E-Book | December 7, 2022

Introduction To Tangential Flow Filtration

Source: Cytiva
Pall Tangential Flow Filtration

Tangential flow filtration (TFF), also known as cross flow filtration, is a rapid and efficient method for the separation and purification of biomolecules. The process fluid passes tangentially across the surface of a filter membrane, and as a pressure differential is applied to the system, constituents in the sample that are small enough to travel through the pore structure of the membrane will pass in to the filtrate. Larger constituents will be retained and recirculate around the flow path of the system.

The method can be applied to a wide range of biological fields, such as immunology, protein chemistry, molecular biology, biochemistry, and microbiology. TFF can be used to concentrate and desalt sample solutions ranging in volumes from 10 mL to thousands of liters. It can be used to fractionate large from small biomolecules, harvest cell suspensions, and clarify fermentation broths and cell lysates.

Learn about TFF, typical system configurations for TFF, ultrafiltration fundamentals, applications, system selection considerations, and more.

access the E-Book!

Get unlimited access to:

Trend and Thought Leadership Articles
Case Studies & White Papers
Extensive Product Database
Members-Only Premium Content
Welcome Back! Please Log In to Continue. X

Enter your credentials below to log in. Not yet a member of Cell & Gene? Subscribe today.

Subscribe to Cell & Gene X

Please enter your email address and create a password to access the full content, Or log in to your account to continue.

or

Subscribe to Cell & Gene