Nodda Duma
Member
As I prepare to make my second batch of emulsion, one of the details I wanted to gain control of is the precipitation stage. For my first attempt, I used a syringe and winged it after a couple minutes' worth of practice, so I'm sure my precipitation rate was all over the place.
At the suggestion of my wife (now a Physician Assistant, formerly a Mechanical Engineer), I acquired two paristaltic pump heads (1 and a spare) which are capable of the 40 ml / minute drip rate that I need. The recipe I'm using calls for adding silver nitrate at a rate of 20 ml every 30 seconds for 10 minutes while stirring vigorously.
I selected an OEM paristaltic pump head off of eBay (item # 131273566619) which provides a maximum of 100 ml / min pump rate at 12V.
Shown with wires that I soldered on for power
The pump head had a short piece of tubing already attached, which I replaced with a 1m length of the tube that it uses (2.5mm I.D. x 4.7 mm O.D. silicon tubing, or 3/32" ID x 3/16" OD silicone tubing, eBay item # 331786745681).
Initial testing with water dyed blue-green.
That went well.
At the suggestion of my wife (now a Physician Assistant, formerly a Mechanical Engineer), I acquired two paristaltic pump heads (1 and a spare) which are capable of the 40 ml / minute drip rate that I need. The recipe I'm using calls for adding silver nitrate at a rate of 20 ml every 30 seconds for 10 minutes while stirring vigorously.
I selected an OEM paristaltic pump head off of eBay (item # 131273566619) which provides a maximum of 100 ml / min pump rate at 12V.
Shown with wires that I soldered on for power
The pump head had a short piece of tubing already attached, which I replaced with a 1m length of the tube that it uses (2.5mm I.D. x 4.7 mm O.D. silicon tubing, or 3/32" ID x 3/16" OD silicone tubing, eBay item # 331786745681).
Initial testing with water dyed blue-green.
That went well.