Whatman 3MM Chromatography Blotting Paper - 3030-6461
Whatman manufactures under Cytiva's quality infrastructure, drawing on a cellulose-paper heritage that spans chromatography, electrophoresis, and blotting. The 3MM Chromatography sheet seats flat against the gel and feeds buffer through the transfer stack. Grade 3MM Chromatography paper wicks buffer evenly across the transfer stack and delivers dependable transfer and separation performance. When sample spotting must stay even, the smooth 3MM Chromatography surface keeps paper chromatography separations consistent.
Key Characteristics
- Medium 0.34 mm thickness holds ample buffer for even, complete transfer
- Supports Western, Southern, and Northern blot transfer as the wicking layer
- Precut sheets drop straight into transfer stacks with no trimming
- Uniform capillary wicking carries buffer evenly through the transfer stack
- Smooth surface stays in even contact with the gel for consistent results
An even, complete transfer keeps your Western, Southern, and Northern blots reproducible from gel to membrane. Uniform buffer wicking carries your transfer evenly to completion so band patterns stay sharp and transfer stays complete. Connect with our customer support technicians to choose between Grade 3MM Chromatography and gel blotting papers for your work.
- Dimensions
- 26cm x 41cm
- Pack Count
- 100
- Sterility
- Nonsterile
- Wettability
- Hydrophilic
- Gel Drying - Backs polyacrylamide and agarose gels during drying for clean, even support and easy, reliable handling at the bench.
- Sample Application - Holds spotted samples evenly for chromatography and electrophoresis with no additive contamination.
- Gel Electrophoresis - Supports sequencing-gel lifting and electrophoretic work with a smooth, uniform cellulose surface.
- Western Blot Transfer - Wicks transfer buffer evenly through the gel-to-membrane stack for complete, reproducible protein transfer.
- Southern and Northern Blots - Carries buffer through capillary and electrophoretic transfer of DNA and RNA from gels to membranes.
- Capillary Transfer - Wicks transfer buffer upward through the gel and membrane to move proteins and nucleic acids by capillary flow.