Product Description
Check this product with a package size of 3 kDa / 3.4cm² / 15/pk on Iright. Cobetter Briscale 4mL centrifugal filters are made of low-binding regenerated cellulose(RC) ultrafiltration membranes, which can achieve a high protein recovery rate >90%, using marker protein Lysozyme(14.4 kDa) at 0.25 mg/mL, centrifuge 60 mins.
Briscale centrifugal filter is ideal for the concentration of proteins and biological samples containing antigens, antibodies, enzymes, nucleic acids, or microorganisms. The vertical design and membrane surface area provide fast concentration time and rapid protein concentration for up to 80-fold concentration.
The centrifugal filter unit consists of a lid, a filter device and a centrifuge tube. Use a pipette to collect the concentrate from the filter device. The ultrafiltrate is collected in the centrifuge tube for further analysis.
RC Centrifugal Filters can handle samples up to 4 mL in rotors accepting 15 mL centrifuge tubes. Use in fixed angle 45°rotor(max starting volume of 4mL) or swing bucket rotor(max starting volume of 4mL).
Specifications
Dimensions
Effective membrane area
3.4cm²
Overall Length x Tube diameter
124.5 x 16.9 mm
Materials
Membrane Material
Regenerated Cellulose (RC)
Centrifuge Tube
PP
Ultrafiltration device
Polystyrene (GPPS)
Lid
High Density Polyethylene (HDPE)
Concentrator Capacity
Fixed Angle Rotor(45°)
Swing Bucket Rotor
Maximum Sample Volume
4 mL
4 mL
Dead-stop volume
30 μL
40 μL
Final concentration volume
80-200μL
Centrifuge
Fixed Angle Rotor(45°)
Swing Bucket Rotor
Maximum G-force
5000g
4000g
Sterility
Delivery Condition
Nonsterile
Sterilization Method
Not Recommended
Package
Pack Size
15pcs
Packaging
Individually packed in PE bag
Features
RC membrane achieves a high recovery rate of>90%
Color-coded cap with different MWCO, volume graduation for easy detection and user-friendly
Low-binding regenerated cellulose(RC) ultrafiltration membranes
Broad chemical compatibility pH 1-14
80-fold concentration with vertical membranes
Translucent housing and volume marker make sample monitoring effortless.
Applications
Concentration and purification of nucleic acids, proteins such as antigens, antibodies, enzymes, etc and other biomolecules
Desalting, buffer exchange and dialyzing proteins and antibodies for sample preparation
Concentration of dilute or pre-purified proteins from chromatography
Remove primers, adapters or molecular tags from the reaction mixture
Purification of macromolecules in tissue culture extracts or cell lysates, and protein removal prior to HPLC and mass spectrometry.
How to choose Cobetter Centrifugal Filters?
To choose which type to use, determine the molecular weight (MW) of your macromolecule of interest, and select an ultrafiltration membrane with a molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) that is 2-3 times smaller than the MW of your macromolecule. Read more details about how to choose MWCO filters.
Filter MWCO
Target MW
3 kDa
6 kDa < MW < 30 kDa
10 kDa
30 kDa < MW < 100 kDa
30 kDa
100 kDa < MW < 200 kDa
50 kDa
200 kDa < MW < 500 kDa
100 kDa
500 kDa < MW
Centrifugal Filter Units Structure & Adapted Equipment
Cobetter ultrafiltration centrifugal filter units consist of a lid, a filter unit, and a centrifuge tube.
It requires a rotor or rotor adapter compatible with 15mL (for 4mL centrifugal filter) or 50mL (for 15mL centrifugal filter) conical bottom centrifuge tubes. Both the swinging bucket rotor and the fixed-angle rotor must meet this requirement. Learn more about how to use a centrifugal filter.
Protein Recovery Rate
The RC membrane and smooth inner wall design have extremely low protein adsorption. Can achieve a recovery rate of more than 90%. Q: Which centrifuges are Cobetter centrifugal filters compatible with?
Briscale UF-15 centrifugal filters are compatible with centrifuges that accept 50 mL conical centrifuge tubes.
Briscale UF-4 centrifugal filters are compatible with centrifuges that accept 15 mL conical centrifuge tubes.
Both are suitable for horizontal rotors and fixed-angle rotors.
Q: How to choose the appropriate centrifugal filters?
When selecting a centrifugal filter, the main considerations are the molecular weight of the target molecule and the desired concentration volume. For selecting the membrane cut-off, a general guideline is to choose a cut-off no greater than 1/3 of the target protein’s molecular weight.
For example, if the target protein has a molecular weight of 35 kDa, an ultrafiltration tube with a 10 kDa cut-off would be appropriate.
Q: How should centrifugal filters be cleaned and stored?
Cleaning:
Soak the tube in 0.1–0.5 N NaOH solution for 30–60 minutes. Discard the NaOH solution, then centrifuge with ultrapure or deionized water for 10 minutes, repeating 1–2 times.
Storage:
Fill the tube with 0.05–0.1 N NaOH solution and store immersed.
Q: Are Cobetter centrifugal filter single-use? Can they be reused?
Cobetter Briscale UF ultrafiltration centrifugal filters are single-use consumables.
For the same feed material, they can be reused 6–10 times with 30 min centrifugation per use without issues.
For different feed materials, it is recommended to use a new centrifugal filter.
Q: Can Cobetter centrifugal filters be sterilized?
Cobetter Briscale UF ultrafiltration centrifugal filters are non-sterile and
cannot
be autoclaved. They can be disinfected using 0.1–0.5 N NaOH or 70% ethanol.
Q: What cause low recovery rate after ultrafiltration?
There are four possible reasons:
1. Inappropriate ultrafiltration cut-off leading to product loss: Try using a smaller cut-off, generally following the 1/3 rule. For example, for a 10 kDa target molecule, the preferred cut-off is 3 kDa, while also testing 10 kDa and 30 kDa tubes to compare recovery.
2. Excessive concentration factor leading to incomplete recovery: Consider reducing centrifugation time and controlling the sample load.
3. Product integrity failure: Compare two centrifugal filters using buffer or pure water. A damaged centrifugal filter typically shows faster flow and lower concentrated volume.
4. Adsorption effects: If the initial sample concentration is below 0.1 mg/mL, adsorption inside the tube may reduce recovery.
Q: Why does protein precipitation occur during concentration?
Protein precipitation may occur when the protein is concentrated too rapidly or to an excessively high concentration. Recommended optimization strategies:
1. Reduce the loading volume or centrifugation time to lower the final protein concentration.
2. Decrease the centrifugal force or centrifugation speed.
3. Increase mixing steps, breaking a single long centrifugation into multiple shorter centrifugation cycles.
Order Guidelines
1. Price & Stock Available on Request. Click to send email to: service@iright.com
2. Please DO NOT make payment before confirmation.
3. Minimum order value of $1,000 USD required.
Collaboration
Tony Tang
Email: Tony.Tang@iright.com
Mobile/WhatsApp/Wechat: +86-17717886924