An interview with Dr. Michael Dong, about his upcoming talk at Pittcon. Why are stability-indicating methods important in pharmaceutical analysis? The stability-indicating assay is perhaps the single ...
What will I get from this course? Based on the instructor’s extensive experience in the laboratory supporting pharmaceutical and bioanalytical method development, those attending this course will gain ...
High-performance liquid chromatography is supposed to be complicated, right? Imagine trying to find the correct mobile phase, stationary phase, column length, diameter, particle size, solvent strength ...
This field has evolved considerably through the integration of systematic design strategies, notably the incorporation of Analytical Quality by Design (AQbD) principles and robust statistical tools ...
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. provides invaluable assistance with the HPLC Method Development Calculator to chromatographers looking to optimize methods with the latest column technologies. This ...
A one-of-a-kind, user-friendly software, LabSolutions MD integrates method scouting, data acquisition, and data processing, and uses analytical quality by design (AQbD) principles, to save users time ...
"The addition of the Alliance iS Bio HPLC System with PDA detection allows biopharmaceutical laboratories to perform enhanced spectral analysis, including impurity detection, peak purity analysis, ...
Southwest Research Institute has upgraded its nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) laboratory to offer robust chemical analysis of organic compounds used in drug discovery and development.
High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is a technique in analytical chemistry used to separate, identify, and quantify each component in a liquid mixture. The Agilent 1260 Infinity Quaternary ...
What will I get from this course? Based on the instructor’s extensive experience in the laboratory supporting pharmaceutical and bioanalytical method development, those attending this course will gain ...
High-performance liquid chromatography is supposed to be complicated, right? Imagine trying to find the correct mobile phase, stationary phase, column length, diameter, particle size, solvent strength ...