CentriVap DNA Systems Users Manual
Manuals | 2021 | OrganomationInstrumentation
The CentriVap DNA Centrifugal Concentrator is a compact benchtop instrument designed to accelerate evaporation and concentration of nucleic acid samples (DNA/RNA) and other small-volume biological or chemical samples. By combining controlled centrifugal force, vacuum, and heating, the system minimizes bumping and foaming, enabling safe recovery of solutes from microliter-scale volumes. Such concentrators are widely used in molecular biology, genomics sample preparation, analytical chemistry, and quality-control laboratories where reproducible, gentle concentration of small-volume samples is required.
This document is a user and service manual for Labconco CentriVap DNA Systems (models 7970010, 7970011, 7970030, 7970035, 7970037). It provides: setup and installation prerequisites; operational guidelines for heating, vacuum and rotor use; troubleshooting and maintenance procedures; accessory installation instructions; safety and solvent compatibility guidance; and basic performance specifications including evaporation-rate examples. The manual’s aim is to enable safe, reproducible operation and proper maintenance to maximize lifetime and performance of the equipment.
The CentriVap uses three coordinated physical actions to concentrate samples:
Operational features include a rotor-speed ramp (vacuum pump starts after rotor reaches speed), a microprocessor-controlled interface with memory for up to nine protocols, separate timers for heater and run duration, a gas-ballast valve to reduce sample freezing/sublimation at very low pressures, and safety interlocks (lid latch and sensor) to prevent chamber access while rotating or under vacuum.
Main instrument and key components described in the manual:
Highlights for routine use and safety:
Performance specifications and practical results provided in the manual:
Discussion points:
Recommended maintenance to maintain performance and safety:
Practical advantages of using the CentriVap DNA system include:
Typical application areas:
Potential developments and application expansions for centrifugal concentrators include:
The Labconco CentriVap DNA Centrifugal Concentrator is a specialized instrument for gentle, reproducible concentration of micro- to small-volume samples by combining centrifugal force, vacuum and controlled heating. Proper installation, solvent selection, trap usage, rotor balancing and adherence to maintenance schedules are essential to achieve reliable performance and safe operation. The system’s programmability, accessory options (glass lid, secondary traps, rotors, strobe, vacuum gauge) and PTFE-wetted pump components make it versatile for many laboratory concentration tasks, particularly in molecular biology and analytical chemistry.
Labconco Corporation. CentriVap DNA Systems User Manual, Part #7397609, Rev. F, 2021.
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Summary
Significance of the Topic
The CentriVap DNA Centrifugal Concentrator is a compact benchtop instrument designed to accelerate evaporation and concentration of nucleic acid samples (DNA/RNA) and other small-volume biological or chemical samples. By combining controlled centrifugal force, vacuum, and heating, the system minimizes bumping and foaming, enabling safe recovery of solutes from microliter-scale volumes. Such concentrators are widely used in molecular biology, genomics sample preparation, analytical chemistry, and quality-control laboratories where reproducible, gentle concentration of small-volume samples is required.
Objectives and Overview of the Manual
This document is a user and service manual for Labconco CentriVap DNA Systems (models 7970010, 7970011, 7970030, 7970035, 7970037). It provides: setup and installation prerequisites; operational guidelines for heating, vacuum and rotor use; troubleshooting and maintenance procedures; accessory installation instructions; safety and solvent compatibility guidance; and basic performance specifications including evaporation-rate examples. The manual’s aim is to enable safe, reproducible operation and proper maintenance to maximize lifetime and performance of the equipment.
Methodology and Operating Principles
The CentriVap uses three coordinated physical actions to concentrate samples:
- Centrifugal acceleration to collect solute at the bottom of sample tubes and to prevent bumping/foaming during solvent removal.
- Vacuum to lower solvent vapor pressure and increase evaporation rate; the integrated diaphragm vacuum pump attains ultimate pressures below ~7 mbar.
- Controlled heating (300 W chamber heater) to raise sample/chamber temperature and accelerate solvent evaporation while maintaining sample integrity via programmable temperature limits.
Operational features include a rotor-speed ramp (vacuum pump starts after rotor reaches speed), a microprocessor-controlled interface with memory for up to nine protocols, separate timers for heater and run duration, a gas-ballast valve to reduce sample freezing/sublimation at very low pressures, and safety interlocks (lid latch and sensor) to prevent chamber access while rotating or under vacuum.
Used Instrumentation
Main instrument and key components described in the manual:
- Labconco CentriVap DNA Centrifugal Concentrator (115 V and 230 V variants).
- Internal diaphragm vacuum pump with PTFE-wetted parts (reduces chemical compatibility issues).
- Interchangeable rotors (multiple rotor options for microcentrifuge tubes, 15/50 mL tubes, 96-well plates, etc.).
- 300 W chamber heater and thermostat/high-temperature limiter (thermal fuse engages at excessive temperature).
- Glass traps (inlet and outlet) and optional secondary trap canisters with various cartridge inserts (acid, moisture, solvent, radiochemical, ammonia, solvent molecular sieve).
- Optional accessories: glass chamber lid (chemical-resistant), CentriZap strobe light (visualization of samples while spinning), vacuum gauge port/connection.
- Materials of construction: PTFE and other fluoropolymers for pump wetted parts, acrylic (standard lid) or glass (optional lid), various metals and elastomers (O-rings, gaskets) with defined solvent/acid/base compatibility.
