in the listing it reads THEY WERE OWNED BY A "PROFESSER OF BIOLOGY"
ignoring the spelling above and the vagueness of the following question;
what 'special' precautions (if any) should I take when giving the tubes their first clean?
one clue is handwritten on the rack " J W Staph" which could mean Staphylococcus, Staphysagria or similar?
(or maybe J W was a staff member that also (like me) is 'spelling challenged')
Googling 'J W staph thunberg' didn't give anything definite.
incidentally, I do not have much use for Thunberg tubes at the moment,
I bid on a whim and unexpectedly won !
[Edited on 7-6-2015 by Sulaiman]aga - 7-6-2015 at 13:09
Boil them.
All Life tends to stop above about 72 C after a few minutes.
Give it an hour of boiling and they'll be as biologically clean as anything ever is.
[Edited on 7-6-2015 by aga]Sulaiman - 7-6-2015 at 13:11
nice and simple ...thanks !aga - 7-6-2015 at 13:17
If you're paranoid, put a lid on the pan, or use a pressure cooking pot.
Most likely this has already been done before you bought them.Zombie - 7-6-2015 at 13:26
Pressure cook them at 15PSI for one hour minimum.
Many common pathogens survive boiling temps. If you don't have access to an autoclave, a pressure cooker is the next best thing.
I wouldn't be too worried but I wouldn't lick them or see what they smell like just yet. My Spidey sense tells me that won't be good.aga - 7-6-2015 at 13:39
"Endospores are able to survive at 100 °C for hours, although the longer the number of hours the fewer that will survive"
"To kill all anthrax spores, standard household bleach .. 5% ... diluted 10:1 ... 10 minutes ... Higher concentrations of bleach are
not more effective ..."Bot0nist - 7-6-2015 at 23:40
I agree that there are chemical means of destroying endospores, much more efficiently than heat. Especially since most people would not boil their
test tubes for "hours."
I HIGHLY doubt the OP has anything to worry about that that a good cleaning and solvent wash, maybe a boil, couldn't handle. Unless maybe the OP plans
to prepare solutions to be used for intravenous application in the test tubes. ChemistryGhost - 7-6-2015 at 23:43
Boil them in a pressure cooker with 95%+ pure isopropyl alcohol. Or freeze them with isopropyl alcohol and dry ice bath. Nothing can survive -78° C
or lower! Bot0nist - 7-6-2015 at 23:51
Unless the used and resold test tubes somehow contain non-terrestrial pathogens from... Europa maybe. Best play it safe and heat to a dull red glow,
then follow with gamma sterilization. unionised - 8-6-2015 at 00:05
Boil them in a pressure cooker with 95%+ pure isopropyl alcohol. Or freeze them with isopropyl alcohol and dry ice bath. Nothing can survive -78° C
or lower!
That would really piss off the people who store bacteria on dry ice.
Also, a pressure cooker full of flammable liquid is a spectacularly dumb idea.
If you don't have a pressure cooker (or don't want to use it for stuff that's not food) then bleach works.
All biology is based on proteins.
All proteins are amides
All amides are susceptible to the hoffman degradation when treated with hypochlorite.
So, as long as you use enough bleach, you will kill everything.Fulmen - 8-6-2015 at 04:39
So, as long as you use enough bleach, you will kill everything.
As per the wiki regarding antrax endo-jobbies, too high a concentration of bleach caused clumping and a LOWER rate of disinfection.
0.5% solution seems to be the way to go.
Lots of it maybe, just not a high concentration.
Edit:
To be completely OCD about it, Autoclave them for a month, heat them until the glass melts, hold there for a week, allow to cool, then bash the glass
blob flat with a sledgehammer just in case any escaped.
Alternatively just boil them with a lid on for an hour and they'll be fine.
Biochemists tend to study Live samples.
[Edited on 8-6-2015 by aga]confused - 8-6-2015 at 18:27
Here's a thought, why not use Fenton's reagent as a disinfectant