Building a Simplistic Automatic Extruder: Instrument Development Opportunities for the Laboratory
Stefanie Klisch, Dylan Gilbert, Emma Breaux, Aliyah Dalier, Sudipta, Gupta, Bruno Jakobi, Gerald J. Schneider

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple, easy-to-assemble automatic extruder for laboratory use, enhancing reproducibility and educational value in STEM labs by combining instrument development with practical application in vesicle preparation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a low-complexity automatic extruder design suitable for educational settings, enabling students to learn instrument development and improve sample preparation reproducibility.
Findings
The extruder design is easy to assemble with common lab materials.
Automation improves reproducibility of vesicle extrusion.
Students gain skills in coding, testing, and instrument construction.
Abstract
A well-rounded introduction to work in a STEM laboratory is vital to scientific education. Besides the ability to use available instrumentation for sample characterization, students should also be imparted knowledge in the steps of instrument development and construction. These concepts can be taught using the example of lipid vesicle preparation via extrusion. Vesicle extrusion is a common technique that involves syringes pushing solutions through membrane filters and is used in fundamental studies on vesicles. Such research is important to better understand of biological phenomena and drug development. Well prepared samples are key to successful research. While the manual approach is very useful to acquire experience, automatic extrusion is more convenient, and automation often results in better reproducibility. These advantages can be combined in a simplistic automatic extruder, that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEngineering Education and Pedagogy · Music Technology and Sound Studies · Material Properties and Processing
