T25 TC Treated Falcon Adherent Cell Culture Flasks

Author: becky

May. 06, 2024

T25 TC Treated Falcon Adherent Cell Culture Flasks

 

T25 TC treated falcon Adherent Cell Culture flasks

If you want to learn more, please visit our website t25 cell culture flask.

 

 

Sufficient inventory, Short Delivery Time, New Price, High Cost Performance! 

 

Product Number Treated Size(cm²) Cultivation Area(cm²) Cap Pack Case PCS/box C000025 TC Treated 25 25 Sealed Cap 10 20 200 C001025 TC Treated 25 25 Vent Cap 10 20 200 C000075 TC Treated 75 75 Sealed Cap 5 20 100 C001075 TC Treated 75 75 Vent Cap 5 20 100 C000175 TC Treated 175 175 Sealed Cap 5 8 40 C001175 TC Treated 175 175 Vent Cap 5 8 40 C000225 TC Treated 225 225 Sealed Cap 5 5 25 C001225 TC Treated 225 225 Vent Cap 5 5 25

 

 Features:

 

  • All production process is strictly controlled, through automatic equipment in accordance with cGMP standards in the C-level purification workshop .No personnel contact, No pyrogen, no animal-derived ingredients.Good product consistency!
  • Vero cultured 48 hrs,Density :280,000-320,000/cm2, Same quality as international brand.
  • PS Material, After TC treated,Provides super strong cell adhesion performance.
  • Arc shape bottom and angled neck, can help you to obtain a complete growth surface easily.
  • 0.2µ m vent cap and seal cap are available for different environment.The breathable membrane of the VENT cap adopts a hydrophobic design, which does not affect the sealing performance and ventilation effect after contact with liquid. Support one-handed opening function.
  • Hollow designed bottom which is conducive to the rapid transmission of gas in the incubator.
  • Stacking design is , easy to stack and carry,not easy to slip off.

 

 

FAQ:

 

1. Q: Is there a product batch number identification for traceability?

Answer: There is a product batch number label, which can be traced back to each day.

2. Q: What is the material of the hydrophobic membrane of the breathable cover? diameter?

Answer:We adopt a double-layer composite membrane design (PTFE sterilizing filter membrane, PP support membrane), and the water pressure resistance

is above 0.35Mpa. Diameter/mm 25.70±2.00.

3. Q: Sealing test method

Answer: Put the cell bottle into the water under one meter, pump at pressure 35Kpa, the product does not leak

 

T-flasks - National Museum of American History

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Description (Brief):

From the 1920s through the 1950s biologists and medical researchers made a concerted effort to solve the problem of tissue culture—how to raise and maintain cells for scientific research. Part of the challenge was to create a home outside the body in which cells could survive. At the National Cancer Institute, a team led by Wilton Earle (1902–1964) used tissue culture to study the process by which normal cells become cancerous. Earle, along with researchers Katherine Sanford, Virginia Evans, and Gwendolyn Likely, worked to develop proper nutrition—through a specially formulated broth—for cells grown in culture.

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Description (Brief)

Cells required the broth to be changed regularly, necessitating the scientists to first remove the old broth. Researchers realized, however, that the floating cells were often removed along with the old broth. To address this problem, Earle developed a new kind of flask in which to grow the cells. The so called T-flask (named for the glass tubing from which it was blown), could be centrifuged prior to changing broth. Doing so trapped cells in the conical end, preventing them from being sucked out with the old broth.

Description (Brief)

This objects were used in Dr. Wilton Earle’s (1902–1964) laboratory at the National Cancer Institute. Earle joined NCI in 1937 and served as head of its Tissue Culture Section from 1946 to 1964. He and his researchers were pioneers in the use of tissue culture for cancer research.

Description (Brief)

Sources:

Description (Brief)

Lyons, Michele, and Jr. Museum of Medical Research DeWitt Stetten. Seventy Acres of Science the National Institutes of Health Moves to Bethesda. Bethesda: Office of NIH History, National Institutes of Health, 2006. http://history.nih.gov/research/downloads/70acresofscience2.pdf.

Description (Brief)

National Museum of American History Accession Files 1991.0071 & 1997.0139

Description (Brief)

Stetten, DeWitt, and W. T. Carrigan. NIH : An Account of Research in Its Laboratories and Clinics. Orlando: Academic Press, 1984. http://archive.org/details/nihaccountofrese00stet.

Location: Currently not on view

Subject: Science & Scientific Instruments

Subject:

See more items in: Medicine and Science: Biological Sciences, Health & Medicine, Science Under Glass, Science & Mathematics

Exhibition:

Exhibition Location:

Credit Line: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute

Data Source: National Museum of American History

Id Number: 1997.0193.20Accession Number: 1997.0193Catalog Number: 1997.0193.20

Object Name: display of t-flasks

Physical Description: rubber (overall material)glass (overall material)Measurements: overall: 18.4 cm x 7 cm x 3 cm; 7 1/4 in x 2 3/4 in x 1 3/16 in

Guid: http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a1-316e-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record Id: nmah_333869

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