Introduction:

A Rotovap is extremely useful to have for chemistry but is usually prohibitively expensive for most people to buy (~$500 used and >$2000 new).

This project outlines how to create your own rotovap assuming you have a vacuum supply, wood working tools, and a 3D printer (or just buy printed parts off of a printing service) for less than $100 USD in parts.

Although this rotovap currently does not recover the evaporated solvents like normal rotovaps do, you can easily add a condenser setup and a solvent receiver flask immediately past this setup.

*Disclaimer: Working with glass under vacuum can result in injury, build this at your own discretion*

Parts:

Materials:


Construction:

Because of the variable parts that can be used to make this, I don't have a step by step construction guide or exact measurements but here's the basics of the construction.

*Note: Pilot holes are necessary with thin pieces of wood or the screw will split the wood*


Main Body (Flask Adapter, Gears, Gearbox)



Rotary Vacuum Joint

Combining the Body and Rotary Joint

Performance

I still need to run some performance test to see how well it evaporates other solvents at higher temperatures.

Preliminary results show that it will evaporate 42mL 95% anhydrous Ethanol in 1 hour in a 23°C water bath.

Final Remarks

Although I provided some construction guides, this rotovap can be build with anything and any form as long as it can spin a flask with sufficient torque. The most important part of the rotovap in my opinion is the rotary vacuum joint which I've struggled to find a cheap design until I found cheap Teflon stopper.

Hopefully this guide helps some amateur chemist in building their own rotovap!

(I really broke the formatting and now can't erase those two bullets below :S )