Difference between revisions of "Μl"
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In general micropipettes work best in the middle of their range (half of their "number", 100 µl for a p200, etc.). Volumes less than 1 µl can be tricky to work with. Use a P10 micropipette instead of a P20 and/or extended pipette tips if you have them. | In general micropipettes work best in the middle of their range (half of their "number", 100 µl for a p200, etc.). Volumes less than 1 µl can be tricky to work with. Use a P10 micropipette instead of a P20 and/or extended pipette tips if you have them. | ||
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+ | =What Links Here= | ||
+ | {{Special:WhatLinksHere/{{FULLPAGENAME}}}} |
Revision as of 00:00, 17 July 2018
A microliter (µl) is one millionth of a liter (a factor of 10−6).
Volumes in the 1 µl – 20 µl should be transferred with a P20 micropipette.
Volumes in the 20 µl – 200 µl should be transferred with a P200 micropipette.
Volumes in the 200 µl – 1000 µl should be transferred with a P1000 micropipette.
In general micropipettes work best in the middle of their range (half of their "number", 100 µl for a p200, etc.). Volumes less than 1 µl can be tricky to work with. Use a P10 micropipette instead of a P20 and/or extended pipette tips if you have them.
What Links Here
- PCR (← links)
- Agarose Gels (← links)