Connected Chemistry
April 3, 2019
How we're working towards the dream of a "smart" laboratory.
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Welcome to the March issue of The Analytical Scientist! This month we're exploring the potential for automation and artificial intelligence in analytical chemistry, talking to three gurus of capillary electrophoresis and interviewing University of Geneva's Jean-Luc Veuthey. Plus, legal highs, copepods, biomarkers, malaria, generic medicines, cannabis, and SFC.
April 3, 2019
How we're working towards the dream of a "smart" laboratory.
1 min read
April 2, 2019
Ready or not, automation is coming soon to analytical labs everywhere. Here’s why we should rejoice – rather than resist – the rise of the machines.
1 min read
April 2, 2019
We ask Peter Harrington, Director of the Center for Intelligent Chemical Instrumentation at Ohio University, whether artificial intelligence can help solve the field’s big data challenges.
1 min read
April 2, 2019
How a respectable chiral separation scientist got sucked into the weird, wonderful, and unpredictable field of novel psychoactive substances.
1 min read
March 28, 2019
A new polarization transfer technique promises improved sensitivity and rapid analysis times.
1 min read
March 28, 2019
The potential market for complex generics is substantial, but navigating the FDA’s guidance for proving “sameness” is a real minefield...
1 min read
March 28, 2019
Rigorous analysis is vital to keep cannabis consumers safe - and help drive forward medical advances.
1 min read
March 26, 2019
Which insecticide-infused mosquito nets are still effective? Mass spec has the answer.
1 min read
March 20, 2019
Could glycosylation patterns associated with a sleep behavior disorder predict the onset of neurodegenerative disease?
1 min read
March 20, 2019
Three connoisseurs of capillary electrophoresis discuss the current state of the art, and what’s coming down the line.
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