Posted by
Oshel, Philip Eugene on
URL: http://confocal-microscopy-list.275.s1.nabble.com/Unclogging-corroded-laser-coolant-lines-tp7584479p7584481.html
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Mike,
I've used both hydrogen peroxide and CLR (brand name lime & rust
remover). For a TEM-sized chiller, this took one bottle of CLR or 1
Liter of 3% H2O2 (or 100 mL 30% H2O2). Circulate this for one to six
hours, or even overnight if needed (sounds like that will be needed in
your case), followed by flushing with 4-5 volumes of tap water.
This works well, and causes no damage to instrument chilling lines.
When I had a biofilm-sludge clogging problem, the vinegar trick worked.
I used about 1 Liter of vinegar for this, followed by tap water.
Phil
On 11/23/2015 16:46 , Michael Giacomelli wrote:
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>
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>
> I recently discovered an old laser in storage. Unfortunately the
> previous users had not drained the coolant lines, resulting in several
> years corrosion blocking the lines. I flushed them out as best I
> could and found a grey metal slurry that was fairly thick in place of
> what was once the coolant. Unfortunately, even with flushing I can't
> flow anything through the system using a normal thermotek chiller.
>
> Are there any options in this situation to unclog a laser? Looking at
> the material in the line, its fairly diffuse and does not appear all
> that solid. Is it possible to use something like a weak acid to
> dissolve any solid material blocking the line? Or some other
> solvent/cleaner?
>
> Mike
>
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576