LCGC International spoke with Thomas Letzel about the key developments he expects to influence chromatography in 2026.
Reviewed by Dr. Catherine Shaffer, Ph.D. Chromatography (from the Greek words chroma, "color," and graphein, "to write") is a method for the separation of a mixture. In simple terms, the process ...
In the Fraunhofer PREPARE project PUMMEL, research teams at the Fraunhofer Institutes for Photonic Microsystems (IPMS), for ...
Gas chromatography was discovered by Russian-Italian botanist, Mikhail Semyonovich Tsvet, in the early 1900s. The separation technique is used to first split the chemical components of a mixture, then ...
Counterfeit or low-quality products—such as olive oil made from dyed rapeseed oil—are often difficult or impossible to ...
Chromatography refuses to be overwhelmed by the processing demands and cost pressures associated with next-generation medicines. Instead, chromatography is strengthening its commitment to innovation.
There is a growing demand for high purity chemicals within the technical, life science and fine chemical industries. As new synthetic routes are discovered and purity requirements increase, the demand ...
Nobel Laureate Linus Pauling, Ph.D., predicted in 1939 that hydrogen bonding would prove to be more significant in the field of biology than any other type of chemical bond. His prediction has been ...
The wide range of chromatographic techniques share one common aim: to separate a material into its components. A material, your sample, is dissolved in a solvent, called the mobile phase. This mixture ...
Liquid chromatography (LC) is a chromatographic technique used to separate and analyze mixtures of chemical components in solution, to determine if a specific component is present or absent and, if ...