Microscale separations enable high-throughput and high-performance analyses at reduced costs and with a lower sample and solvent consumption, being a highly competitive analytical approaches in today's research, including drug discovery and development, clinical toxicology, forensic toxicology and food analysis.
Bioanalysis is a sub-field of analytical chemistry covering the quantitative measurement of xenobiotics (drugs and their metabolites, and biological molecules in unnatural locations) and biotics (macromolecules, proteins, DNA, large molecule drugs, metabolites) in biological systems.
Microscale Separations and Bioanalysis has generated significant interest in recent years which covers new advances in method development (miniaturized sample pretreatment, multidimensional separations, micro-LC column developments, microfluidics, and interfacing approaches) with cutting-edge applications relevant to human health and the environment.
Title : Chromatographic methods for authenticating bee pollen origin
Jose Bernal, University of Valladolid, Spain
Title : Raman spectroscopy and imaging in organization, processing and functionalization of polysaccharide materials
Pieter Samyn, Department of Innovations in Circular Economy and Renewable Materials, SIRRIS, Leuven, Belgium
Title : Portable and laboratory analytical photometric and fluorometric systems based on the use of 3D printed devices
Victor Cerda, Sciware Systems, Spain
Title : Electrochemical properties and sensing capacities of different carbon-based nanodots toward the detection of bioactives in complex matrices
Maria Jesus Villasenor Llerena, Castilla- La Mancha University, Spain
Title : Development of new creep prediction model for use through computational modelling for SS-304 material
Mohsin Sattar, Universiti Teknologi Petronas, Malaysia
Title : DNA-templated silver nanoclusters light up tryptophan for combined detection of plasma tryptophan and albumin in sepsis
Jingpu Zhang, Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center, China