Plexiglass vacuume container
Rifleman 1776, I also have concerns about the container being damaged. Previously the interior of the container was siliconised i,e coated with a special silicon solution that is largely inert and should help protect the surface at least a bit. One of the things they use this material for is to coat glass so that the material it contains will not bind to or react with the glass.
My background is in pathology laboratory work and I agree with what you say about vacuum Vs pressure. In one of the ways of preperation of tissue sample for sectioning for electron microscopy the fixed tissue is placed in a runny epoxy mix and is placed under vacuum for several hours and this will draw epoxy into every space in the sample and any air is scuked out. Its all to do with gradients, you have a lot of epoxy outside the tissue the system wants to equilibrate so there is equal amounts of epoxy inside as outside the sample and the reverse for moisture/air in the sample it is reduced by a gradient going the other way.. Vacuum just assists this process by reducing the factors limiting flow(back pressure etc)where as pressure is trying to achive the same thing by forcing the material in and trying to overwhelm the resistance the result is often trrapped air. Histology labs have used vacuum for years for this reason. Also it takes a lot of pressure and only a small amount of vacuum.. Try the old black coffe and timtam trick where a hole is made in opposite corners and you suck the coffee through like a straw, easy and tastes great:2tsup:. Now get a mouth full of coffee and try and push it into a timtam , it will not work, is more difficult to do and it won't be pretty:~.( A tim tam is a rectangular choc coated biscuit)
I am not sure if I am a real scientist or not:?, as all scientists, physicists, physiotherapiests and radiologists have now been lumped into one big pile and called heath practitioners.
regards
Jeff