Friday, May 09, 2008

Extreme Instruments


Chemical & Engineering News


Scientific instrument makers, often-hidden contributors to great scientific revolutions of the past, now are focusing on development of a new generation of the third most common instrument found in modern chemistry labs, according to an article scheduled for the April 28 issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), ACS’s weekly news magazine.


These so-called “liquid chromatography” machines rank behind only the laboratory scale and the pH meter as chemistry’s ubiquitous instrument, Senior Editor Mitch Jacoby notes in the C&EN cover story. Chemists use chromatography to analyze complex solutions of chemicals in the search for better medicines, more durable materials, and in a range of other research.


Instrument makers are responding to a critical need for faster, more powerful versions of one particular tool, termed high performance liquid chromatography, or “HPLC,” where the “P” also often can stand for “pressure,” the article says. Jacoby describes the quest for new generations of HPLC tools with the ability to separate chemicals faster and more precisely than ever before. “Extreme” HPLC instruments already are speeding laboratory work in drug companies and other settings, with even better instruments on the horizon, the article suggests.



This story will be available on April 28 at
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/coverstory/86/8617cover.html


FOR ADVANCE INFORMATION, CONTACT:

Michael Bernstein
ACS News Service
Phone: 202-872-6042
Fax: 202-872-4370
Email: m_bernstein@acs.org

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Kari Dalnoki-Veress receives 2008 John H. Dillon Medal


Springer editor Kari Dalnoki-Veress has been chosen as the 2008 John H. Dillon Medal recipient. He receives the prize "for significant and innovative experiments in glass formation and polymer crystallization at the nanoscale." The medal will be presented to Dalnoki-Veress at the meeting of the American Physical Society from March 10-14, 2008 in New Orleans, USA.

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