How One Entrepreneur Is Making Rotary Evaporators Cool Again

Rotary evaporators, which chemists fondly refer to as rotovaps, are used to swirl a sample in a round-bottom flask like a wine connoisseur swirls an expensive glass of Bordeaux. But instead of trying to draw out the bouquet and taste as a connoisseur would for wine, chemists use rotovaps to remove solvents from a completed organic reaction, leaving the desired product behind.

Commercialized in 1957 by the Swiss company Büchi, the vacuum-assisted devices turn sample flasks in heated baths to draw out solvent vapors through a series of tubes. The condensed solvents can be disposed of or reused, and the samples left behind go on for further analysis.

Rotovaps populate the benches in academic, life sciences, forensic, and materials research labs. Dependable workhorses of organic chemistry, they haven’t changed much in the past half-century. But now George Adjabeng, a medicinal chemist from Ghana with an entrepreneurial flair, has developed a rotovap accessory called the EcoChyll that he says will make rotovaps more efficient and ultimately less costly to operate.

The EcoChyll is a refrigerated cooling device that attaches to a rotovap and is meant to condense solvent vapors removed from a sample. Plug in the unit and set it up in place of a traditional water-cooled or dry-ice condenser, and the unit can cool down to –20 °C in less than one minute. It also doesn’t need constant monitoring, Adjabeng says.

“It’s always available and ready to go,” says Adjabeng, who recently got a degree from the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He started his firm, called Ecodyst, two years ago with his friend Kwabena Williams, a manufacturing executive.

Many labs depend on glass condensers filled with dry ice to liquefy solvent vapors. In other cases, labs use a spiral-wound glass tube filled with water drawn from the tap to cool down the condenser. Once used, the water goes down the drain.

Current refrigeration-based systems cool down a mixture of antifreeze and water externally and circulate it through a spiral glass tube chiller. They go only as low as –10 °C, Adjabeng says, and take as much as a half-hour to cool.

What’s different about the EcoChyll is that the unit’s condenser contains a refrigerant-filled copper coil surrounded by a proprietary metallic alloy to prevent solvent attack. By putting refrigerant-filled coils inside, the EcoChyll condenser cools more efficiently and rapidly than does a water-based system, according to Ecodyst, and can go as low as –40 °C.

“No one thought of doing that before,” Adjabeng says. Ecodyst now has one patent issued on its approach and three more pending, he says.

Adjabeng points to additional advantages of the condenser he has developed. Condensers that cool with a continuous flow of tap water are wasteful. Labs dependent on dry-ice-cooled condensers require a dependable source of dry ice and constant monitoring. “Dry ice evaporates very quickly,” he says. And because glass is a poor conductor of heat, “you don’t get the full benefit of the dry ice,” he adds.

Adjabeng’s experience with rotovaps started at Ghana’s University of Cape Coast. After graduating in 2001, he received an M.S. degree in organic chemistry from Ontario’s Brock University and went to work for Roche in California. From 2004 to 2011, he worked for GlaxoSmithKline in North Carolina where he was a discoverer of Tafinlar, a drug that treats advanced melanoma.

“I used rotovaps while I was in school and at work,” Adjabeng says. At times, he says, “I’d spend all day going back and forth getting dry ice to recharge the rotovap condenser.”

He left GSK to get a business degree because, he says, “I didn’t want to be in the lab for the rest of my career.” During his studies, he was bitten by the entrepreneurial bug. “I met people who had started up university-research-based spin-outs,” he says.

Seeking a technology of his own, Adjabeng recalled his experience in the lab and conceived of the EcoChyll. He also sought out people familiar with refrigeration technology and worked with the department of mechanical and aerospace engineering at North Carolina State University to develop the prototype he is now testing with potential users.

Adjabeng and his friend initially funded development of the EcoChyll out of their own pockets. More recently, an angel investor kicked in $100,000.

Planning to test the EcoChyll in his lab is University of California, Berkeley, chemistry professor Richmond Sarpong. Given California’s water shortage, Sarpong notes, tap water cooling is rarely used. “But we use a lot of dry ice. It’s expensive and not the most sustainable thing,” he says.

Bruce Pitner, chief scientific officer at Nirvana Sciences, a near-infrared diagnostic dye start-up in Research Triangle Park, N.C., has already tried the EcoChyll. The unit is more efficient than refrigerated recirculating water-antifreeze chillers and takes up less space, he says.

