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Braking Ramps
Lab Academy
- Centrifugation
- Essay
Most of the larger benchtop centrifuges on the market as well as some small benchtop centrifuges offer what are called acceleration and deceleration (braking) ramps. Most small benchtop centrifuges also enable the user to switch between a normal brake and a soft/slow brake.

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To prevent remixing the phases, the protocol requires that acceleration/deceleration be shut off completely so that the centrifuge accelerates slowly and high forces cannot disturb the gradient. During the run, the different blood components can pass through the gradient and accumulate in the appropriate phase according to their density. When the brake is shut off, the centrifuge simply runs down until the rotor stops by itself. This way, the gradient will not be disturbed by sudden braking.
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When pelleting cells, especially yeast or mammalian cells in flat-bottom vessels in a higher volume in a swing-out rotor, the pellet is not completely solid (depending on the application, it may not be possible to spin the cells at a higher speed to get a more compact pellet, because mammalian cells in particular are quite sensitive when it comes to centrifugal forces). The fact that the pellet is not completely solid means that when braking forces are too strong, the pellet could be remixed, leading to sample loss when the supernatant is discarded. Therefore, we recommend lowering the deceleration ramp (usually it is not necessary to shut off the brake completely) to keep the pellet from swirling up. The use of a vessel with a conical bottom shape can also help you get a tighter pellet, even when centrifuging at lower speeds.
Thus centrifuges with different acc/dec ramps offer users the option of adjusting acceleration and deceleration and optimizing their protocols quite easily.
