|
Cost Effective – Time Effective –
In your Conference Room or Office
HPLC Diagnostics:
What to Do When Things Go Wrogn!
Conducted by Tom Jupille
LC Resources, Inc.
November 30, 2007
As HPLC systems have become more and more "appliance-like", we become
increasingly used to having on-board computer control and diagnostics. The
fact is, however, that a liquid chromatograph is not a microwave oven;
problems requiring operator intervention can and do occur. On-board
diagnostics are great, as far as they go. But they can't tell you whether
your problem is due to hardware malfunction or separation chemistry
problems. This one-hour seminar will give you the tools you need to tell the
difference! We'll look at a range of simple diagnostic tests that can help
you answer questions like these:
- what's causing my baseline to drift?
- where are these "garbage" peaks coming from?
- is my column dying because of garbage in the sample or a corrosive
mobile phase?
- are my repeatability problems coming from sample prep or separation
conditions?
- how come I'm seeing negative peaks (and how do I get rid of them)?
In addition, this seminar will discuss a number of common-sense diagnostic tips and
tricks that you can use when you REALLY have to track down the source of the problems such as:
- column contamination
- packing deterioration
- late-eluters
- gradient proportioning problems
- gradient garbage peaks
- flow rate problems
The instructor for this seminar
is Tom Jupille. Tom managed HPLC applications
laboratories for well-known LC supplies and instrument companies, training
users on the best techniques to take advantage of their instruments. Tom is
recognized as the moderator of the popular Chromatography Forum
on-line discussion group, providing a resource for solving practical
problems many chromatographers encounter.
In this unique web
seminar format, lasting just one hour, you will be able to
follow along with a PDF file,
ask questions, and interact with Tom. Mr.
Jupille's qualifications can
be found below.
Register now!
Don’t like to order online?
Call us at 714-289-1233
All registrations include handout materials. Once you’re registered, you will
receive via e-mail (the e-mail address you provide in your registration) the web location to download the handout materials.
We accept Visa, MasterCard, and
American Express (AMEX). All prices are in US
dollars.
Note: Our shopping cart is set to
the highest security level. Please make sure that the address
corresponds to the credit card holder. It may result in a declined
order if the address doesn't match the address on file for the
cardholder named on the credit card.
Please enter your billing information
EXACTLY as it appears on
your credit card statement.
Get the CD and handout
LC071130E - CD and
Handout materials
HPLC Diagnostics
CD price includes HANDOUT MATERIALS and audio
CD. CD will be shipped three weeks after the seminar |
$397.00 |
 |
Instructor
Thomas H. Jupille,
M.S.
Tom Jupille has
been a practicing chromatographer for more than 30 years, during which he
has written more than 30 papers on chromatography and related subjects. He
worked primarily in gas chromatography in the late ‘60s, switching to
thin-layer chromatography in the early ‘70s and then to HPLC and ion
chromatography in the late ‘70s. His career has focused on instrument and
column development, and user support, providing a broad foundation of
practical experience to call on as an instructor.
Over the past 20 years, Tom Jupille has presented
courses and seminars in the field of chromatography to more than 5000
students. In addition to teaching, he has been involved in the development
and support of computer modeling techniques for chromatography method
development. He is President of LC Resources, a Consulting Editor for
LCGC, and associate director of the California Separation Science
Society (CASSS). Tom is the founder and moderator of Chromatography Forum
(www.chromforum.com),
an on-line discussion group focused on providing practical support to
practicing chromatographers.
Please forward this to your colleagues who may be
interested.
|