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Biochemistry
Study data from University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences update understanding of biochemistry
April 10th, 2007
A new study, "Dispersion effects in preparative polymethacrylate monoliths operated in radial-flow columns," is now available. According to a study from Vienna, Austria, "Monolithic media have found widespread use as excellent tools for fast analytical separations of small molecules, proteins, pDNA and viruses. Polymethacrylate monoliths with large channels are attractive for capturing large molecules, like immunoglobulins, DNA, and viruses." "For preparative purposes, these monoliths are operated in radial flow mode. Band spreading in monoliths is extremely low and mostly dominated by the contribution of extra column effects. The model used here had a single axial...
Source: Virus Weekly (2007-04-10)
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