Hi All,
Can someone tell me please why the agar sometimes sets & other times it doesn't.
Thanks
Nahrein
Agar blocks
- Lis
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- Job Title: Laboratory Technician
- School: Central Coast Grammar
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Re: Agar blocks
Hi Nahrein,
I found if I dont boil the agar long enough it wont set.
Lisa
I found if I dont boil the agar long enough it wont set.
Lisa
-
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- State/Location: NSW
Re: Agar blocks
Thanks Lisa for replying. I thought it might be the amount of agar I used or the agar being old.
- Lis
- Posts: 362
- Joined: 01 Jun 2006, 10:00
- Job Title: Laboratory Technician
- School: Central Coast Grammar
- Suburb: Erina Heights
- State/Location: NSW
Re: Agar blocks
If you need blocks you would use more agar, I am not sure of shelf life though,
- Graham Kemp
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Re: Agar blocks
Agar agar has a fairly infinite shelf-life; just so long as it's kept dry.nahrein.yaghoubpour wrote:Thanks Lisa for replying. I thought it might be the amount of agar I used or the agar being old.
To make a litre, disolve 15-20g agar agar, and nutrients, in about 850mL of cold distilled water. (Eg: 5g peptone, 3g beef extract or substitutes such as vegemite.)
Mix thoroughly until you get a cloudy suspension, with no powder settling on the bottom or floating on the top.
Bring to near boiling while stirring for about five minutes. Don't allow to boil; add cold distilled water to keep the brew from bubbling. Continue until the solution clarrifies into a clean yellow solution. It won't go fully clear, but the phase transition is noticable. This is your visual test. If it's still cloudy it won't set.
Optionally at this point, pipette a test dash into the dimple of a cold dropping tile and pop into the fridge for a moment to see if it will set properly. Just continue heating, and maybe disolve in a few more grams of agar agar, until satified.
Let the solution start to cool, then dilute to volume with cool distilled water.
Pour into conical flasks with a cotton plug, capped by aluminium foil, and autoclave for 15 minutes at 140 kPa. These can be stored in the fridge until needed (and remelted in the autoclave again for a few minutes), or used immediately.
However, the autoclaved solution should be allowed to cool to below 50 C before pouring onto plates, to reduce condensation. Additionally, this means the conical flasks should be cool enough to handle by hand rather than needing clumby heat proof gloves. (But do test carefully.)
Last edited by Graham Kemp on 16 May 2013, 11:10, edited 1 time in total.
- Graham Kemp
- Posts: 173
- Joined: 22 Nov 2011, 09:21
- Job Title: Laboratory Assistant
- School: St John's School
- Suburb: Roma
- State/Location: QLD
Re: Agar blocks
Blocks of agar agar for "'cell' volume and surface area" practicals can be made using 20-25g agar agar and 100g salt as a stiffening agent. The blocks are then stable enough to be handled by students; and the salt keeps them extra sterile.Lis wrote:If you need blocks you would use more agar, I am not sure of shelf life though,
I set the blocks in a set of dropping bottle carry trays. The dividers pull out allowing the blocks to be extracted smoothly.
The same setting technique also works for phenylphthalein agar blocks (made with 25g agar per L, and while cooling add 10mL 1% phth and ~10mL 0.1M NaOH til color change.)
Both can be stored for months in cool cuboard if sealed inside tupperware containers. Without added nutrients, agar agar is fairly sterile, and the main concern is drying out.