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November 2018
In Upfront, Cassini takes a deep dive through Saturn’s rings, GC uncovers an Egyptian embalming “recipe”, and we find out how brown bears help with antibiotic analysis. In our features: Mary Wirth asks how analytical science can support epigenetic exploration, and Lloyd Snyder is fondly remembered by friends and colleagues. We also discover more about “recycling” chromatography, ask what impact 3D printing could have on sample prep, and interview GCxGC genius, Jean-François Focant.
The Sweet Smell of Success
November 7, 2018
Sitting Down With… Jean-François Focant, Professor, Chemistry Department, University of Liège, Belgium.
1 min read
Those Who Can, Teach: Pharma Stars
November 7, 2018
In the fourth part of our series on innovative education, a group of academic scientists from Norway, Denmark and the Czech Republic tell us how their new post-graduate bioanalytical course will produce the pharmaceutical scientists of the future.
1 min read
Think Twice
November 7, 2018
We’re (re)developing twin column “recycling” chromatography as a semi-preparative technology that separates and identifies trace impurities.
1 min read
Remembering Lloyd Snyder
November 7, 2018
In September 2018, Lloyd Snyder – best known for uncovering fundamental principles in liquid chromatography – passed away at the age of 87. These recollections by four colleagues and friends paint a picture of Lloyd as a generous and gifted scientist – and a wonderful human being.
1 min read
A Lasting Legacy
November 7, 2018
In 1944, famine struck the Netherlands. Babies born soon after the end of the famine initially appeared to suffer few ill effects, but as they reached middle age they began to exhibit an unusual prevalence of heart disease and other metabolic disorders. Studies of the “Dutch Hongerwinter cohort” ultimately discovered that environmental factors can not only affect gene expression in an individual, but leave a lasting epigenetic imprint on their children. How can events that happened decades earlier affect later generations – and could we one day manipulate our epigenome to live longer, healthier lives? To find the answers, we need better, faster analytical tools.
1 min read
Digital Sample Prep
November 7, 2018
Advanced 3D printing is already boosting analytical efficiency – but shouldn’t the wider community be embracing its transformative potential?
1 min read
Biotherapeutic QC: Time to Meet MAM
November 7, 2018
How high-resolution mass spectrometry and the multiple attribute method could give a boost to biopharma analytics, particularly with continuous processing on the horizon.
1 min read
Bearfaced Research
November 7, 2018
A new way of discovering antibiotics makes use of an unusual source of complex microbial communities
1 min read
Safe and Sound
November 7, 2018
Business in brief: What’s going on in analytical science?
1 min read
Gone Fishing
November 7, 2018
A magnetic wire inserted into a vein captures circulating tumor cells and cell-free tumor DNA
1 min read
Suppressed Excitement
November 7, 2018
New microfluidic membrane suppressor technology wins the prestigious Solvay Award for the best PhD thesis
1 min read
Ring the Changes
November 7, 2018
NASA’s pioneering Cassini spacecraft captures Saturn’s atmospheric composition in its “Grand Finale”
1 min read
Just What the Doctor Ordered
November 7, 2018
We need to increase diversity – and talking is not enough.
1 min read
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Recommended
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