Büchner flask

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Cross section of a Büchner Flask. Note the hose barb pointing right for attaching a vacuum source.
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Cross section of a Büchner Flask. Note the hose barb pointing right for attaching a vacuum source.
A Büchner funnel is attached to the flask via a black elastomer adapter. The hose barb is connected to a vacuum source. The flask should be clamped before use to prevent tipping.
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A Büchner funnel is attached to the flask via a black elastomer adapter. The hose barb is connected to a vacuum source. The flask should be clamped before use to prevent tipping.

A Büchner flask, also known as a vacuum flask[1], filter flask or Kitasato flask, is a thick-walled erlenmeyer flask with a short glass tube and hose barb protruding about an inch from its neck. The short tube and hose barb effectively acts as an adapter over which the end of a thick-walled flexible hose (tubing) can be fitted to form a connection to the flask. The other end of the hose can be connected to source of vacuum such as an aspirator, vacuum pump, or house vacuum. Preferably this is done through a trap (see below), which is designed to prevent the suckback of water from the aspirator into the Büchner flask.

The thick wall of the Büchner flask provides it the strength to withstand the pressure difference while holding a vacuum inside. It is primarily used together with a Büchner funnel fitted through a drilled rubber bung or an elastomer adapter at the neck on top of the flask for filtration of samples. The Büchner funnel holds the sample isolated from the suction by a layer of filter paper. During filtration, the filtrate enters and is held by the flask while the residue remains on the filter paper in the funnel.

The Büchner flask can also used as a vacuum trap in a vacuum line to ensure that no fluids are carried over from the aspirator or vacuum pump (or other vacuum source) to the evacuated apparatus or vice versa.

It is commonly thought to be named for the Nobel Laureate, Eduard Buchner, but it is actually named for the industrial chemist Ernst Büchner.

[edit] References and notes

  1. ^ The use of the term vacuum flask sometimes causes confusion with the Thermos flask
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