Vacuum Evaporation Overview

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Vacuum Evaporation Overview

Vacuum concentrators use a combination of heat, vacuum and centrifugal force for the evaporation of volatile samples. The method is used for evaporation, drying, purification and especially fast concentration. It takes advantage of the fact at pressures of a few hectopascal, volatile substances boil at room temperature without freezing the specimen. 

The additional centrifugal force from rotation prevents bumping and changes the liquid level in the test tubes, thereby increasing the evaporation surface. The applied heat increases the rate of evaporation without causing overheating of the specimens under vacuum. Rotational Vacuum Concentrators (RVC) are an alternative to the following methods:

Rotational vacuum concentration occupies a position between the two methods mentioned above. With suitable parameter settings, the resulting products can also be frozen and sublimated in a sort of final-drying process.

The boiling point for liquid evaporation depends on the nature of the substance concerned and the external pressure. Reducing the pressure dramatically reduces the boiling point of the solvent and therefore avoids overheating of samples.


Key features of rotational vacuum concentration:

 
Applications overview

1.Analytical applications
Application / Industry Application Substances
Toxicology / Forensic / Medicine Residue analysis Amphetamines, narcotics, drugs, antibiotics, alcohols, other chemicals
Environment

Residue analysis:

  • Water
  • Wastewater
  • Soil & sediment
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), dioxins
Foods and agriculture
  • Residue analysis
  • Quality control
  • Purity control
End product, HPLC fractions, aromas
Biotechnology & pharmaceuticals Specimen preparation & concentration: before or after HPLC Acetonitril, ethanol, methanol, water

Media

Taxonomy