Linde Gases has entered into an agreement with the Denso Corporation for the installation of a central speciality gases supply system at the company?s newly built research and technology laboratory at Samutprakan in Thailand.
Linde Gases has entered into an agreement with the Denso Corporation for the installation of a central speciality gases supply system at the company‘s newly built research and technology laboratory at Samutprakan in Thailand. In addition, Linde has also signed a contract with the PTT Research and Technology Institute for a second speciality gases supply system at their laboratory at Athuthaya, Thailand.
The system for Denso, which was completed in September, will assist the company in providing state-of-the-art automotive emissions testing capabilities for their car components. The installation at PTT will help the company in its drive towards production of lower emission automotive fuels. Both installations will support the respective companies in complying with recent emissions reduction legislation in Thailand.
Linde supplies high purity gases, calibration gas mixtures, pharmaceutical grade gases and gas distribution systems, as well as services and support, to a wide range of industries employing speciality gases applications.
For more information go to hiq.linde-gas.com
Linking LC-HRMS Features to Aquatic Toxicity: A Nontargeted Approach Without Compound Identification
July 7th 2025A recent study conducted by the University of Amsterdam (Amsterdam, Netherlands) and the University of Queensland (Queensland, Australia) developed a novel prioritization strategy that directly links fragmentation and chromatographic data to aquatic toxicity categories, bypassing the need for identification of individual compounds. LCGC International spoke to Viktoriia Turkina of the University of Amsterdam, lead author of the paper that resulted from this study, about their work.
Detection and Risk Assessment of Mycotoxins in Commercial Tortillas Using HPLC-Based Methods
July 4th 2025A joint study between Selçuk University (Konya, Turkey) and Hitit University (Corum, Turkey) determined the natural occurrence and concentrations of the mycotoxins ochratoxin A (OTA) and deoxynivalenol (DON) in commercially available tortillas in Turkey. Contamination levels were quantified using validated analytical methods based on high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with fluorescence or ultraviolet detectors (HPLC-FLD or HPLC–UV).