This Tuesday morning session will be chaired by Mary Wirth of Purdue University and will be held in the Golden Gate Ballroom A on floor B2 level.
This Tuesday morning session will be chaired by Mary Wirth of Purdue University and will be held in the Golden Gate Ballroom A on floor B2 level.
The session will open with a keynote lecture presented by James Jorgenson of the University of North Carolina. His presentation is titled “Separation of Polar Molecules with Porous Graphitic Carbon in Capillary UHPLC.”
The session’s next presentation, also a keynote lecture, is titled “Compact Ultrahigh Pressure Nanoflow LC System” and will be presented by Milton Lee of Brigham Young University. Lee was the recipient of LCGC’s 2016 Lifetime Achievement in Chromatography Award.
The third presentation in the session will be presented by Fabrice Gritti of Waters Corporation and is titled “Achieving Quasi-Adiabatic Thermal Environment to Improve Column Efficiency and Robustness in Liquid and Supercritical Fluid Chromatography.”
Yoachim Vanderheyden of Vrije Universiteit Brussel will present the final talk in this Tuesday session. It is titled “Peak Deconvolution to Correctly and Completely Assess the True Band Broadening of Chromatographic Columns.”
The symposium will be followed by Poster Session 1 in the Yerba Buena Ballroom Exhibition Hall, floor lower B2 level (poster presentations: Biopharma-Large Molecule and General Applications; LC Column Technology, Silica and Other Particles; and Chiral Separations).
Sustainable Green Solvents in Microextraction: A Review of Recent Advancements
March 27th 2024Conventional sample preparation can be time- and resource-consuming, and a green analytical methodology can be a game-changer for scientists, in addition to facilitating selective and sensitive separations.
Transferring Methods to Compact and Portable HPLC
February 14th 2024The current trend in laboratory equipment design is the miniaturization of laboratory instruments. Smaller-scale HPLC instruments offer benefits that cannot be matched by analytical-scale equipment, especially in the areas of portability, reduced fluid volumes, and reduced operating costs. Yet, the miniaturization of laboratory equipment has brought with it a unique set of challenges, including transferring methods to compact LC. Capillary LC expands the use of LC to applications not currently done using conventional LC in a wide array of application areas, including pharmaceutical, food and beverage, petrochemical, environmental, and oil and gas. Greg Ward, Axcend’s CEO wrote, “Customers want an HPLC system with a small footprint, low flow rates and green chemistry.” Join his podcast where he shares method transfer in these application areas.
High-Throughput Analysis of Volatile Compounds in Air, Water, and Soil Using SIFT-MS (Apr 2024)
March 27th 2024This study demonstrates high-throughput analysis of BTEX compounds from several matrices (air, water and soil). Detection limits in the single-digit part-per-billion concentration range (by volume) are readily achievable within seconds using SIFT-MS, because sample analysis is achieved without chromatography, pre-concentration, or drying. We also present a calibration approach that enables speciation of ethylbenzene from the xylenes in real time.