Individually plastic-wrapped pipettes, no paper residue, more peace of mind

Individually plastic-wrapped pipettes, no paper residue, more peace of mind

Serological pipettes were originally developed as an alternative to glass pipettes and are indispensable for sterile transfer of serum culture media, hence the name serological pipettes. They are widely used in fields requiring sterile handling of liquids, such as tissue culture, bacteriology, clinical laboratories, and scientific research experiments.

With the widespread application of pipettes in the biopharmaceutical industry, some issues related to packaging have also arisen: paper-plastic packaging is often difficult to tear open completely in one go, which can result in paper residue and subsequently cause other problems. To address this, SMTRA has specially launched individually plastic-wrapped pipettes to eliminate paper residue issues and enhance laboratory safety performance.

Features

  • Made from USP Class VI standard polystyrene raw materials, manufactured in a 100,000-grade cleanroom.
  • The pipette body is highly transparent with clear graduations, and the graduation error is ±3%.
  • Dual-sided graduations for enhanced sampling accuracy; negative graduations provide additional sampling capacity.
  • All pipettes come with a polyester fiber plug at the tail to effectively prevent secondary contamination.
  • Color-coded rings at the tail and color bands on the pipette body for easy volume identification.
  • Individually plastic-wrapped with easy-tear design for convenience and to effectively prevent paper residue from paper-plastic packaging.
  • Free from pyrogens, endotoxins, and cytotoxicity.
  • Sterilized by irradiation, with a sterility assurance level (SAL) of 10^-6.
The individually plastic-wrapped pipettes, while ensuring and maintaining their consistent high quality and precision, use an entirely plastic, easy-tear packaging material. This effectively eliminates the production of paper residue, thereby enhancing the safety of laboratory experiments.
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