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General Lab Product Surveys

Do You Need a Mill or Grinder In Your Lab?

Find out which types of mills and grinders are most popular among respondents, and more

by Jason Kerkhof

In a laboratory, most materials required for sampling are, in practice, nonhomogeneous mixtures. The best method of obtaining a small representative sample of the nonuniform whole is to take a quantity of the material large enough to be compositionally representative and reduce it to a fine homogeneous powder. For this purpose, a laboratory mill or grinder is usually used.

Top 5 Questions You Should Ask When Buying a Mill or Grinder

  1. Will the mill/grinder be used for wet or dry milling?
  2. For dry milling, ask how finely the material needs to be ground and what are the properties of the material? Rotor beater, disc, and mortar mills, for example, are best for mid-range grinding (final fineness of ~0.01-0.1 mm).
  3. For wet milling, ask what capacity of grinder you will need. Bead mills are usually best for small capacity applications while rotor-stator homogenizers should be considered for larger scale applications. For very large scale applications, industrial-scale mills are probably the best fit.
  4. How important is preventing cross contamination? Bead mills are likely a good choice if you don’t want any risk of contamination.
  5. Based on the materials you will be milling, how long does the mill or grinder typically last? How much do replacement parts cost and how easy are they to get? What level of support/warranties does the company offer?

Types of laboratory mills or grinders used by survey respondents:

Ball mill34%
Grinding mill32%
Jaw Crusher19%
Mortar grinder18%
Rotor Mill14%
Cutting Mill12%
Knife mill11%
Mixer Mill7%
CryoMill4%
Disc Mill4%
Other23%

Primary purpose of lab mill or grinder as reported by survey respondents:

Research42%
Processing26%
Quality control19%
Clinical and diagnostic2%
Other11%

Nearly 48% of respondents are engaged in purchasing a new laboratory mill or grinder. The reasons for these purchases are as follows:

Replacement of an aging system
46%
Addition to existing systems, increase capacity
22%
First time purchase
16%
Setting up a new lab
4%
Other
12%

Top 10 Features/Factors Respondents Look for When Purchasing a Laboratory Mill or Grinder:

Durability of product84%
Low maintenance — easy to use and clean72%
Value for price paid 63%
Results with minimum deviation60%
Safety features49%
Reliability of vendor48%
Service and support45%
Warranty40%
Reputation of vendor40%
Recommendation from colleagues/peers35%

For more information on mills and grinders, including useful articles and a list of manufacturers, visit www.labmanager.com/mills-and-grinders