Quartz ELISA 96 Wells Plate with Flat Quartz Glass Cover / Lid for PCR UV Measurements

Item Name: Quartz ELISA 96 Wells Plate with Flat Quartz Glass Cover / Lid for PCR UV Measurements
Material: Quartz Glass
Item NO.: 7251748
Custom Fabrication Available

Quartz ELISA 96 Wells Plate with Flat Quartz Glass Cover : Lid 1

Quartz ELISA 96 Wells Plate

Quartz 96 wells plate enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) plates can be made as a whole. This kind of processing can make it more practical and durable. The processing difficulty of quartz 96 well plate is relatively high. Each hole of it needs to be manual polishing. There is also a risk of fragmentation during polishing process. This is the reason for its increased cost. The quartz 96 well plate can also be paired with a flat quartz plate as a sealing cover. The contact surface between such a quartz cover and a quartz 96 wells plate must be absolutely flat. We can also customize quartz lid separately for each hole.

The main characteristics of quartz glass

  1. Heat resistance

The softening point of quartz glass is 1730 ℃. It can be used for a long time below 1100 ℃, and the temperature for short time use is up to 1450 ℃.

  1. Light transmission

Quartz glass has good light transmittance in the entire optical spectrum from ultraviolet to infrared, and the visible light transmittance is more than 93%, especially in the ultraviolet spectral region, the maximum transmittance can reach more than 80%.

  1. Electrical insulation

The electrical resistance of quartz glass is equivalent to 10,000 times that of ordinary glass.

  1. Chemical stability

Quartz glass almost don’t react chemically with other acid-base substances except hydrofluoric acid.

  1. Thermal stability

Quartz glass has low expansion coefficient, and it can withstand drastic temperature changes.

  1. Hardness characteristics

With the hardness of Mohs level 7, the mechanical properties of quartz glass are better than hard glass and ceramics, and the strength of quartz glass improves with the increase of temperature, reaching its maximum when approaching the annealing temperature.

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