Key Operational and Safety Guidelines
Highlights for routine use and safety:
- Placement: Stable, level benchtop; maintain 12 inches (300 mm) clearance around the unit during operation.
- Exhausting: Always vent the vacuum pump to a fume hood when using hazardous or volatile solvents; the system is not explosion-proof and should not be used with Class A–C flammable solvents or with solvents having autoignition temperatures below 180°C.
- Electrical: Dedicated grounded receptacle (115 V models ~5 A; 230 V models ~3 A), recommended emergency power disconnect outside the room.
- Sample loading: Fill tubes ≤ ~50% of volume; balance rotor symmetrically to avoid vibration and mechanical stress.
- Temperature/timing control: Separate heater time and run time allow the heater to be turned off earlier for heat-sensitive samples while maintaining rotation and vacuum.
- Gas ballast: Use to prevent sample freezing/sublimation for highly volatile solvents or when ice formation is observed.
- Chemical compatibility: Consult material compatibility guidance—PTFE and fluoropolymers provide broad resistance, but acrylic lids and certain elastomers can be attacked by acids, bases or aggressive solvents; use the glass lid option and frequent cleaning when exposure is likely.
Main Performance Data and Discussion
Performance specifications and practical results provided in the manual:
- Heater: 300 W chamber heater; temperature setpoint range up to 99°C (display shows HI for 100°C); thermal safety limits in place (thermal fuse trips at ~141°C and resets when cooled below ~120°C).
- Rotor speed: up to 1,725 RPM, providing sufficient centrifugal force to prevent bumping for micro- and small-scale tubes.
- Vacuum: integrated diaphragm pump capable of achieving <7 mbar (ultimately dependent on system leaks, traps and gas ballast settings).
- Evaporation rates: Example empirical data (1.5 mL tubes, 132-sample load) show solvent-specific drying times and rates. Representative values: methanol dried in 30–82 min depending on temperature (24–100°C) with overall rates from ~1.6 to 4.7 mL/min; acetonitrile, ethanol and methylene chloride showed substantially faster rates under comparable conditions. Water evaporation times were significantly longer (hundreds of minutes at low temperatures) given higher latent heat and lower vapor pressure under the tested conditions. These empirical values are illustrative—actual times depend on sample volume, solvent identity, temperature, vacuum level and rotor loading.
Discussion points:
- Evaporation efficiency is governed by the interplay of heat, vacuum depth and mass transport. Increasing temperature and vacuum generally speeds drying but raises the risk of thermal degradation or sample freezing; the gas ballast and separate heater timer are practical controls for trade-offs.
- Material compatibility and trap selection are critical for pump life and lab safety; PTFE-wetted pump components reduce corrosion and contamination, but volatile acids, bases, and halogenated solvents still require careful trap use and prompt maintenance.
Maintenance and Troubleshooting
Recommended maintenance to maintain performance and safety:
- Daily: purge residual liquids from the pump after runs (open lid, turn rotor switch ON to draw air through the system for a period appropriate to solvent volatility).
- As-needed: clean chamber, lid and gaskets after spills; empty and safely dispose of trap contents; replace saturated trap cartridges (color indicators for some cartridges; radiochemical cartridges show no color change and should be discarded after each use).
- Monthly: inspect and replace aging rubber hoses and gaskets; clean exterior and lid with mild detergent; inspect rotors and replace or return defective rotors.
- Troubleshooting guidance: the manual lists diagnostic display codes (e.g., heat sensor, lid/latch, memory and motor errors) and corrective actions, plus practical checks for vacuum loss (trap liquids, leaks, pump state, open control valve) and vibration (imbalanced load).
Benefits and Practical Applications
Practical advantages of using the CentriVap DNA system include:
- Safe, reproducible concentration of small-volume samples with minimized sample loss from bumping.
- High throughput capability with rotors that support many microtubes or well plates—suitable for genomics sample prep and preparative workflows.
- Programmable protocols and memory for reproducibility across runs and users.
- Flexibility to process a range of solvents and sample formats using optional traps, lids and rotor choices.
Typical application areas:
- DNA/RNA concentration prior to downstream assays (PCR, sequencing library prep).
- Concentration of biological buffers and small-molecule solutions for analytical workflows.
- Sample drying in QC/QA laboratories where controlled, reproducible solvent removal is required.
Future Trends and Potential Uses
Potential developments and application expansions for centrifugal concentrators include:
- Integration with laboratory automation and sample tracking to support high-throughput sequencing and screening pipelines.
- Improved sensor integration (digital vacuum sensors, contactless temperature monitoring) and closed-loop control to optimize evaporation rates while preventing sample damage.
- Enhanced materials and coatings for broader chemical compatibility, extending safe use to more aggressive chemistries without frequent component replacement.
- Development of validated protocols for sensitive biomolecules and complex sample matrices, enabling broader adoption in regulated environments (clinical, forensic, GLP).
Conclusion
The Labconco CentriVap DNA Centrifugal Concentrator is a specialized instrument for gentle, reproducible concentration of micro- to small-volume samples by combining centrifugal force, vacuum and controlled heating. Proper installation, solvent selection, trap usage, rotor balancing and adherence to maintenance schedules are essential to achieve reliable performance and safe operation. The system’s programmability, accessory options (glass lid, secondary traps, rotors, strobe, vacuum gauge) and PTFE-wetted pump components make it versatile for many laboratory concentration tasks, particularly in molecular biology and analytical chemistry.
Reference
Labconco Corporation. CentriVap DNA Systems User Manual, Part #7397609, Rev. F, 2021.
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