Depending on the price, Pitner, who spends more than $50 per week to pick up dry ice from a local supplier, says he’d be interested in buying the unit. “At a small firm, efficiency counts, and every dollar is important,” he says.

At large academic labs where dry ice is readily available, not everyone resents the fetching chores. Kevin A. Robb, who is working on a Ph.D. in organic chemistry at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, says, “Dry ice is incredibly easy to use.” As he sees it, “unless the university realizes cost savings, I don’t think refrigerated condensers would make all that much difference.”

Adjabeng says he hasn’t settled on a price for the EcoChyll unit yet. But given that traditional rotovaps consume $3,000 or more of dry ice per year, he figures he could charge three to four times that amount for the EcoChyll. With the 10-year life expectancy he predicts for the tool, Adjabeng suggests labs will get a bargain.

For rotovap users, he says, buying an EcoChyll will be like going from a flip phone to a smartphone. “I figure it’s worth a premium,” he says.

 

Source: https://cen.acs.org/articles/94/i5/One-Entrepreneur-Making-Rotary-Evaporators.html

How labs are improving solvent recovery with Ecodyst

From electricity-gobbling chillers to power-hungry solvent recovery machines, extracting cannabis oil can be surprisingly time- and energy-intensive. As the industry grows, disruptive tech companies like Ecodyst are making a big impact in cannabis labs by revolutionizing solvent recovery.

What began as a modern alternative to a decades-old process is now a burgeoning business providing cannabis extraction labs with what they need to accelerate cannabis oil extraction while using efficient methods that don’t present old hazards.

Calling all Cannabis Extractors

Ask a cannabis chemist what they need to run a proper extraction lab, and you’ll get a pretty universal list. Along with glassware and safety gear, you’ll hear about the rotary evaporator, or rotovap. These machines are used in a process called solvent recovery, which is key to creating refined cannabis oils and distillates that are free of solvents like ethanol.

For the last sixty years, labs have been at the mercy of cumbersome rotovaps and chillers that require lots of resources and effort to heat and cool. While technology at-large moved forward in that time, solvent recovery remained largely stagnant, leaving environmentally-conscious labs with much to be desired.

This is what first inspired Ecodyst founder George Adjabeng to create the innovative technology needed to keep up with the times and reduce waste.

“I thought technology and sustainability should be improved so scientists can focus on more complex tasks,” Adjabeng says. “Traditional rotary evaporator models need near endless supplies of dry ice, running water, or thermal fluid to maintain cold temperatures. The cannabis industry has a lot of participants that are eager to practice less wasteful solvent recovery methods as a standard, and there are many different ways Ecodyst can help.”

The Ecodyst EcoChyll line of rotary evaporators eliminates the need for dry ice, water, and bulky thermal fluid chillers by using direct self-cooling technology. By improving the efficiency of the traditional solvent recovery process, scientists and lab techs can shift more focus to what they’re making, rather than how they’re making it.

Cannabis Chemistry Solutions

After starting in pharmaceutical and university labs, Ecodyst found it had a natural home in the growing cannabis extraction industry.

“We learned the EcoChyll was already being used in cannabis labs, so we went to a cannabis business tradeshow to learn more about the market and their needs,” says Adjabeng. “The first thing that became clear was the need for more sustainable industrial-scale rotary evaporators, as we saw solvent recovery was a major bottleneck in cannabis extraction.”

Some parts of the EcoChyll design were already ideal for cannabis extraction. A drain valve minimizes risk by getting rid of the need to disassemble and handle hot and heavy flasks, which excited small cannabis labs operating with skeleton crews.

Next, Adjabeng and co-founder Kwabena Williams decided to expand the line of EcoChyll X7s to accommodate larger cannabis extraction labs and help them meet the industry’s growing solvent recovery needs. That’s because their team was surprised that traditional rotary evaporator companies were promoting their 20-liter rotovap (which had only a 10-liter actual capacity) as large-scale solvent recovery systems.

