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Chamberland Filter
The Chamberland filter, designed by Charles Chamberland and Louis Pasteur in 1884, is a porcelain filtration device with a pore size of . This pore size is small enough to remove all bacteria greater than or equal to from any liquids passed through the device. In early virology, its small pore size allowed viruses to pass through, leading to the discovery of the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Today, these porcelain filters have been replaced by membrane filters and other devices for virus isolation and identification.
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Updated 2026-06-03
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