Can You Use a Pressure Cooker as an Autoclave? Science Says Sure, in Some Situations (2024)

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Posted on March 12, 2019July 3, 2022 by Jennifer Tsang

I clearly remember my high school science teacher running across the room with a pressure cooker in hand making a beeline to the sink. After some sizzling when cold water hits its hot surface, my teacher finally opened it. What were we up to? Making agar plates of course!

Years later, research published in PLoS One puts the pressure cooker to a test: can these tools be used for sterilization when a steam autoclave is not available?

Can You Use a Pressure Cooker as an Autoclave? Science Says Sure, in Some Situations (2)

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Steam heating to 121°C at 15 PSI for ~20 minutes per liter of liquid is standard practice to consider something sterile. Lower temperatures (115°C) may be adequate at a longer sterilization time.

However, autoclaves can be prohibitively expensive for many facilities and schools. They also have a large physical footprint and are difficult for field researchers to sterilize equipment as needed.

Enter, the pressure cooker. These researchers tested four different 8-quart electric pressure cookers (GoWISE, CORSORI, Gormia, and Instant Pot) for their utility as lab sterilization tools.

They first tested whether or not the pressure cookers could sterilize 1.5 L of nutrient broth or agar medium. For all pressure cookers, 15 minutes of sterilization time was enough to sterilize the medium. But growth medium freshly prepared is hom*ogenous and unlikely to contain a lot of microbes.

Thus, the researchers turned to soil mixture containing small particles and many more microbes than media would. They resuspended 20 g of soil per liter of water and tested sterilization times. Unlike the nutrient agar, the soil water mixture took 45 minutes to completely sterilize.

For dry items, such as a spatula or scissors, the researchers dunked them into soil water and then placed them into the pressure cooker for different sterilization times. Afterwards, they submerged them into liquid medium for a week to see if things grew. What they found was that sterilization times differ for different instruments. Spatulas and probes were sterilized after 15 minutes but the scissors required 30 minutes.

Can You Use a Pressure Cooker as an Autoclave? Science Says Sure, in Some Situations (3)

While these tests seem to indicate that the pressure cooker may be up for the task at hand, they were still all done with samples with low bacterial densities (103– 104 CFU/mL in soil water) when compared to densities seen in laboratory grown bacteria (>107 CFU/mL in laboratory cultures or disease samples). They tested a diverse set of microbes at these densities and found that 15 minutes was required to inhibit growth of bacterial strains but one hour was needed to inhibit fungal growth. The pressure cookers used can inactivate up to 1010 CFU/mL bacteria and 107CFU/mL fungi.

The ultimate test for a sterilization device uses the most heat-resistant organisms, commonly Geobacillus stearothermophilus endospores. If the hardiest of microorganisms is killed, than all other microbes should die as well. An ampoule containing 106G. stearothermophilus endospores is autoclaved and then the spores are plated on growth media. Failure to grow means the autoclave is working properly. As for the pressure cookers in this study, only the Instant Pot was able to inactivate the endospores (but required 150 minutes), making it the best choice for a laboratory pressure cooker.

Can You Use a Pressure Cooker as an Autoclave? Science Says Sure, in Some Situations (4)

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  1. This article us useless and so is the study if the pressure is not quoted. The pressure cooker needs to generate 15 lbs to reach the required temperature. So if the pressure cooker or pressure caner has the option for 15lbs of pressure then it will achieve the required temperature same as the autoclave.

    Reply

    1. The original research article definitely lists the working pressure (PlosOne is a free open source journal, you just need to click the link in the first paragraph to read the journal article). While 15 PSI is the standard for autoclaves, none of these pressure cookers can reach that. That does not make it useless though, you just have to increase the time needed in the pressure cooker. That was the whole point of this article, and the original research.

      Reply

      1. The Instant Pot’s high pressure setting is 15.21PSI which is sufficient. I think 15psi is a default for most pressure canners.

