Is it Time for a New CO2 Incubator?

As the heart of the lab and its workflow, CO2 incubators can make or break the facility’s overall productivity. Douglas Wernerspach, business manager of CO2 and constant temperature at Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, MA), says researchers depend on CO2 incubators to be reliable and provide uniform conditions for cells.

Written byRachel Muenz
| 3 min read
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Reliability, consistency, and new features main reasons to go shopping

As the heart of the lab and its workflow, CO2 incubators can make or break the facility’s overall productivity.

Douglas Wernerspach, business manager of CO2 and constant temperature at Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, MA), says researchers depend on CO2 incubators to be reliable and provide uniform conditions for cells.

“If you don’t have a viable quantity of cells, it’s very difficult to proceed very much further from there with your experimentation, so the performance of the CO2 incubator is important,” he says.

Once the unit can no longer provide that consistency and reliability, is having frequent contamination issues, or the system is becoming more costly and difficult to maintain, it could be time to buy new. Changing application needs could also necessitate an upgrade, vendors say.

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