Mold incubator with temperature & humidity control NovaIncu MD750-I
Mold incubator with temperature & humidity control NovaIncu MD750-I
Features
- Robust design includes a stainless steel interior, external housing, and safety glass components.
- Double-door access and stainless steel shelves provide practicality and durability.
- Refrigeration unit is engineered for reliability, with protective controls and low fluctuation.
- Employs 3D heating technology and an optional UV lamp for uniform, decontaminated conditions.
- High-performance controller with fast processing handles complex climatic simulations.
- Integrated humidity system automates water management with fail-safe alarms.
- Dynamic interactive control ensures temperature and humidity setpoints are met without conflict.
- Enables sophisticated, unattended testing with programmable 99-hour sequences.
- System monitors itself and alerts users to any operational anomalies.
- Configurable with a secondary safety cut-off to meet stringent compliance requirements.
Specifications
| Model | NovaIncu MD750-I | |
| Chamber volume(L) | 750 | |
| Temperature Control Range | 5℃~50℃ | |
| Temperature | Resolution | 0.1℃ |
| Fluctuation | ±0.5℃ | |
| Uniformity | ±2℃ at 37℃ | |
| controller | ||
| Sensor | ||
| Timer | ||
| Humidity range | ||
| Humidity | Accuracy | |
| Fluctuation | ||
| controller | ||
| Sensor | ||
| Material | Internal | |
| External | ||
| Dimensions (WxDxH,cm) | Internal | 85*80*110 |
| External | 100*115*188 | |
| Net Weight(Kg) | 247 | |
| Consumption Power(W) | 3060 | |
| Shelf Size(mm) | 828*780 | |
| Shelf Qty(Standard/Maximum) | 3/17 | |
| Power Supply | 220V/50Hz (Optional: 220V/60Hz, 110V/60Hz) | |
Introduction about incubator
In the intersection of geology and biology, incubators facilitate the study of ancient and extreme life. Geomicrobiologists use incubators to culture microorganisms obtained from deep subsurface cores, hydrothermal vents, or hyper-saline lakes.
These extremophiles often require unusual conditions: anaerobic jars placed inside incubators to create oxygen-free atmospheres, or temperatures set to very high (for thermophiles) or very low (for psychrophiles) settings, sometimes requiring specialized refrigerated/heated incubators. In paleontology and archaeology, incubators are used in a more indirect way. Sterile techniques and incubators can be employed to attempt to culture modern contaminants from ancient specimens (like dinosaur bones or permafrost samples) to confirm sterility before attempting to extract ancient DNA or proteins.
Furthermore, experiments simulating early Earth conditions to study the origin of life (prebiotic chemistry) often take place in controlled environment chambers that function like sophisticated incubators, regulating temperature, pressure, and atmospheric composition. Here, the incubator moves from a tool for growing known life to an instrument for probing the boundaries of life itself and its potential in extreme or ancient environments.
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