Principle and Working of Autoclave

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Principle and Working of Autoclave

Principle and Working of Autoclave

1. Principle

The autoclave works on the principle of moist heat sterilization using saturated steam under pressure.

  • When pressure is applied to water, its boiling point increases.

  • At 121 °C (15 psi / 1.05 kg/cm² above atmospheric pressure), saturated steam can kill all forms of microorganisms including resistant bacterial spores within a defined exposure time (usually 15–20 minutes).

  • Mechanism of action:

    • Steam penetrates the material.

    • The condensation of steam on a cooler surface releases latent heat.

    • This latent heat rapidly coagulates and denatures microbial proteins and enzymes, leading to cell death.

  • Compared to dry heat, moist heat is more effective because steam transfers heat much faster and requires lower temperatures and less time.


2. Working of Autoclave

The working cycle of a steam sterilizer (autoclave) typically includes:

a. Loading

  • Materials to be sterilized are loaded.

  • Items should not be tightly packed to allow free circulation of steam.

  • Indicators (biological, chemical, or physical) are placed inside to validate sterilization.

b. Air Removal

  • Air inside the chamber must be completely displaced for effective sterilization.

  • Methods:

    • Gravity displacement: Steam enters from the top, pushing air out through a drain.

    • Pre-vacuum: A vacuum pump removes air before steam entry (faster and more reliable).

c. Sterilization (Holding) Phase

  • Steam fills the chamber.

  • Temperature rises to 121–134 °C at 15–30 psi pressure.

  • Exposure time (commonly 15–30 minutes depending on load type) is maintained.

  • At this stage, microorganisms are killed by moist heat protein denaturation.

d. Exhaust / Depressurization

  • After holding time, steam is released.

  • Pressure gradually returns to atmospheric level.

e. Drying

  • Residual moisture is removed either by continued heating or vacuum drying.

  • Especially important for surgical instruments and sterile equipment.

f. Unloading

  • Once temperature and pressure normalize, the sterilized load is removed.

  • Care must be taken to avoid recontamination.


3. Applications in Pharmaceuticals

  • Sterilization of culture media, glassware, rubber stoppers, gowns, and instruments.

  • Sterilization of certain aqueous preparations.

  • Decontamination of biohazardous waste.

  • Moist heat stability testing during validation.


4. Types of Autoclaves

  • Gravity displacement autoclave (commonly used in labs).

  • Pre-vacuum / high-speed autoclave (used in pharmaceutical production).

  • Bench-top autoclaves (small-scale, research use).

  • Horizontal / vertical autoclaves depending on design.

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