Whatman glass vacuum filter sterilization

This is one of those times where ocd is a good thing lol. Having my tattoo guy sterilize everything for me. When you transfer from the flask to your vials are you doing that out in the open or under a hepa hood?
 
This is one of those times where ocd is a good thing lol. Having my tattoo guy sterilize everything for me. When you transfer from the flask to your vials are you doing that out in the open or under a hepa hood?

I use a laminar flow hood; but I made it myself. I took the idea from some mushroom growing forum member (EvilMushroom66) and modified it. Don’t know anything about mushrooms, but evidently they keep those cultures sterile. I just did a search for “diy laminar flow hood” on google. That was just the one I liked the best; but there are lots of instructables. I came out less than $300 for a 24x48 hood, using a blower motor I had in my shop.
I used all acrylic plate for my walls rather than plywood. It took some time to build but it was fun.

Another note about the filter flasks:
I bought some white rubber bung plugs that fit them. They are designed for regular thin-wall erlenmeyer flasks; but will work on the heavy filter flasks with some effort.
I put a piece of sterile IV tubing through one of those plugs with a female luer bulkhead fitting. From there I use an IV extension tubing to a 3-way stopcock. The sterile tubing allows me to draw the sterile oil from the flask with a syringe; leaving the cap or bung in place so nothing can get inside.
I just put everything under the hood (flask of oil, vials, stoppers, syringe), put on a new pair of sterile gloves, draw the oil up, inject it into the vials and put the stoppers in. Once all the vials are filled and stoppered; I take them out and crimp on the caps.
I do kinda feel like Walter White with all this; and my wife was like “WTF!” when she saw it all. But it’s fun and I know my stuff is completely sterile.
 
Thanks for help. I made a hood out of a sandblasting cabinet from harborfreight. Thought it might be overkill but it seems like I am on the right track. Love the stopper idea and will be adding that before I brew this week. I was going to pour into another beaker and draw from there. Thanks for saving me that step. This seems a lot like when I brew beer. 90% cleaning and 10% actual work.
 
Thanks for help. I made a hood out of a sandblasting cabinet from harborfreight. Thought it might be overkill but it seems like I am on the right track. Love the stopper idea and will be adding that before I brew this week. I was going to pour into another beaker and draw from there. Thanks for saving me that step. This seems a lot like when I brew beer. 90% cleaning and 10% actual work.
No prob man. Glad to offer anything that might help. And yes sir, at least 90% cleaning and prepping.

But it is all gonna be worth it. I actually drained a big abscess on a patient on New Year's Eve. He got it from a bad injection in the deltoid. I didn't ask him if it was aas he was injecting; but the location of the abscess and his physique answered before I asked.
They are so painful and can lead to vast tissue damage. The abscess was big enough I had to pack it with iodoform and refer him to surgery to follow up. It just made all the stuff I bought and the work involved well worth it.

I like the blast cabinet idea. I hadn't thought of that.
 
FYI, I've heard people use the air inlet on the erlynmeyer flask to pour into their vials. Never tried it but heard it works pretty good.

Though I like the sterile iv tubing better.
 
FYI, I've heard people use the air inlet on the erlynmeyer flask to pour into their vials. Never tried it but heard it works pretty good.

Though I like the sterile iv tubing better.
It will certainly pour from the vacuum port; but, for me, it was difficult to control the flow. That is where I got the idea of drawing it up with a syringe; and it just grew into my current method from there.
It is weird to think about the thought and work I have put into this over the last couple of months. I wish I had been this motivated and had this much fun in grad school........
 
The blast cabinet just seemed easier to use. Sealed all the seams with silicone. Then I made up ductwork from a hepa room filter unit to the exhaust port on the cabinet. Left the gloves off of it so air can flow out and I can get work done. Planning to run all my gso through a .45 first then brew then .22. Think I have 200 into it and a few hours to put it all together.

Pouring out of the spout is an idea as well. Doing 50ml bottles so brew 50. Fill a bottle and brew the other 50 would also work I would think.
 
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