“We introduced the medium-sized 22-liter evaporator, which has almost the same maximum volume as a traditional 50-liter rotovap. We then decided to push further on behalf of the cannabis industry to provide cannabis extractors with more options,” says Adjabeng. “These are great, energy-saving rotovap options for all extraction labs, whether they use ethanol or CO2—the EcoChyll X7 100-Liter turnkey uses about the same 10 kW of energy as a traditional 20-liter rotovap. We have also significantly increased rate of recovery, recovering more liters per hour from every extraction.”

Scaling for the Growing Cannabis Industry

As the cannabis industry continues to grow at a rapid pace—especially industrial hemp processing for CBD extracts—the Ecodyst team sees even more appetite for even larger solvent recovery systems. That’s driven their team to launch the super-large industrial-sized 200-liter EcoChyll X9, which caters to many different cannabis extraction needs, but is particularly helpful to hemp processors. With an EcoChyll X9 200-Liter, hemp processors can avoid the high energy consumption, heat output, and operating costs associated with other systems like falling film evaporators. As a matter of fact, equipment that rivals falling film evaporators are already on the Ecodyst launch list for later this year.

In the meantime, Ecodyst’s cannabis customers are already showing the founders how their technology can be used in resourceful and unexpected ways, conducting work like short path distillation and decarboxylation right inside their EcoChyll units.

“If we hadn’t been engaged with the cannabis community, there’s no telling how long it would have taken us to find out about decarbing right in the machine,” says Williams. “Our cannabis customers are challenging how we think about our own technology and pushing us to develop new solutions for them.”

Sharing the Power of Science

These learning experiences are just one example of meaningful customer engagement, and the Ecodyst founders don’t take that lightly. Even as the company has grown, the founders still do the installation and training themselves, providing new customers in the cannabis industry with hands-on expertise in how to get the most out of their new tools.

Now, the visits are part of their unique brand experience and concentration on good customer service.

“Ecodyst offers custom solutions to help solve customers’ unique problems. Sometimes it’s a custom glass component, and sometimes it’s in the set-up of the machine itself,” says Ecodyst’s customer service and sales manager Trevor White. “George and Kwabena interact directly with the customers because they know the machinery the best, and they have the knowledge to identify where our partners can make changes in the technology that can really help.”

Encouraging an Eco-Friendly Future

With more and more companies trying to find the best methods for extracting cannabis distillates or isolates, Ecodyst is devoted to making scientists’ lives more efficient and allowing them to concentrate on the principles, not the process. The EcoChyll is ready to find its place in any lab, helping cannabis extractors with both CO2 and ethanol extraction.

In the future, they hope to enable every lab to help save money, save our planet, and deliver great products to consumers with increasing efficiency.

 

Source: https://www.leafly.com/news/industry/labs-improving-solvent-recovery-ecodyst

An Innovative Approach To Rotary Evaporator Design – Whitepaper

Electronic devices have changed chemistry. Just as home kitchen counters now feature machines—such as electric kettles and multicookers—that make food preparation more convenient, so modern laboratory benches have dedicated labor-saving devices. For many labs, especially within organic chemistry, one of the most commonly seen and frequently used pieces of equipment is the rotary evaporator. Next-generation, electronic rotary evaporators are beginning to offer tangible and significant performance benefits.

Usually known by users as a rotovap, these workhorses remove the solvent at the end of virtually any synthetic chemistry procedure and again after chromatography to leave the pure final product. In most pharmaceutical and organic chemistry labs, rotovaps are used so regularly that all lab members have their own machine. With such heavy use, any innovation that makes rotovaps faster, more convenient, or more energy efficient can have major payoffs for lab productivity and environmental sustainability.

Please download the full whitepaper.

Ecodyst sponsors Young Women In STEM Conference

The Young Women In STEM Conference announces Ecodyst as its the official Sponsor of the 1st annual Young Women In STEM conference for middle and high school girls.

Hosted in Apex, North Carolina on Saturday, June 8th, 2019 at Hope Community church, Ecodyst was beyond elated to Sponsor the 1st annual Young Women In STEM conference.

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Ecodyst Announces Former Heidolph Representative Trevor White Joins Team

APEX, N.C. – September 10, 2018 /Canna Newswire/ – Ecodyst (www.ecodyst.com), announced that former Heidolph sales and technical representative Trevor White joined its team.

