Centrifuges machines

A laboratory centrifuge is a piece of laboratory equipment, driven by a motor, which spins liquid samples at high speed. There are various types of centrifuges, depending on the size and the sample capacity. Like all other centrifuges, laboratory centrifuges work by the sedimentation principle, where the centripetal acceleration is used to separate substances of greater and lesser density.

There are various types of centrifugation:

  • Differential centrifugation, often used to separate certain organelles from whole cells for further analysis of specific parts of cells
  • Isopycnic centrifugation, often used to isolate nucleic acids such as DNA
  • Sucrose gradient centrifugation, often used to purify enveloped viruses and ribosomes, and also to separate cell organelles from crude cellular extracts There are different types of laboratory centrifuges:
  • Microcentrifuges (devices for small tubes from 0.2 ml to 2.0 ml (micro tubes), up to 96 well-plates, compact design, small footprint; up to 30,000 g)
  • Clinical centrifuges (moderate-speed devices used for clinical applications like blood collection tubes)
  • Multipurpose high-speed centrifuges (devices for a broad range of tube sizes, high variability, big footprint)
  • Ultracentrifuges (analytical and preparative models)

Because of the heat generated by air friction (even in ultracentrifuges, where the rotor operates in a good vacuum), and the frequent necessity of maintaining samples at a given temperature, many types of laboratory centrifuges are refrigerated and temperature regulated.

There are different providers of laboratory centrifuges like Meditech, Eppendorf, Thermo-Heraeus, Thermo-Sorvall, Hettich, Beckman-Coulter, MSE, Sigma,REMI and AWEL International.

Centrifuge tubes (also referred to as Eppendorf Tubes, Microfuge Tubes, and Microcentrifuge Tubes) are precision-made, high-strength tubes of glass or plastic made to fit exactly in rotor cavities. They may vary in capacity from 50 mL down to much smaller capacities used in microcentrifuges used extensively in molecular biology laboratories. Microcentrifuges typically accommodate disposable plastic microcentrifuge tubes with capacities from 250 μL to 2.0 mL.