Re: chambers with silicone

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Carol Heckman Carol Heckman
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Re: chambers with silicone

Evangelos-
I have been told that there are chambers with silicone  seals, and you may enter the sealed ring with 22 size syringe needles to make additions and/or release air bubbles from the sealed chambers.

Bellco

www.bellcoglass.com
tel. 800.257.7043
fax. 856.691.3247
[hidden email]    

Description Wrench for Assembly of Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber
Part # 1943-44444

Description Cover Slip Round #1 Thickness, 25mm
Part # 1943-22222

Description Gasket for Sykes Moore Chamber Red Silicone with 2.5mm Working Distance
Part # 1943-33325

Description Gasket Red Silicone for Sykes Moore Chamber, 25mm  
Part # 1943-22115

Description Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber Only, SST
Part # 1943-11111

Description Sykes-Moore Chamber Holder for Microscope Viewing, Aluminum 3 x 1-1/2 x 3/16"
Part # 1943-55555


________________________________________
From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Evangelos [[hidden email]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 1:25 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: chambers for volatile organics

  I've been working lately on confocal microscopy with very volatile and
toxic organics.  The chambers described today are quite useful
(Matek...) for cell culture and cell imaging; however, the solvents I've
been working with lately readily attack plastic and rubber.  I would
need a chamber made of glass or fused silica, with a thickness at the
bottom comparable to a 0, 1, or 1.5 standard microscope coverslip for an
inverted microscope, and Luer Locks or similar pipette access ports made
of Teflon or with Teflon plugs.  I haven't found a supplier yet, if any
vendor here or any of you know of a vendor that makes any type of
chamber with glass only and with PTFE plugs that would be terrific.

Best,
Evangelos
Harvard CNS
Donnelly, Tom Donnelly, Tom
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Re: chambers with silicone

WillcoWells  www.willcowells.com have a self assembly kit.  This would allow you to assemble the coverslip into a plastic 35mm dish with the sealant of your choice.  That is assuming the organics would not eat the 35mm plastic dish.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List
[mailto:[hidden email]]On Behalf Of Carol Heckman
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 12:46 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: chambers with silicone


Evangelos-
I have been told that there are chambers with silicone  seals, and you may enter the sealed ring with 22 size syringe needles to make additions and/or release air bubbles from the sealed chambers.

Bellco

www.bellcoglass.com
tel. 800.257.7043
fax. 856.691.3247
[hidden email]    

Description Wrench for Assembly of Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber
Part # 1943-44444

Description Cover Slip Round #1 Thickness, 25mm
Part # 1943-22222

Description Gasket for Sykes Moore Chamber Red Silicone with 2.5mm Working Distance
Part # 1943-33325

Description Gasket Red Silicone for Sykes Moore Chamber, 25mm  
Part # 1943-22115

Description Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber Only, SST
Part # 1943-11111

Description Sykes-Moore Chamber Holder for Microscope Viewing, Aluminum 3 x 1-1/2 x 3/16"
Part # 1943-55555


________________________________________
From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Evangelos [[hidden email]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 1:25 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: chambers for volatile organics

  I've been working lately on confocal microscopy with very volatile and
toxic organics.  The chambers described today are quite useful
(Matek...) for cell culture and cell imaging; however, the solvents I've
been working with lately readily attack plastic and rubber.  I would
need a chamber made of glass or fused silica, with a thickness at the
bottom comparable to a 0, 1, or 1.5 standard microscope coverslip for an
inverted microscope, and Luer Locks or similar pipette access ports made
of Teflon or with Teflon plugs.  I haven't found a supplier yet, if any
vendor here or any of you know of a vendor that makes any type of
chamber with glass only and with PTFE plugs that would be terrific.

Best,
Evangelos
Harvard CNS
Stephen Cody-2 Stephen Cody-2
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Re: chambers with silicone

In reply to this post by Carol Heckman
Dear Evangelos,
 
I have extensively used these Sykes-Moore chambers in both open and sealed modalities, although not with solvents (other than water). If you think a silicone o-ring will withstand your solvents I think these will do the trick nicely.
 
And as Carol mentioned you can push hypodermics through the o-ring to create a very simple flow bath.
 
You probably DON'T need the gasket Part #  1943-22115, this is the flat thin washer that is not suitable for poking a hypodermic through.
 
See Fig. 3 in the paper:
 
John A. Sykes (1978), "Sykes Moore Chamber"
Methods in Cell Science, Volume 4, Number 2 / June
 
No commercial affiliation with Bellco.
 
All the best,
Steve
 
Stephen H. Cody
Imaging Research Fellow & Manager
Monash Micro Imaging – AMREP
Monash University
6 Floor Burnet Tower
Alfred Medical Research & Education Precinct
89 Commercial Rd, Melbourne, Australia, 3004

www.microimaging.monash.org
 
 
2009/6/11 Carol Heckman <[hidden email]>
Evangelos-
I have been told that there are chambers with silicone  seals, and you may enter the sealed ring with 22 size syringe needles to make additions and/or release air bubbles from the sealed chambers.

Bellco

www.bellcoglass.com
tel. 800.257.7043
fax. 856.691.3247
[hidden email]

Description     Wrench for Assembly of Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber
Part #  1943-44444

Description     Cover Slip Round #1 Thickness, 25mm
Part #  1943-22222

Description     Gasket for Sykes Moore Chamber Red Silicone with 2.5mm Working Distance
Part #  1943-33325

Description     Gasket Red Silicone for Sykes Moore Chamber, 25mm
Part #  1943-22115

Description     Sykes-Moore Culture Chamber Only, SST
Part #  1943-11111

Description     Sykes-Moore Chamber Holder for Microscope Viewing, Aluminum 3 x 1-1/2 x 3/16"
Part #  1943-55555


________________________________________
From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Evangelos [[hidden email]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 1:25 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: chambers for volatile organics

 I've been working lately on confocal microscopy with very volatile and
toxic organics.  The chambers described today are quite useful
(Matek...) for cell culture and cell imaging; however, the solvents I've
been working with lately readily attack plastic and rubber.  I would
need a chamber made of glass or fused silica, with a thickness at the
bottom comparable to a 0, 1, or 1.5 standard microscope coverslip for an
inverted microscope, and Luer Locks or similar pipette access ports made
of Teflon or with Teflon plugs.  I haven't found a supplier yet, if any
vendor here or any of you know of a vendor that makes any type of
chamber with glass only and with PTFE plugs that would be terrific.

Best,
Evangelos
Harvard CNS