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Results 91 - 100 of 520 for Raman spectroscopy
  • Article - 22 Aug 2012
    Raman spectroscopy is a widely used technique that can help identify chemicals or materials by the way in which they scatter light.
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    The Bruker name has become synonymous with the excellence, innovation and quality that characterizes our comprehensive range of scientific instrumentation.   Bruker's trusted solutions...
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    LaVision was founded in 1989 as a spin-off from Max Planck Institute and Laser Laboratory in Goettingen, Germany. LaVision cooperates with leading scientists, research institutions and companies...
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    JASCO is a manufacturer of instrumentation for molecular spectroscopy and chromatography. Established in 1958, by a group of leading scientists in vibrational spectroscopy, the company quickly...
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    Bio-Rad's Informatics Division specializes in state-of-the-art software and database solutions for the pharmaceutical, biotech, and chemical industries. Bio-Rad is the leading publisher of fully...
  • News - 30 Mar 2018
    Scientists at the University Hospital Jena and Friedrich Schiller University have been working on a faster way to analyze life-threatening infections using Raman spectroscopy. Standard practices...
  • News - 25 Jan 2018
    A new, rapid and low-cost method for detecting bacteria in a water or food samples has been developed by researchers in America where microbial contamination is considered the number one food safety...
  • Article - 19 Sep 2023
    Crystallography provides insight into the structure and properties of materials at the atomic level. While X-ray diffraction has traditionally dominated crystallography, Raman spectroscopy is now...
  • Article - 20 Apr 2023
    A recent study published in Nano Letters proposed a novel technique that combines Raman spectroscopy, acoustic bioprinting, and machine learning for rapid bacterial identification. This innovative...
  • News - 1 Apr 2008
    Doctors' quest to see what is happening inside a living body has been hampered by the limits on detecting tiny components of internal structures and events. Now a team of Stanford University...

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