lark1405
Bioengineer
- Oct 17, 2016
- 3
Hi all,
Brand new to the forum with a question for you guys.
I'm looking for tubing that has some pretty specific properties that I haven't seen on too many charts. The tubing should be:
- a very small, extremely smooth, consistently sized hollow
- not 100% sure on this one, but a hydrophobic interior might be nice
- roughly a millimeter in total tube diameter
- low deformation in the tubing cross-section
- clear or translucent
- can create a low/moderate vacuum
- has moderate overall flexibility in the lengthwise direction
- has decent durability
Essentially, we want to flow a liquid at an extremely consistent pressure, which is why we don't want tube radius deformation and possibly hydrophobic properties. We are using peristaltic pumps, which is less than ideal. The tubing has to be flexible enough to move the liquid along through the tube, yet strong enough to endure some wear and tear.
The tubing only has to work from somewhere between 10 to 40 C, so that shouldn't pose too much of a problem.
I know this is a pretty tall order in terms of details, but if anyone has suggestions for references or resources I'd really appreciate it.
Brand new to the forum with a question for you guys.
I'm looking for tubing that has some pretty specific properties that I haven't seen on too many charts. The tubing should be:
- a very small, extremely smooth, consistently sized hollow
- not 100% sure on this one, but a hydrophobic interior might be nice
- roughly a millimeter in total tube diameter
- low deformation in the tubing cross-section
- clear or translucent
- can create a low/moderate vacuum
- has moderate overall flexibility in the lengthwise direction
- has decent durability
Essentially, we want to flow a liquid at an extremely consistent pressure, which is why we don't want tube radius deformation and possibly hydrophobic properties. We are using peristaltic pumps, which is less than ideal. The tubing has to be flexible enough to move the liquid along through the tube, yet strong enough to endure some wear and tear.
The tubing only has to work from somewhere between 10 to 40 C, so that shouldn't pose too much of a problem.
I know this is a pretty tall order in terms of details, but if anyone has suggestions for references or resources I'd really appreciate it.