Hand Centrifuge
Why We Need It
Cell pelleting requires ~300g for 7 minutes. Lab microcentrifuges run at 10,000-16,000g — cell pelleting is a tiny fraction of maximum speed. The physics are accessible with cheap motors.
Pelleting allows:
- Concentrating cells from dilute nasal wash into small volume
- Washing away background histamine, environmental noise, and cromolyn from collection spray
- Resuspending in controlled volume of clean buffer
G-Force Math
G = (RPM² × radius_cm) / 895
Target: 300g, 7 minutes
At 3,000 RPM: need radius = (300 × 895) / (3000²) = 268,500 / 9,000,000 = ~3cm
At 2,000 RPM: need radius = (300 × 895) / (2000²) = ~6.7cm
Design the rotor radius to match your motor’s RPM. Bake the calculation into the print.
Motor Options
Dollar Store Fan Motor
- ~$3, available everywhere
- Estimated 3,000-5,000 RPM unloaded
- Not regulated — RPM varies under load
- Sufficient for cell pelleting where precision isn’t critical
- Problem: Designed for fan blade loading, not tube loading. Balance is the engineering challenge.
Small DC Motor (preferred)
- Hobby motors, RC car motors — $5-15
- Known RPM ratings
- Easier to mount and balance
- USB-powered options available (5V, 500mA from any phone charger)
Drill (immediate home option)
- Variable speed, handles rotational loads
- 3D printed rotor attaches to chuck
- Run at lowest speed setting
- Good for Splatspace experiments before dedicated motor
3D Printed Rotor Design
Key requirements:
- Balance — tubes must be positioned symmetrically. Always load in opposing pairs.
- Fixed radius — tubes held at consistent distance from center for reproducible G-force
- Retention — tubes cannot fly out at speed. Snap-fit or friction fit with positive retention.
- Safety shroud — containment in case of tube failure. Not optional when working with biological samples.
Print in PETG or ABS — better chemical resistance than PLA, more appropriate for lab environment.
Tube slots at calculated radius for target G-force at expected motor RPM.
Kit Product Version
For consumer kit: whirligig/paracord style centrifuge.
Stanford bioengineers demonstrated 125,000 RPM with paper/string whirligig (published PLOS ONE ~2017), sufficient for plasma separation. Cell pelleting is a much lower bar — needs ~300g, trivially achievable.
- No power required
- Manufacturable for cents
- Proven in low-resource diagnostics
- Consistent with home use format
Design: 3D printed tube holder on paracord. User pumps cord to spin. Timer included in protocol (7 minutes). Low-tech, reliable, no batteries.
Status
- Design rotor for drill attachment (Splatspace use)
- Print and test balance
- Characterize actual RPM with tachometer or phone app
- Verify cell pelleting at calculated G-force
- Design whirligig version for kit