coverwell_incubation_chamber_header

CoverWell™ incubation chambers

CoverWell™ incubation chambers are reusable, easy to apply chambers that attach without the use of adhesive.  CoverWells™ enclose a large sample area with a small reagent volume and preserve kinetic (non-capillary) fluid dynamics for better reagent mixing and lower backgrounds within the chamber for more uniformly sensitive assays. These ready-to-use chambers are designed expressly for in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry.

Features

  • Eliminate precipitate deposits on specimens by incubating slides and specimens upside down during enzymatic color precipitation reaction
  • Provides an exceptionally secure seal during submerged water bath and/or high temperature incubations
  • RNase and DNase free
  • Easily removed
  • Adheres to wet or dry surfaces

Please note, that we can customize chamber shape, size and depth for your application.

Products

Id Title
645401 PC20-CoverWell Incubation Chambers, 13mm Dia. X 0.2mm ID, 22mm X 25mm OD / Approx. Vol. 20UL - 25 PACK1
645402 PC200-CoverWell Incubation Chambers, 22mm X 40mm X 0.2mm Depth, 25mm X 44mm OD / Approx. Vol. 200UL - 25 PACK2
645501 PC50-CoverWell Incubation Chambers, 13mm Dia. X 0.5mm ID, 22mm X 25mm OD / Approx. Vol. 50UL - 50 PACK3
645502 PC500-CoverWell Incubation Chambers, 22mm X 40mm X 0.5mm, 25mm X 44mm OD / Approx. Vol. 500UL - 50 PACK4

1) CoverWell incubation chambers are reusable, easy to apply incubation chambers that attach without the use of adhesive

2) CoverWell incubation chambers are reusable, easy to apply incubation chambers that attach without the use of adhesive

3) CoverWell incubation chambers are reusable, easy to apply incubation chambers that attach without the use of adhesive

4) CoverWell incubation chambers are reusable, easy to apply incubation chambers that attach without the use of adhesive

References

  • Fa, N., Lins, L., Courtoy, P. J., Dufrêne, Y., Van Der Smissen, P., Brasseur, R., … Mingeot-Leclercq, M.-P. (2007). Decrease of elastic moduli of DOPC bilayers induced by a macrolide antibiotic, azithromycin. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta, 1768(7), 1830–1838
  • Gachet, Y., & Hyams, J. S. (2005). Endocytosis in fission yeast is spatially associated with the actin cytoskeleton during polarised cell growth and cytokinesis. Journal of Cell Science, 118(Pt 18), 4231–4242
  • Hinds, K. A., Hill, J. M., Shapiro, E. M., Laukkanen, M. O., Silva, A. C., Combs, C. A., … Dunbar, C. E. (2003). Highly efficient endosomal labeling of progenitor and stem cells with large magnetic particles allows magnetic resonance imaging of single cells. Blood, 102(3), 867–872