Chemical Analysis Facility

Chemical Analysis Facility

Introduction to the Facility

The Department of Molecular Sciences offers a comprehensive package of analytical and technical services to universities and outside companies. The Chemical Analysis Facility has a wide range of high-quality modern equipment, operated and maintained by qualified personnel. All work is undertaken with speed, accuracy and a full guarantee of confidentiality, at very competitive prices.

The Chemical Analysis Facility is not intended to compete with commercial or government laboratories, which in general, serve restricted market niches and are dedicated to relatively inflexible tasks and high sample throughput. Instead, our aim is to provide consultancy and analytical services in areas such as:

  • non-routine types of analysis
  • analytical method development
  • materials QA (eg purity, performance and degradation).

We also undertake work in forensic chemistry, providing expert witness at court appearances.

In a typical year the Chemical Analysis facility will manage more than 30 consultancy and non-routine analytical projects for external clients covering a wide range analytical challenges. As such, we have an extensive portfolio of analytical experience. Our clients are diverse and include industrial companies, legal firms involved in litigation or intellectual property, government organisations and other scientific consulting organisations.

Available Services

Elemental Microanalysis

Elemental Microanalysis

The Elemental Microanalysis Service provides a CHN and CHNS elemental analysis service for the wider research community within Australia as well as for the research needs of the Faculty of Science. CHN and CHNS analysis provides a quick and inexpensive method to find sample purity, and when used in conjunction with mass spectroscopy and NMR data can be used to characterise a compound.

 

NMR Analysis

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) is a powerful, non-destructive analytical tool for obtaining information about the atomic composition of solutions. The Macquarie University NMR facility is able to analyse the chemical structure of organic molecules and biomolecules in solution, quantify mixtures, and perform kinetics analysis. Please refer to NMR facility website for more information, or contact Nima Sayyadi with any enquiries.

Thermal Analysis & Testing (DSC/TGA)

Thermal Analysis & Testing (DSC/TGA)

Thermal analysis measures physical or chemical changes in a material as a function of temperature. Two common, complimentary, techniques of thermal analysis offered by the Thermal Analysis Service are Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) and Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA). DSC provides information about physical and chemical changes that involve endothermic and exothermic processes, or changes in heat capacity, and is useful in materials testing (e.g. proteins, foods, plastics, pharmaceuticals etc.). TGA is a technique for measuring changes in mass as function of temperature and is primarily used to determine the composition of substances.

Chromatography (GC/LC/GCxGC)

Chromatography (GC/LC/GCxGC)

Chromatography is the collective term for a family of analytical techniques where a mixture is separated into its individual components. The mixture, dissolved in a 'mobile phase', is passed through a stationary phase, where the individual components of the mixture are separated. Once separated, the components of interest may be further identified and quantitated. The following chromatographic analytical techniques and expertise are provided by the Chemcial Analysis Facility:

  • Gas Chromatography
  • High Performance Liquid Chromatography
  • Thin Layer Chromatography

Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS,GC-MS/MS,LC-MS)

Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS,GC-MS/MS,LC-MS)

Mass spectrometry is an analytical technique used for determining masses of particles, for determining the elemental composition of a sample or molecule, and for elucidating the chemical structures of molecules. The combination of Mass Spectrometry with chromatographic techniques provide a powerful tool for the separation, quantitation and identification of the components of mixtures.

Spectroscopic Analysis (AAS/FTIR/UV-Vis)

Spectroscopic Analysis (AAS/FTIR/UV-Vis)

Spectroscopic Analysis is a useful form of analysis providing both qualitative and quantitative information. The specificity of spectroscopic analysis allows compounds to be distinguished from one another in a mixture, making spectroscopy useful in wide variety of applications from characterising paint chips to measuring trace metals in water.

General/Wet Chemistry Analysis & Testing

General/Wet Chemistry Analysis & Testing

The Chemical Analysis Facility also offers most common forms of routine analysis. e.g. Karl Fischer (KF) for water content, density/specific gravity of liquids, pH (acidity, alkalinity), testing of water sources, for items like nitrate, sulfate, cyanide etc. Wet chemistry is a term used to refer to chemistry generally done in the liquid phase. It is also known as bench chemistry because many of the tests performed are done at a lab bench.

Contact
Dr Aleksei Marianov
T: +61 (2) 9850 4219
E: aleksei.marianov@mq.edu.au

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