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Anthias Consulting are delighted to announce their participation in Lab Innovations 2015 to be held at the Birmingham NEC on 4th and 5th November 2015. Now in its 4th successful year, Lab Innovations is the UK’s only event dedicated to laboratory professionals.
Diane Turner, Director of Anthias Consulting will be delivering a taster training session at 14:00 on 5th November during the Royal Society of Chemistry’s conference at the event. The conference will feature case studies and research driven sessions on the latest hot topics. Diane commented ‘ I am delighted to have been asked to participate once again in this exciting event. Lab Innovations continues to go from strength to strength and attract the leading organisations and institutions in the sector. ’
We look forward to connecting with our industry colleagues there.
If you are attending and would like to arrange a meeting with Diane to discuss your GC and GC-MS training requirements please contact us at info@anthias.co.uk.
Details of the session can be found below:
The session will examine how deconvolution works and how powerful and useful it can be, even when just analysing target compounds. In separation techniques like gas chromatography, good chromatographic resolution is necessary to analyse sample components for both qualitative and most importantly accurate quantitative analyses. When separation techniques are hyphenated to mass spectrometry, like in GC-MS, another dimension of separation is added in the form of analytical resolution. This can reduce the necessity for good chromatographic resolution, unless components are isomers, but can also enable the separation of many more components in shorter run times. In the method development and in many cases the analysis of target compounds, significant ions can be extracted and compared to identify their retention times, frequently coeluting with other target plus matrix components. But when analysing a sample to identify unknowns, how do you know if you have chromatographically co-eluting peaks or components hidden under the baseline?
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