- published: 26 Dec 2014
- views: 7637
A biosafety cabinet (BSC) — also called a biological safety cabinet or microbiological safety cabinet — is an enclosed, ventilated laboratory workspace for safely working with materials contaminated with (or potentially contaminated with) pathogens requiring a defined biosafety level. Several different types of BSC exist, differentiated by the degree of biocontainment required. BSCs first became commercially available in 1950.
The primary purpose of a BSC is to serve as a means to protect the laboratory worker and the surrounding environment from pathogens. All exhaust air is HEPA-filtered as it exits the biosafety cabinet, removing harmful bacteria and viruses. This is in contrast to a laminar flow clean bench, which blows unfiltered exhaust air towards the user and is not safe for work with pathogenic agents. Neither are most BSCs safe for use as fume hoods. Likewise, a fume hood fails to provide the environmental protection that HEPA filtration in a BSC would provide. However, most classes of BSCs have a secondary purpose to maintain the sterility of materials inside (the "product").
Biosafety is the prevention of large-scale loss of biological integrity, focusing both on ecology and human health. These prevention mechanisms include conduction of regular reviews of the biosafety in laboratory settings, as well as strict guidelines to follow. Biosafety is used to protect from harmful incidents. High security facilities are necessary when working with synthetic biology as there are possibilities of bioterrorism acts or release of harmful chemicals and or organisms into the environment. A complete understanding of experimental risks associated with synthetic biology is helping to enforce the knowledge and effectiveness of biosafety.
Biosafety is related to several fields:
Cabinet or The Cabinet may refer to:
An instructional video from Esco Biotech detailing out the standard procedures to follow when working in Class II Biological Safety Cabinet. Providing step-by-step instructions starting from properly planning your work in a Biological Safety Cabinet, do's and don't's while working in the Biological Safety Cabinet to how to shut down the cabinet at the end of your process. Website: www.escoglobal.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/EscoGlobal Twitter: www.twitter.com/EscoGlobal Google+: www.gplus.to/EscoGlobal Email: mail@escoglobal.com
This video visualizes the airflow in a biosafety cabinet, which allows you to organize your work and protect yourself (against exposure to pathogens) and the cultures (from contamination). The Basler & Hofmann workshop "Working Safely in the Biosafety Cabinet" will enable you to better protect the BSC operator and cultures from exposure and contamination, respectively. Workshop information: www.gmuender.org/ftp/BSC.pdf
Biological Safety Cabinet - We Are Made Safety - Copyright Ⓒ 2013 Advanced Laboratory System CHC LAB. All rights reserved
Our EN 12469 Certified biological safety cabinet offers exceptional user and sample protection.. The difference is the design: see SmartFlow, dual DC motors, Digital Airflow Verification (DAVe), and SmartPort in action.
A safety video on how to use Biosafety cabinets.
See how this class II, Type A2 biological safety cabinet protects your research from contamination and can save operating costs.
This video demonstrates how biological safety cabinets work to protect you -- providing protection to laboratory workers, product and the environment while reducing the risk of exposure. Thoroughly understanding how a biological safety cabinet works while following established lab safety protocols will help prevent contamination of your work and protect you at the same time.
This video describes how to work safely in a class II biological safety cabinet
A safety video on how to use Biosafety cabinets.
A demonstration of the difference between fume hoods and biosafety cabinets
How to work inside a biosafety cabinet. Watch as Brennen explains the proper way to pipette inside a biosafety cabinet