Detergents are indispensable as agents that can be used to disintegrate the structure of biological membranes with the object of purifying and characterizing their membrane protein components.
The wide range of chromatographic techniques share one common aim: to separate a material into its components. A material, your sample, is dissolved in a solvent, called the mobile phase. This mixture ...
Chromatography in Greek means to ‘write with colors.’ It is a versatile separation technique developed in 1903 by Mikhail Tswett, a Russian botanist. He separated colorful plant pigments using a ...
Chromatography is the science of separating molecules of interest to identify, quantify or even purify them. Properties of the target molecules such as their solubility, size or hydrophobicity give ...
The biopharma industry is looking at continuous chromatography for sensitive molecules. Continuous processes continue to advance in bioprocessing. In downstream processing, continuous chromatography ...
Ion exchange separates components in a sample depending on their relative ionic strengths and interaction with the stationary phase. The stationary phase is a charged substance that selectively ...
Chromatography is used to separate the given components of a mixture that have differing solubilities in a solvent. It can be used to separate coloured substances in a mixture, like the inks in this ...