    2. Instapots only go to 12 PSI. They have a very new model out now, Instapot Max that goes to 15 PSI. Obviously, this was done with the 12 PSI model.

      Reply

  2. I’ve seen claims that the newer Instant Pot Max will reach temps of between 140° & 150° at 15 PSI. No one has approved it for canning low acid foods because it may not maintain (turns on & off to maintain heat) high enough temps over the full canning cycle. It has a temp readout, but no one should trust it until certified. Testing is being done in the US & Canada, no results yet apparently.

    Reply

  3. I didn’t see any mention to the altitude of the place where the research was done…
    So unless the sterilisation will be done at sea level this research is useless since the reached temperature is dropping as the altitude go up (ex. At 900 meters and 15 psi water will boil at about 3 celsius degrees less)

    Reply

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Can You Use a Pressure Cooker as an Autoclave? Science Says Sure, in Some Situations (2024)

FAQs

Can you use a pressure cooker as an autoclave? ›

A pressure cooker works just as well as autoclaving, especially for small batches. Just like an autoclave, the pressure cooker chamber reaches temperatures high enough to kill bacteria and mold spores. Add an inch or two (2-5 cm) of water to the pressure cooker.

What is the difference between an autoclave and a pressure cooker in terms of their utility in microbiology lab? ›

An autoclave does just that. Think of it as a pressure cooker for lab apparatus. It basically 'cooks' various heat-resistant glassware and apparatus with extremely hot air or steam under high pressure for a good amount of time.

What is the difference between an autoclave and a pressure canner? ›

Pressure canners are generally less expensive than autoclaves, but may not be as effective at sterilization, especially for materials that are more resistant to high heat and pressure.

Do autoclaves use pressure? ›

Autoclaves use saturated steam under pressure of approximately 15 pounds per square inch to achieve a chamber temperature of at least 250°F (121°C) for a prescribed time—usually 30–60 minutes.

What is the principle of autoclave in pressure cooker? ›

PRINCIPLE OF AUTOCLAVE

The high pressure inside the chamber increases the boiling point of water for the sterilization of equipment, while ensuring the rapid penetration of heat into the deeper parts of equipment.

What Cannot be used in an autoclave? ›

Polypropylene can withstand autoclaving, but many plastics cannot and will melt. Talk to your autoclave professional to ask which plastics are okay, and which are not. Usually polystyrene (PS) and polyethylene (PE) are examples of plastics that should not be autoclaved. Anything combustible, corrosive, or flammable.

Can bacteria survive a pressure cooker? ›

The pressure cookers used can inactivate up to 1010 CFU/mL bacteria and 107 CFU/mL fungi.

What is the alternative to an autoclave? ›

Dry heating remains an important sterilisation option due to the some items being immune to the effects of an autoclave, making this method a useful backup for all labs and research facilities.

Can you use a pressure cooker to sterilize tattoo equipment? ›

If you're wondering, a pressure cooker does work in a similar way to an autoclave, but the two things are far from comparable in terms of their abilities to effectively sterilize tattoo instruments and piercing tools.

What is the use of autoclave and pressure cooker in concern with pressure on boiling point? ›

An autoclave works like a pressure cooker. For sterilization, it's not enough just to boil things. Boiling water will kill most bacteria, but it will not kill bacterial endospores. As a liquid, water cannot get any hotter than its boiling point, which is 100°C at standard pressure (1 atm).

What is an autoclave used for? ›

What is an autoclave? Autoclaves are also known as steam sterilizers, and are typically used for healthcare or industrial applications. An autoclave is a machine that uses steam under pressure to kill harmful bacteria, viruses, fungi, and spores on items that are placed inside a pressure vessel.

Why is pressure used in an autoclave quizlet? ›

During the process, the main role of the pressure in the autoclave is to. Also, the pressure increases the temperature of the water to kill all known microorganisms together with their spores.

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