Trevor White was raised in Boston and attended the University of Massachusetts Amherst for his undergraduate studies where he received a Bachelor’s of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. During his undergraduate work, he explored chemistry techniques in the Garmin lab where he contributed to the group’s crystallography efforts to solve the structure of Human alpha-Glucosidase. After graduation, Trevor’s broad scientific interests in science allowed him the opportunity to work in zoos, the Inkaw Vervet Project on a game reserve in South Africa, and the Harvell marine biology research lab. After that, he joined the Boston-based biotechnical start-up company, NeoScientific.

In 2016, he joined Heidolph as the New England Field Sales Specialist where he served hundreds of chemists in a variety of industries such as academic, cannabis, pharmacology, and more. While White was at Heidolph, he was responsible for the first Ecodyst product sale, the EcoChyll, during Heidolph’s and Ecodyst’s brief partnership. White was drawn to Ecodyst because of the company’s unique ability to adapt and customize solutions to meet the needs of chemists and the fact that they remain unfettered to traditional methodologies.

Co-founder of Ecodyst, George Adjabeng says, “At Ecodyst, we strive to create value for our clients and providing excellent customer service. We look for professionals who share our core beliefs to join our growing team and I’m excited to have Trevor become a part of the Ecodyst Team. Trevor is very passionate about delivery value for customers and I have experienced first-hand his willingness to listen and learn from clients and provide solutions and support. Our customers will benefit from Trevor’s scientific knowledge, technical and customer services skills and experience in the scientific instrument industry.”

Trevor currently resides in San Diego and continues his service to the scientific community. His primary role at Ecodyst is customer service, technical support, international client relations, and sales. We look forward to an excellent partnership to increase awareness of Ecodyst’s products and services.

 

Source: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ecodyst-announces-former-heidolph-representative-trevor-gm-adjabeng/

Ecodyst Announces That the EcoChyll X7 Turnkey is Now NRTL Listed

APEX, N.C. – August 30, 2018 /Canna Newswire/ – Ecodyst® (www.ecodyst.com), announced that its innovative industrial scale, tankless evaporator the EcoChyll X7 is now NRTL (Nationally Approved Testing Laboratories) listed. NRTLs are independent laboratories that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recognizes to test products to make sure that they meet standard safety requirements. Customers that require OSHA approved equipment now have that option with the EcoChyll X7 solvent recovery systems.

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Startup Grind picks Apex lab gear startup Ecodyst for global showcase in Silicon Valley

APEX – Ecodyst, a startup launched in 2014 with the mission of making chemistry labs safer and less expensive to operate, is getting a chance to showcase its technology to investors from Startup Grind.

The global entrepreneurial organization, which has a growing presence in the Triangle, picked Ecodyst as one of 50 companies to participate in Startup Grind Global 2018. The vent is set for Feb. 12-14 in Redwood City, Calif.

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Ecodyst Selected as Top 50 for Startup Grind 2018 Global Conference

Startup Grind: Inspiring, Educating and Connecting Entrepreneurs.

REDWOOD CITY, CAFebruary 5, 2018 – Startup Grind has announced the induction of 50 Companies to the 2018 Class of Exhibiting Startups. The Startup Program recognizes the Top 50 companies selected from 130 companies handpicked from 115 countries, 400 cities around the world. Startup Grind Startup Program Top 50 companies are an elite group of pre-seed and seed stage companies who have collectively raised more than $40 Million and hail from countries and states as far away as Mauritius, Japan, Bangladesh, Australia and as close as Guatemala, Canada, New York, Virginia, Georgia, Ohio, Wisconsin, Texas, Nevada, Washington, California and more.

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Ecodyst’s Innovative, Self-Cooling Technology is Sustainable

Ecodyst® instruments do not require water or anti-freeze for cooling. With our rotary evaporators, researchers do not need to use tap water for cooling. There is no need to flush precious water down the drain and no need to be concerned with water bills anymore.

This innovative, self-cooling technology is sustainable.

Press Release

Press Release – August 28, 2017

A few days ago, within a span of 10 minutes a competitor posted 15 malicious comments about EcoChyll® X7 on our Instagram pages. You know you’re doing something right when a leading lab equipment manufacturer starts posting negative messages about your revolutionary and disruptive products. The competitor then informed us through text messages about their intention to discourage customers from purchasing our products and further threatened to tell everyone that our products are not good.

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