Jean-Baptiste,

Since these were conceived and developed by Jon Spear when he was a member of my group (at the ALS at the time), I know a bit about these Dewars, their intended usage, and relative benefits. When Jon first made them, the beamline users and staff quickly realized the advantages, they spread around the ALS, and then to other sources. My guess is that for other beamlines that have both these and
vacuum-jacketed Dewars, the users prefer these over other options.

As with all things, the advantages and disadvantages must be viewed in context of what the use is. The fact that these will not shatter, can be shaped to whatever the needed dimensions are and pockets can be machined in to allow for transport pucks, cryo-tools, etc., they cool and warm rapidly and are inexpensive, are all distinct advantages. Thus for freezing and manipulating crystals at home or the beamline, they are excellent and
inexpensive options.

Regarding the two comments that followed your post from Uwe and James:

Uwe: When using Berkeley-style pucks or Unipucks (which replicated the Berkeley form factor), these are sufficiently dimensioned, and I believe there is a version that accommodates the SSRL cassette. If you want another dimension, I suggest contacting Jon directly and discuss this with him.

James: I'm not sure why you think that chemical resistance or autoclaving are relevant to the discussion, as these are for holding and transporting liquid nitrogen and sample cryo-transport units. Also they are machined with a bit more precision than a "carpet knife" would give, and this eliminates the burrs or other bits that
may tend to flake off, as well as allowing for shaping to need.


- Thomas


Thomas Earnest, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist and Group Leader
Structural Proteomics Development Group
Physical Biosciences Division
MS64R0121
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Berkeley CA 94720

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
510 486 4603



Jean-Baptiste REISER wrote:
Dear all,

Does anyone in the biocrystallogaphy community use foam dewars for handly liquid nitrogen and freezing/manipulating frozen protein crystals ?

We are interested in the following dewar package from Hampton Research : http://www.hamptonresearch.com/products/ProductDetails.aspx?cid=24&sid=187&pid=559

But before purchasing, we would like to have any comments on the advantages and drawbacks from people who already tried those dewars.

Thanks in advance for your help and advices.

--

*Dr JEAN-BAPTISTE REISER - Chargé de recherche CNRS*

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