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Encyclopedia > Centrifuges
A laboratory centrifuge

A centrifuge is used for centrifugation. It is a device for applying force to a sample, usually by motor driven rotary motion of the sample. There are many different kinds of centrifuges, often for very specialized purposes.


English military engineer Benjamin Robins (1707-1751) invented a whirling arm apparatus to determine drag.


The ultracentrifuge is a device invented in 1925 by Theodor Svedberg, which by use of very high acceleration, and allowing the observation of sedimentation rates for macromolecules, allowed for the determination of their approximate molecular weights. Svedberg won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his invention.


Other, simpler centrifuges are used in biology and biochemistry for isolating and separating biocompounds on the basis of molecular weight. These will tend to rotate at a slower rate than an ultracentrifuge, and have larger rotors, and be optimized for holding large quantities of material at intermediate acceleration.


Washing machines use a centrifuge to partially remove the water from wet clothes.


Other centrifuges, the first being the Zippe-type, are used to separate isotopes, and these kinds of centrifuges are in use in nuclear power and nuclear weapon programs.


Exceptionally large centrifuges are used to test the reactions of pilots and astronauts to acceleration above those experienced in the Earth's gravity.


Because of the kinetic energy stored in the rotor head, those who have experienced an ultracentrifuge losing a rotor compare the experience to having a bomb explode nearby.



Laboratory equipment
Agar plate | Aspirator | Bunsen burner | Calorimeter | Colorimeter | Centrifuge | Fume hood | Microscope | Microtiter plate | Plate reader | Spectrophotometer | Thermometer
Laboratory glassware
Beaker | Burette | Conical measure | Cuvette | Erlenmeyer flask | Florence flask | Gas syringe | Graduated cylinder | Pipette | Petri dish | Soxhlet extractor | Test tube | Volumetric flask





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Protocols for centrifugation typically specify the amount of acceleration to be applied to the sample, rather than specifying a rotational speed such as revolutions per minute.
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The heavier isotopes of uranium (uranium-238) in the uranium hexafluoride gas tend to concentrate at the walls of the centrifuge as it spins, while the desired uranium-235 isotopes are extracted and concentrated with a scoop selectively placed inside the centrifuge.
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