April 2009
Volume 41, Number 5
Bringing atomic force microscopy (AFM) into the mainstream is the subject of a technical article in this issue. Another author points out the importance of AFM/SPM in the nanosciences, while another demonstrates how gel permeation chromatography (GPC) can be enhanced with a photodiode array detector.
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Table of Contents
Barbara Foster
The past decade has seen dramatic growth in scanning probe microscopy (SPM) technology, both in functionality and in broader acceptance. Market research conducted in mid-2007 by The Microscopy and ...
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Mario Viani, Roger Proksch, Jason Cleveland, Monteith G. Heaton
Over the past decade, atomic force microscopy/scanning probe microscopy (AFM/SPM) has emerged as the leading tool for investigations at the nanoscale—doing everything from imaging, to compositional ...
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Don-Roger Parkinson
Over the last few years there have been many school and business closures related to mold and bacteria buildup, which have affected the health of the occupants. Mold growth has been potentially linked...
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Jason Sanchez, Paul Clarke, Jean-Luc Brousseau
The properties of long-chain molecules and polymers are tailored to meet the demands of a specific application in a range of different ways. In the production of “smart” materials and other high-...
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Xiaodong Liu, Christopher Pohl
Basic compounds are widely used in many areas, such as pharmaceutical development, biological research, consumer products, and in the chemical industry. Although reversed-phase (RP) liquid ...
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Tammy Goodman
Selecting a centrifuge and rotor can sometimes feel like the easy part when faced with choosing the consumables in which to centrifuge samples. There are many suppliers of centrifuge tubes to choose ...
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