Showing posts with label cutting edge literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cutting edge literature. Show all posts

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Search for ICPMS on digg.com yields no results

I searched for "mass spectrometry" on the user powered news site, digg.com, and got no results. First, I checked under the science topic. Oh, wait there are some stories that come up when the whole site is searched.

Fairly interesting stuff, not newsworthy according to the digg community, but I don't think there are many scientist on there.

At Georgia Tech, this is what they call a nanoscale probe, or the Scanning Mass Spectrometry probe (SMS). It seems like what they are trying to do is take some mass spectrums of protiens, metabolites, and peptides without separating them from the cell/tissue. The associate professor responsible for doing this work is Andrei G. Fedorov. His research is pretty hardcore, talking about crazy ideas for ion sources, see project 7.



I think the way it works is the substrate gets a positive charge, the scanning tip has a negative charge. The scanning tip pulls molecules by charge, but also uses something called Taylor electrohydrodynamic focusing of jets to produce charged ions.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

On global warming from a sceptical chemist

I got into a very interesting and controversial conversation while on a trip to Chicago with a jaunt to Green Bay last week.

The topic of global warming came up from someone who believes it is happening and that something must be done about it. I made a little remark about how I was still somewhat sceptical of the whole global warming argument. And the reaction was surprisal, especially me being a scientist and everything. They went on to talk about how scientist views are being put down or hushed by Washington government. That in itself is very alarming and really requires its own post.

It gets real messy when politics get mixed in with science. You really don't know whose views are swayed by whatever. Really, what I think the problem is, I can't find information on the subject that I don't feel has been politically influenced. What I have read is mostly from science articles on the web that are conflicting. That is how it appears to me, is that scientist actually don't agree on global warming.

Instead of commenting about how I know nothing about global warming (I admit, I'm not an expert), please give me a link to some scientific literature about global warming that you believe to be the truth. I mean the facts, some evidence, you know, experimentation. I'll take a sceptical look at computer models.

By the way, I noticed I made an appearance on the Mass Spectrometry Blog.
An interesting blog by a fellow mass spectrometerist.

Cutting edge literature_, Chemistry facts_, Rants and raves_,

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Everybody should read this


I read a story on Wired news about garage chemistry. I wish they still sold chemistry sets that I thought would be fun to use. Like all the chemicals and equipment necessary to isolate and characterize natural products. I think I would specialize in marine natural products, they don't seem to be a passing fad.

Organic chemistry_, Cutting edge literature_

Monday, April 24, 2006

DARTs and MS

I'm sure all the mass spec people have heard about this before because it is so cool and also one year old news. It's a new ionization method called DART (direct analysis in real time) invented by Robert B. Cody of JEOL USA and James A. Laramee of EAI Corp. It is a sample introduction system that can be coupled to a mass spectrometer, currently only coupled to a MS by JEOL.
The major difference here, compared to other mass specs, is the sample inlet is at atmospheric pressure. You can hold an object, such as an orange, up in front of the sample cone and get a reading of masses detected and find fungicides.

This technique works by applying an electrical potential to a gas (N2 or H2) to form a plasma that interacts with the sample and the atmosphere.

It took me a minute to picture the instrument layout in my head, I couldn't, so I went to the website. The path of the ion: First, gas is fed in, a plasma is formed, then the instrument opens up to the atmosphere. So, the open region is between the plasma torch and the sample cone. Then, the rest of the mass spec, the one they use happens to be a time-of-flight.

Friday, April 21, 2006

MS at PittCon

Well, I didn't get to go to PittCon, even though it was only a 4 or 5 hour drive from here. And it looks like I missed out on a lot of cool analytical instrumentation as well as possible job leads.
My favorite company Thermo (read with sarcastic tone) introduced a new type of mass spec. In fact, they claim it is "the first totally new mass analyzer to be introduced to the market in more than 20 years." It is called the LTQ Orbitrap mass spectrometer. To read about its initial research, Anal. Chem. 2000, 72, 1156.

Apparently, the orbitrap takes the place of the quadrupole to separate the ions based on m/z. The orbitrap "has ions spinning around a carefully shaped central electrode while shuttling back and forth over its long axis in harmonic motion at frequencies dependent only on their mass-to-charge ratios," says R. Graham Cooks of Purdue University.
More interesting news from PittCon to come.