ABgene Plate of the Month

Laboratory products

ABgene Plate of the Month

27 Apr, 2009

Published over 17 years ago. See the latest and most current information on Laboratory products.

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc is pleased to announce the Thermo Scientific ABgene™ Non-Skirted 96-well PCR Plate (ref AB-0600) was its ‘Plate of the Month’ for February 2009. The Plate of the Month initiative celebrates entry into the second century of man-made plastics by providing scientists with valuable ways to try ABgene plates.

The ABgene Non-Skirted 96-well PCR plate is the most versatile PCR plate of the comprehensive ABgene range and is in use worldwide. The non-skirted deck design will optimally fit the majority of PCR thermal cyclers and can be cut into different sizes to meet every throughput need. Each well has a thin walled design for optimal and consistent heat transfer and a raised rim for superior sealing with adhesive seals or cap strips, while alphanumeric grid referencing makes well identification easy for any throughput.

The market-leading ABgene range combines precision design, high-quality materials and clean room production to ensure reliable and reproducible, premium products that provide results with confidence. Like all ABgene PCR plastic consumables, the ABgene Non-Skirted PCR Plate is manufactured from non-porous virgin (medical grade) polypropylene and undergoes extensive quality testing to ensure a plate of the highest quality, certified free from DNase, RNase and endotoxin contamination.

ILM Guide 2026/27

Explore our Digital Edition

Discover the latest news and research

Digital edition

Explore Our Other Sites

Envirotech Online
WEBINAR: Delivering certainty for Section 82 with continuous water quality monitoring
Explore more Arrow
Pollution Solutions Online
Next-generation reverse osmosis membranes for more efficient and cost-effective seawater desalination
Explore more Arrow
Petro Online
Promotion strengthens engineering leadership team
Explore more Arrow
Chromatography Today
Chromatography and XFEL imaging reveal critical point behind water’s behaviour
Explore more Arrow