Storing pharmaceutical and biological materials isn’t as simple as putting them in a facility closet with little-to-no air control functions.
According to the World Health Organisation, there are a number of facility climate requirements companies need to abide by. These standards are incredibly stringent, and define what sort of temperature loggers organisations should use.
The University of Technology Sydney (UTS) is one institution that must pay attention to climate control guidelines. Offering more than 130 undergraduate and 210 postgraduate degrees across fields between information technology and pharmacy, the university is also an active participant in biological engineering research.
UTS’ role in pharmaceutical, biotechnological and scientific assessments has put indoor climate administration as a key priority for the institution. University Technical Service Support Manager Philip Lawrence, detailed how the Testo Saveris data logger assists him in maintaining optimal storage environments.
How Testo suports UTS's critical facilities
What’s your role at the university? How long have you been working there?
What does your day-to-day workflow look like?
Why does UTS need a temperature monitoring system?

Why does the school have multiple temperature parameters for their samples?
Medium term storage of live cells requires that they are stored below -50 degrees Celsius to prevent the cells from deteriorating. For this we use a -80 freezer so that there is room for temperature drift without losing cells. For very long-term storage of biological samples, we put cells and nucleic acid samples in liquid or vapour phase nitrogen as they need to be kept below the glass transition temperature of water (below -135 degrees Celsius)This ensures that molecular motion stops and all biological enzymes that might damage our samples cease to operate.
We also have incubators running different temperature set points, as our research is diverse – covering biomedical cell culture and cryostorage, aquatic algae and corals. We store numerous other biological samples at -200, -80, -20 and 4 degrees Celsius.
What is it about the Saveris temperature logger that makes it so helpful? How does it assist you on a regular basis?
The Testo saveris 1 system allows us to set up new equipment on an alarm in a matter of minutes and gives us direct control of the alarm set points, who received notifications and in what order. It also gives us instant feedback of all aspects of the system and this allows us to quickly test, troubleshoot and correct problems without depending on other departments in the University.
By contrast, wired systems take a long time to install to new locations and are expensive and usually involve several different divisions of the university. This lack of local control causes significant lags in installation and troubleshooting

How do you monitor temperature in your incubators, medical fridges and freezers? What does the data tell you about performance?
Since you are responsible for multiple locations, has the temperature monitoring systems met your expectations?
How to contact us.
Do you have any questions?
We would be more than happy to help you.