The Analytical Scientist Power List returns to celebrate the successes of the field’s leading lights!
10/20/2015 | Sponsored by Merck Millipore
Hormones are examples of contaminants of emerging concern (CEC) that have been detected in environmental and drinking waters around the world in trace amounts (1, 2).
10/20/2015 | Olaf Hollricher
Equipping scanning electron microscopes with Raman imaging to create a 2014 Innovation Award-winning universal microscopy solution.
10/20/2015 | Richard Fussell
When Richard Fussell still worked at the UK’s Food and Environment Research Agency, he was the first customer to see the Thermo Scientific Q Exactive™ GC in action – well ahead of its official launch at ASMS 2015. The latest Orbitrap™ innovation made him wonder – not for the first time – if the grass was greener on the other side.
10/20/2015 | Alexander Makarov
Coupling gas chromatography with Orbitrap™ technology wasn’t easy, but the outcome – the introduction of the Thermo Scientific Q Exactive™ GC – represents a big step towards bringing full-scan, high-resolution, and accurate mass data into routine labs around the world. And my dream of an “Orbitrap in every lab” inches ever closer.
10/20/2015 | John Gilbert
Research into migration of packaging materials into food began decades ago. And despite the relatively inconspicuous nature of this niche area, it is characterized by some of the most significant modern-day challenges in food analysis.
10/19/2015 | Robert Kennedy
Sitting Down With…Robert (Bob) Kennedy, Distinguished Professor and Chair of Chemistry at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA, and Chair of the forthcoming HPLC 2016 conference in San Francisco.
10/19/2015 | David Essumang
The gift of analytical capability is welcomed with open arms, but needs to go beyond core instrumentation.
10/19/2015 | Frank Vanhaecke
High-precision isotopic analysis of essential metals is beginning to show real promise for medical diagnoses. Here, I share some of the progress in this exciting application area.
10/19/2015 | Victoria Barton
Sniffing out ‘off smells’ in drinking water with a bioelectronic sensor
10/12/2015
The molecular weight, molecular weight distribution and size of three common polymers are measured using OMNISEC. This information can provide insight into the physical properties and behavior of these synthetic polymers.
Register to access our FREE online portfolio, request the magazine in print and manage your preferences.
Register
On an IM-MS Crusade
Lighting Up Archaeological Science
The Winner Takes It All