Short Courses
GC
22 September 2009
Explore GC in the Fast Lane
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
9–13 November 2009
Gas Chromatography: Fundamentals, Troubleshooting, and Method Development
Chicago, IL.
Contact: Website: www.acs.org
HPLC
14–15 September 2009
Normal & Reversed Phase HPLC
Tarrytown, NY.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
16 September 2009
HPLC Maintenance & Troubleshooting
Tarrytown, NY.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
16 and 18 September 2009
HPLC Certification Examination
Tarrytown, NY.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
17–18 September 2009
HPLC Analysis and Purifications of Proteins & Peptides
Tarrytown, NY.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
21 September 2009
Develop a Painless Migration Roadmap to UHPLC
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
21 September 2009
Applications in UHPLC Instrumentation and Column Technology
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
22 September 2009
Know the Advantages of Using HPLC — Charged Aerosol Detection (CAD) in Pharmaceutical Analysis
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
22 September 2009
Accomplish Accurate Concentration, Mole Percent and Residue Composition Data — Amino Acid Analysis by UHPLC
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
12–13 October 2009
Normal & Reversed Phase HPLC
Boston, MA.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
14 October 2009
HPLC Maintenance & Troubleshooting
Boston, MA.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
14 and 16 October 2009
HPLC Certification Examination
Boston, MA.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
15–16 October 2009
HPLC Analysis and Purifications of Proteins & Peptides
Boston, MA.
Contact: Ronald Sutton, Chromatography Institute; tel: 1-800-788-9922,
Website: www.HPLCinstitute.com
LC–MS
21 September 2009
Fast LC and MS Techniques with Biogenerics
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
21 September 2009
Improve Speed, Efficiency and Green Chemistry through High Temperature LC
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
21 September 2009
Expand the Scope of Application with LC–MS and LC–MS-MS
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
21 September 2009
A Quality-by-Design (QbD) Approach to Rapid LC Method Development
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
Miscellaneous
21 September 2009
Implement Key Validation Protocols for Chromatographic Methods
Philadelphia, PA.
Contact: Website: www.lcgcevent.com/lcgcevent/v42/index.cvn?id=10003
2024 EAS Awardees Showcase Innovative Research in Analytical Science
November 20th 2024Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Washington, and other leading institutions took the stage at the Eastern Analytical Symposium to accept awards and share insights into their research.
Inside the Laboratory: The Richardson Group at the University of South Carolina
November 20th 2024In this edition of “Inside the Laboratory,” Susan Richardson of the University of South Carolina discusses her laboratory’s work with using electron ionization and chemical ionization with gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) to detect DBPs in complex environmental matrices, and how her work advances environmental analysis.
AI and GenAI Applications to Help Optimize Purification and Yield of Antibodies From Plasma
October 31st 2024Deriving antibodies from plasma products involves several steps, typically starting from the collection of plasma and ending with the purification of the desired antibodies. These are: plasma collection; plasma pooling; fractionation; antibody purification; concentration and formulation; quality control; and packaging and storage. This process results in a purified antibody product that can be used for therapeutic purposes, diagnostic tests, or research. Each step is critical to ensure the safety, efficacy, and quality of the final product. Applications of AI/GenAI in many of these steps can significantly help in the optimization of purification and yield of the desired antibodies. Some specific use-cases are: selecting and optimizing plasma units for optimized plasma pooling; GenAI solution for enterprise search on internal knowledge portal; analysing and optimizing production batch profitability, inventory, yields; monitoring production batch key performance indicators for outlier identification; monitoring production equipment to predict maintenance events; and reducing quality control laboratory testing turnaround time.
Infographic: Be confidently audit ready, at any time and reduce failures in pharma QC testing
November 20th 2024Discover how you can simplify the audit preparation process with data integrity dashboards that provide transparency to key actions, and seamlessly track long-term trends and patterns, helping to prevent system suitability failures before they occur with waters_connect Data Intelligence software.
Critical Role of Oligonucleotides in Drug Development Highlighted at EAS Session
November 19th 2024A Monday session at the Eastern Analytical Symposium, sponsored by the Chinese American Chromatography Association, explored key challenges and solutions for achieving more sensitive oligonucleotide analysis.