Warwick Analytical Service, a division of Exeter Analytical (UK), has developed a fast and precise analytical service for organisations seeking to check the purity of their samples.
Using methodology covered by their UKAS ISO17025 accreditation, Warwick is able to investigate and precisely measure the percentage Carbon, Hydrogen and Nitrogen content of samples with an accuracy of better than +/- 0.3% for a wide range of sample types. CHN analysis provides a quick and inexpensive
Warwick Analytical Service
method to check sample purity, and in conjunction with mass spectrometry and NMR data, can be used to fully characterise a compound. Warwick has the experienced staff and instrumentation to provide a fast, accurate and precise CHN service for a wide range of sample types, including polymers and volatile samples. The company operates from a dedicated facility approved to BSI ISO 9001-2000 and with a wide range of analytical techniques accredited to UKAS ISO17025.
Shimadzu launches new ultra fast triple quadrupole GCMS
Shimadzu has launched the GCMS- TQ8030 triple quadrupole gas chromatograph mass spectrometer, capable of handling the fast and comprehensive GCMS applications more usually handled by expensive time of flight analysers. Compared with existing
systems, the GCMS-TQ8030 provides increases in scanning speed (20,000 amu/sec) and MRM (Multiple Reaction Monitoring) speed (600/sec) without sacrificing. Users can obtain full scan and MRM data in the same run with all results stored in one data file.
The high sensitivity and ultrafast
Shimadzu UK T 01908 552209
performance enables trace analysis at the ppt level needed in food and water safety. The GCMS-TQ8030 enables the simultaneous analysis of pesticide in food and the analysis of samples in the presence of biological compounds, without
complicated
sample pre-treatment. The GCMS-TQ8030 is launched with workstation software
GCMSsolution version 4.0, which uses the same user-friendly interface seen in the 2.0 series software for single GCMS analysis, while providing innovative functionalities and efficient operation flow to improve data processing.
Wednesday 5 - Friday 7 December 2012 Churchill College, Cambridge, UK
The symposium aims to bring together a wide range of speakers from across the pharmaceutical, agrochemical and fine chemical industries, as well as from an academic background.
The area of process development continues to be a challenging and important area for the research into and application of modern synthetic organic chemistry, as well as enabling technologies. It is the application of chemistry to the scale up of new synthetic processes from the laboratory, through pilot plant to full scale commercial manufacture and into life cycle management. It is an extremely broad discipline, crossing the boundaries between synthetic organic chemistry, process technology and chemical engineering.
This meeting brings together experts from across the entire spectrum of the discipline to present state of the art process development. As an established and well attended meeting, the Process Development Symposium offers an excellent opportunity for networking between like-minded process scientists of all levels of experience and from all areas of the chemical industry.