Laminar Flow Cabinet

Jack Daniels
2 min readDec 31, 2021

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PCR Laminar Flow Cabinet is a type of ventilated enclosure with a vertical laminar airflow and provides product production for your PCR reagents and samples.

What is laminar flow?

Laminar flow is defined as airflow in which the entire body of air within a designated space is uniform in both velocity and direction.

What is a laminar flow hood?

Clean benches and biological safety cabinets are common examples of laminar flow hoods. They are laboratory enclosures designed to carefully direct HEPA filtered air. Some of these hoods protect items placed on the work surface from contamination. Others prevent exposing the user to contaminants in the work area. Laminar flow hoods are often used to work with biological samples, semiconductors or other sensitive materials.

the laminar air flow principle was first developed in the early 1960s. It’s still incredibly relevant for modern labs, having literally shaped the way air safely moves in many generations of laboratory enclosures. Today, many categories of laminar flow hoods exist. Although they differ depending on the science performed within, there is one common denominator: all use this type of unidirectional airflow to aid in maintaining sterility, preventing cross-contamination and reducing turbulence.

Just what exactly is laminar air flow, why is it effective and what does it look like in labs today? Let’s explore.

How is laminar air flow utilized in different types of equipment?

Class II Biosafety Cabinets, sometimes referred to as laminar flow hoods, maintain product protection through HEPA-filtered laminar downflow over the work zone. Per the NSF definition, these ventilated cabinets also feature inward airflow at the open front to protect operators and HEPA filtered exhaust air for environmental protection.

Class II, Type A cabinets recirculate air back into the laboratory unless a canopy connection is warranted.

Class II, Type B cabinets are hard-ducted to the outside.

Class II, Type C1 cabinets can function in either Type A or Type B mode. Whichever model suits your application, safe operation within biological safety cabinets is imperative to protect the integrity of your work and your personal safety.

PCR stations, enclosures that are specifically designed to house polymerase chain reaction experiment, utilize vertical flow of HEPA-filtered air to maintain a particulate-free work environment. A UV light is necessary to denature genetic material (DNA, RNA, etc.) and provide secondary decontamination.

Clean benches are suitable for applications that require product protection, such as media plate preparation or tissue culture maintenance. Air is drawn in through a prefilter located at the top of the clean bench before being pulled through a HEPA filter.

In a vertical clean bench, laminar air is then projected vertically over the work area. In a horizontal clean bench, laminar air is projected horizontally towards the operator. In both instances, laminar flow provides a particulate-free work area.

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Jack Daniels
Jack Daniels

Written by Jack Daniels

I am a content writer who loves writing stories and tech information on startups and their marketing strategies.

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