Interesting find. Conductive polymers might be an option. However, the threshold for conductivity to be a good wire is much higher than to dissipate static. If I understand the units correctly (I don't quite get sheet resistance, especially since these are not sheets but bristles), I think these brushes have a conductivity somewhere between that of wood and glass. That is conductive enough to not build up static, but still more of an insulator than a conductor. Are there more conductive polymers out there? I think you'd want something sub-ohm, while these are 10,000-1,000,000 ohms/square. What about something like this: https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/graphite-polymer-super-thin-high-thermal_60530140212.html?spm=a2700.7724838.2017115.1.22c14c640y8th5&s=p?
On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 1:24 AM Björn Johansson <bjornjobb@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all and sorry for resurrecting this old thread.I have retrofitted some old electrophoresis units with stainless steel wire for electrodes and this works using TAE buffer for a while before thebuffer gets an odd color (green).However, I recently cam across a superior buffer containing LiAc and boric acid and this seems much more aggressive, the unit fills up with rust after one run.Platinum wire is an obvious choice, but it is quite expensive.I came across something I think wasn't mentioned here: conductive brush wire (sold here).This wire is probably used for brushes that can not be allowed to build up static electricity.This wire seems to be made from some plastic with a carbon filler.Could this be an option?/bjorn--
On Sunday, May 26, 2013 at 7:29:19 PM UTC+1, Josiah Zayner wrote:I have been testing out a bunch of different metals and they either oxidize to death on the minutes timescale or in the case of stainless steel turn the buffer orange/brown.Platinum wire is pretty expensive ~$1.00 cm^-1. Has anyone had luck with a cheaper metal at 100V or greater with TAE?I have tried:NickelStainless Steel 430Tinned CopperThinking of trying Titanium or Nickel Titanium (<= $4 meter^-1). Anyone ever tried these?Thanks,Josiah Zayner
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