Difference between revisions of "Team:WashU StLouis/Hardware"

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     <p style="font-size:1.5vw">The Environmental Simulation System (ESS) is a suite of useful unit operations which includes: (1) a lamp producing UV-B radiation; (2) a miniature orbital shaker; and (3) a temperature control system. First, we acquired a reptile lamp (found at a local pet store) which produces a very narrow wavelength of light found within the spectrum of UV-B radiation. We performed a series of experiments to demonstrate the effect of UV exposure under the lamp on DH5α cells.</p>
 
     <p style="font-size:1.5vw">The Environmental Simulation System (ESS) is a suite of useful unit operations which includes: (1) a lamp producing UV-B radiation; (2) a miniature orbital shaker; and (3) a temperature control system. First, we acquired a reptile lamp (found at a local pet store) which produces a very narrow wavelength of light found within the spectrum of UV-B radiation. We performed a series of experiments to demonstrate the effect of UV exposure under the lamp on DH5α cells.</p>
  
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     <video controls style="height:400px;"><source src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/1/13/Shaker.mp4" type="video/mp4"><source src="" type="video/ogg"></video>
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     <p style="font-size:1.5vw">We also constructed a working orbital shaker based on a <a href="https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5045">previously drafted design</a>which would allow us to grow liquid cultures outside the 37 degree room while being exposed to UV radiation.
 
     <p style="font-size:1.5vw">We also constructed a working orbital shaker based on a <a href="https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5045">previously drafted design</a>which would allow us to grow liquid cultures outside the 37 degree room while being exposed to UV radiation.

Revision as of 05:14, 1 November 2017

Hardware

The Environmental Simulation System

As we further developed our project, we ran into several issues - the foremost of which was the lack of any equipment in our lab that we could use to test the effectiveness of our modified cells against UV-B radiation. Much of the equipment in lab which utilizes UV radiation does so at the UV-A and UV-C spectrums and not specifically at the relatively narrow range from 285-315 nm. This left us in bit of a pickle: how could we test our cells without our light source specifically emitting UV-B radiation? Our solution was to design a new piece of hardware, which we dubbed the Environmental Simulation System.

The Environmental Simulation System (ESS) is a suite of useful unit operations which includes: (1) a lamp producing UV-B radiation; (2) a miniature orbital shaker; and (3) a temperature control system. First, we acquired a reptile lamp (found at a local pet store) which produces a very narrow wavelength of light found within the spectrum of UV-B radiation. We performed a series of experiments to demonstrate the effect of UV exposure under the lamp on DH5α cells.

We also constructed a working orbital shaker based on a previously drafted designwhich would allow us to grow liquid cultures outside the 37 degree room while being exposed to UV radiation. Finally, we built a simple temperature control loop into our ESS to incubate our cells at optimal growth temperatures. With this feature combined with our orbital shaker, our Environmental Simulation System has the potential to operate as a tabletop version of the incubation rooms required for any E. Coli or Cyanobacteria labs. Not only is this a remarkable achievement that could be employed by community labs and