PureTIP One

Automated plasma cleaning that enables high-throughput pipette tip reuse

Discover The Next Step In Plastic Labware Reuse

High-throughput labs invest in automation to remove bottlenecks, reduce variability, and scale reliably. Tip consumption is one of the last remaining linear systems inside a highly automated environment.

With fully automated cleaning up to 70 racks/hour, PureTIP One fits where it belongs: as infrastructure that keeps your lab moving.

If the modern lab is defined by closed-loop workflows, tip reuse isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the next logical step.

How Does Plasma Cleaning Work?

Automation

Most high-throughput environments run on a simple principle: minimize human touch. Every manual handoff introduces risk, contamination, operator variability, and delay. Automation is the only reliable way to scale.

But tip usage has historically lived outside that model. Tips arrive, they’re staged, used once, and discarded. It’s a linear system, high volume in, high volume out.

PureTIP One changes that model to circular. Used racks become input, and cleaned racks return as usable inventory. With an open API, PureTIP One can be integrated directly into existing automation workflows, allowing labs to control and coordinate cleaning alongside their current systems. For teams looking to move faster, turnkey automation solutions are available through our automation partner, delivering a fully integrated, end-to-end process. When cleaning is automated at this level, tip reuse stops being “a program” and becomes a background utility, like plate sealing or barcode scanning.

Proven Effective

Proven to Effectively Remove:

 

  • DNA, RNA, siRNA, mRNA – to PCR Clean

  • Macromolecules – Proteins, carbohydrates, etc.

  • Complexes of macromolecules, eg. Immunoglobins

  • Low molecular weight compounds in DMSO

  • Cells, viruses, and sub-viral particles

Why PureTIP One?

With fully automated cleaning up to 70 racks/hour, PureTIP One fits where it belongs: as infrastructure that keeps your lab moving.

Read Our Latest Blogs!

An Introduction to Plasma

An Introduction To PlasmaIn 1927, the term plasma was adopted by Nobel Prize-winning chemist Irving Langmuir to describe the properties of gases in which atoms have been ionized by high voltage to form free negatively charged electrons and positive ions (in a neutral...

How Does IonField Clean with Plasma?

How Does IonField Clean with Plasma ?Why Use Plasma? The use of plasma for cleaning is a common industrial process. Industrial plasma cleaning is most commonly performed in low-pressure chambers using specialized gas(es). IonfFeld uses plasma generated from room air,...

Microplate Circularity

Microplate CircularityIt doesn't matter if you're dealing with complex technology or seemingly simple goods like a cotton T-shirt, the global supply chain is an endlessly complicated network of materials and people. For example, the life cycle of a simple T-shirt is...

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