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Sample warming during innocent exposures from a liquid nitrogen freezer

7 Sept 2020

Storing samples in liquid nitrogen vapour phase freezers (LN2) is very common and performed throughout the biobanking and cell therapy industries. These freezers are chosen primarily because they maintain a sub -150°C storage environment and thus, keep the samples below -135°C, the glass transition temperature of water (Tg). This cryogenic storage practice preserves sample viability. The concern is what happens to innocent samples (the ones not intended to be thawed) during routine rack exposures. Thousands of innocent samples may be exposed multiple times throughout their storage lifetime. Constant thawing/freezing through the glass transition phase may cause irreversible damage and affect sample functionality when thawed.

FluidX™ Cryo Consumables

Brooks Life Sciences

The FluidX™ range of Cryo Consumables is designed to suit the needs of researchers storing samples at cryogenic temperatures. The range includes Cryo Racks and Tri-coded Next-Gen Jacket Sample Tubes.

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Refrigerators Freezers and CryogenicsRefrigerators, Freezers & Cryogenics can be used for preservation or experimental purposes. Types of freezers include deep freeze, -80C°C, ultra-low temperature, explosion proof, cryogenic and controlled rate freezers. Freezing is also used in freeze-drying equipment for dehydration processes. Feature to consider in freezers include temperature control and recorders, failure alarms and self-closing mechanisms.CryopreservationSample StoragePreserving clinical trial samples to the highest standards is a critical component in maximizing the value of present day and future clinical research. Specialized storage and transportation of these tissue, blood and serum samples reduces the risk of them being damaged or lost.
Sample warming during innocent exposures from a liquid nitrogen freezer