
Vape accessories
by Arizer
The Arizer Glass Aroma/Potpourri Bowl is a borosilicate glass attachment that turns your Arizer vaporizer into an aromatherapy diffuser. Drop in a blend of dried flowers, herbs, or a few drops of essential oil, and let the vaporizer's heat do the rest — filling your room with scent instead of reaching for a plug-in air freshener full of synthetic fragrance. Available in two sizes: one for Arizer desktop units, one for the portable range.
We've sold Arizer gear since the early days of desktop vaporizers, and this is one of those accessories people don't think about until they try it. A customer once bought the desktop version on a whim, came back two weeks later and grabbed a second for their bedroom Solo 2. That's the kind of accessory this is — quietly useful.
Two variants, two very different sizes. Pick the one that matches your vaporizer — they are not interchangeable.
| Variant | Total length | Bowl diameter | Bowl depth | Compatible with |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| For desktop vaporizer | 85 mm | 35 mm | 40 mm | Arizer Extreme Q, Arizer V-Tower |
| For portable vaporizer | 43 mm | 22 mm | 18 mm | Arizer Air, Air 2, Solo, Solo 2 |
The desktop bowl holds noticeably more material — 40 mm deep versus 18 mm — so it suits longer sessions or bigger rooms. The portable version is compact enough to slip into a pocket alongside your Air or Solo. One thing to flag: the Arizer ArGo is not compatible with either version. Different stem geometry entirely.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Type | Aroma / potpourri bowl |
| Desktop bowl length | 85 mm |
| Desktop bowl diameter | 35 mm |
| Desktop bowl depth | 40 mm |
| Portable bowl length | 43 mm |
| Portable bowl diameter | 22 mm |
| Portable bowl depth | 18 mm |
| Desktop compatibility | Arizer Extreme Q, V-Tower |
| Portable compatibility | Arizer Air, Air 2, Solo, Solo 2 |
| Not compatible with | Arizer ArGo |
| Manufacturer | Arizer (original part) |
Already own the vaporizer but missing other spares? The Arizer Extreme Q and V-Tower share a range of replacement glass parts — cyclone bowls, whip assemblies, balloon kits. If you're running a portable Arizer, a fresh set of glass aroma tubes keeps flavour clean session after session. Worth grabbing a spare while you're here.
Borosilicate glass is the same stuff lab beakers are made from. It doesn't leach chemicals when heated, doesn't absorb odours between sessions, and handles thermal shock without cracking. That matters when you're heating essential oils — you want the scent of lavender or eucalyptus, not the off-gassing of cheap plastic or metal coatings. Glass keeps the vapour path completely neutral.
There's a practical angle too. A dedicated potpourri bowl means you're not gunking up your regular herb bowl with sticky essential oil residue. Oils leave a film that's annoying to clean out of a standard cyclone bowl, and it can taint the flavour of whatever you vaporize next. Separate bowl, separate purpose, no cross-contamination. Simple.
On the aromatherapy side, research is starting to back up what people have felt anecdotally for years. According to a 2021 systematic review and meta-analysis of 34 studies, aroma inhalation therapy was found to be highly effective in improving sleep quality (PubMed ID: 33655928). And a separate study examined the effects of geranium aroma on anxiety among patients, suggesting that inhaled essential oils may influence mood states (PubMed ID: 29122262). Neither of those studies used an Arizer specifically, but the principle is the same: gentle, controlled heat releasing volatile compounds from plant material into the air you breathe.
The honest limitation? The portable bowl is small — 18 mm deep. You'll get maybe 15–20 minutes of scent from a single load of potpourri before it dries out completely. The desktop version lasts considerably longer thanks to its 40 mm depth. If room-filling aromatherapy is your main goal, the desktop variant paired with an Extreme Q or V-Tower is the better setup by a wide margin.
People sometimes ask if they can use this bowl for anything other than aromatherapy. It's designed for potpourri, dried flower blends, and essential oils — that's what the bowl geometry and depth are built for. The desktop version sits nicely in the Extreme Q's elbow joint and works particularly well with the fan on a low setting, pushing scented air gently across the room without any noise beyond the unit's normal hum.
One thing we'd mention: if you're using essential oils, less is more. Two or three drops on a small cotton pad or a bed of dried lavender is plenty. Flooding the bowl just creates a sticky mess and an overpowering scent that's more headache than relaxation. The glass cleans up easily enough with iso, but why make extra work for yourself?
No. The ArGo uses a different stem design and neither the portable nor the desktop version of this glass bowl is compatible. Check Arizer's ArGo-specific accessories instead.
Yes, but use a carrier — place 2–3 drops of essential oil onto a small piece of cotton or a bed of dried herb inside the bowl. Pouring oil directly into an empty glass bowl can cause it to pool and burn rather than vaporize evenly.
Rinse with warm water after each use. For sticky essential oil residue, soak the bowl in isopropyl alcohol (90%+) for 10–15 minutes, then rinse thoroughly and air dry. Borosilicate glass handles this without any degradation.
Start low — around 150–170°C. Essential oils and dried potpourri release their aromatic compounds well below the temperatures used for dried herb. You can nudge it up if the scent is too faint, but going above 200°C tends to burn the material rather than vaporize it.
If filling a room is the goal, the desktop version wins easily. It holds more material (40 mm deep vs 18 mm), lasts longer per session, and the Extreme Q's fan-assist mode actively pushes scented air outward. The portable version works well for personal-space aromatherapy but runs out faster.
This is an original manufacturer's part made by Arizer. Same borosilicate glass, same tolerances as the components that ship with the vaporizer itself.
According to a 2021 meta-analysis of 34 studies, aroma inhalation therapy was found to be highly effective in improving sleep quality (PubMed ID: 33655928). Results vary by individual and by the oils used, but the research is encouraging — lavender blends appear most frequently in the studies.
Last updated: April 2026