Abstract
We examined temperature deviations from the set temperature in specific locations, between-freezer temperature variability, and the effect of defrosting on temperature deviation in a group of 15 upright mechanical freezers, part of a biological sample bank of a large prospective cohort study. By using an Omega Type T Thermocouple Microcomputer thermometer with the freezers set at -80 degrees C, the internal temperature (12 locations in each freezer) ranged from -90 degrees C to -43.5 degrees C. Overall, internal temperatures tended to be appreciably warmer in the upper and front sections of the freezers. Upright front-loading mechanical freezers, which are widely used in research laboratories throughout the world, may not be optimally suited to preserve human biological samples for long-term banking in epidemiology.