Skip to content

6 Laboratory Sterilization Methods

Posted in: Basic Lab Skills and Know-how
Yellow 'Cleaning in Progress' floor sign to represent effective laboratory sterilization methods

Listen to one of our scientific editorial team members read this article.
Click here to access more audio articles or subscribe.

Effective laboratory sterilization methods are essential for working with isolated cell lines. For obvious reasons, you don’t want bugs from the environment growing in your nice culture medium, and, equally, cultures must be sterilized before disposal. Unless you are using microbiology microscopes to view your cultures, you might not be aware of any unwanted microbe guests. Time to buff up on the various laboratory sterilization methods, and how they work to keep your cells healthy, happy, and bug-free.

6 Common Laboratory Sterilization Methods

1. Wet Heat (Autoclaving)

The laboratory sterilization method of choice in most labs is autoclaving: using pressurized steam to heat the material to be sterilized. This is a very effective method that kills all microbes, spores, and viruses, although, for some specific bugs, especially high temperatures or incubation times are required.

Autoclaving kills microbes by hydrolysis and coagulation of cellular proteins, which is efficiently achieved by intense heat in the presence of water.

The intense heat comes from the steam. Pressurized steam has a high latent heat; at 100oC it holds 7 times more heat than water at the same temperature. This heat is liberated on contact with the cooler surface of the material to be sterilized, allowing rapid delivery of heat and good penetration of dense materials.

At these temperatures, water does a great job of hydrolyzing proteins… so those bugs don’t stand a chance.

2. Dry Heat (Flaming, Baking)

Dry heating has one crucial difference from autoclaving. You’ve guessed it – there’s no water, so protein hydrolysis can’t take place.

Instead, dry heat tends to kill microbes by oxidation of cellular components. This requires more energy than protein hydrolysis so higher temperatures are required for efficient sterilization by dry heat.

For example, sterilization can normally be achieved in 15 minutes by autoclaving at 121oC, whereas dry heating would generally need a temperature of 160oC to sterilize in a similar amount of time.

3. Filtration

Filtration is a great way to quickly sterilize solutions without heating. Filters, of course, work by passing the solution through a filter with a pore diameter that is too small for microbes to pass through.

Filters can be sintered glass funnels made from heat-fused glass particles or, more commonly these days, membrane filters made from cellulose esters. For the removal of bacteria, filters with an average pore diameter of 0.2um are normally used.

But remember, viruses and phages can pass through these filters so filtration isn’t a good laboratory sterilization method if these are a concern.

4. Solvents

Ethanol is commonly used as a disinfectant, but isopropanol is better at dissolving lipids and is probably a better option.

Both solvents work by denaturing proteins, though the process requires water. So, they must be diluted a little bit, from 100% to 60–90%, with water taking up the remaining percent, to be effective.

Again, it’s important to remember that although ethanol and isopropanol are good at killing microbial cells, they have no effect on spores.

5. Radiation

UV, X-rays, and gamma rays are all types of electromagnetic radiation that have profoundly damaging effects on DNA, so make excellent tools for sterilization.

The main difference between them, in terms of their effectiveness, is their penetration.

UV has limited penetration in air so sterilization occurs in only a fairly small area around the lamp. However, it is relatively safe and is quite useful for sterilizing small areas, like laminar flow hoods. (It’s really important to remember to sterilize your equipment too.)

X-rays and gamma rays are far more penetrating, which makes them more dangerous but very effective for large-scale cold sterilization of plastic items (e.g. syringes) during manufacturing.

6. Gas Sterilization

Ethylene oxide can be used to sterilize equipment that is sensitive to heat or moisture and is often used to sterilize medical equipment such as catheters and stents. Ethylene oxide essentially prevents cell metabolism and replication by alkylation. Because ethylene oxide is easily absorbed, equipment must be aerated after sterilization to remove any residue. Ethylene oxide is also highly toxic and can present a number of health risks. As it’s generally used for healthcare products, you’re not very likely to be using it in the lab.

So, those are some of the main laboratory sterilization methods. If we’ve missed any, please feel free to let us know in the comments section.

Originally published March 28, 2012. Reviewed and updated February 2021.

Share this to your network:

52 Comments

  1. Alan Oluocy on March 28, 2020 at 8:52 pm

    Great information. I just like the helpful information you provide to your articles. I’ll bookmark your blog and test again right here regularly. I’m relatively sure I will be told many new stuff right right here! Good luck for the next! Following from https://www.seku.ac.ke



  2. Keratinocyte on February 12, 2020 at 11:13 am

    So cruel… use gamme ray to kill cell… so many died cell in the petri dish!



  3. Frank on September 24, 2019 at 1:24 pm

    This is a nice article on Laboratory Sterilisation Methods. It should be shared broadly. Thank you for sharing



  4. syed Tabrez Irfan on July 18, 2019 at 8:46 am

    Please share with me the harmful eggects of Formaldehyde gas if used in Tissue culyure lab for disinfection , specially its effect on Tissue culture plants inside tube. This will be very useful for my work



  5. Surya on May 16, 2019 at 4:01 pm

    My exam? Is what is sterilization. I will use this answer



Scroll To Top