Automation In Clinical Chemistry

During the past few years in clinical biochemistry there has been a considerable increase in clinical demand for investigations.

How do synthetic biologists keep the support of the public?

The science minister, David Willetts, gave an address this morning to an international gathering of researchers who are in London for a symposium on synthetic biology. The event is a UK-US-Chinese collaboration, bringing together the science and engineering academies from those three countries.

Heat-Treatment Terms Used in Aircraft Processes

Critical range, applied to steel, refers to the range of temperature between 1300'F and 1600'F. When steel passes through this temperature range, its internal structure is altered.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Automation In Clinical Chemistry

During the past few years in clinical biochemistry there has been a considerable increase in clinical demand for investigations. When the volume of work increased, there arose a need for work simplification. Mono-step methods were introduced to replaced multistep cumbersome methods. The efficiency of mono-step methods was further increased by the introduction of automatic dispensers and diluters. For the common tests like blood glucose and blood urea etc; however most large laboratories found this approach still inadequate to deal with work load and instruments designed to handle the whole analytical process in a mechanized fashion.

This procedure is called automation, it is a self regulating process, where the specimen is accurately pipetted by a mechanical probe and mixed with a particular volume of the reagent and the results are displayed in digital forms and also printed by a printer. There is a element of feedback which detects any tendency to malfunction. The automated instruments not only save the labor and time but also allow reliable quality control, reduce subjective errors and work economically by using small quantities of samples and reagents. First successful automated system was introduced by L.T.Skeggs. In 1957. Technicon marketed it as single channel continuous flow analyzer. In Japan hematology and chemistry instruments coexist side by side in a chematology environment. These are clustered compactly around a belt line in an open laboratory space.

In a dichroic mirror, instead alternating layers of optical coatings with different refractive indexes are built up upon a glass substrate. The interfaces between the layers of different refractive index produce phased reflections, selectively reinforcing certain wavelengths of light and interfering with other wavelengths. The layers are usually deposited in a vacuum. Because unwanted wavelengths are reflected rather than absorbed, dichroic filters do not absorb this unwanted energy during operation and so do not become nearly as hot as the equivalent conventional filter (which attempts to absorb all energy except for that in the passband). Use of Dichoric mirrors makes optical system more precise and reliable as these special mirrors split wavelengths more accurately and precisely. Presently Accurex is having this optical system in LW C100plus analyzer. Random Access Clincal chemistry auto analyzers are in great demand as laboratories going through consolidation phase. Small labs are undergoing the process of Merging and Acquisitions. Big players are competing to capture the market dominance. As it is seen in US, India will have only few players in Pathology with large network and quality standards.

Temperature Accuracy With Infrared Temperature Sensors

Temperature measurement devices are popular not only in family groups but also in industrial environments. Moms and dads are probably well acquainted with the popular mercury thermometers or the digital ones used to measure their son's or daughter's temperature and check if they have fever. And just as high temperature can be bad for ourselves, in many industrial processes it is of utmost importance to ensure that all throughout the manufacturing process a certain range of temperatures is kept so that the final product keeps up with the highest and strictest security policies.

Industrial temperature sensors or analysers are highly sensitive devices that are largely adopted by a wide variety of industries that need to ensure that the product they are manufacturing is being produced within the right temperatures. Many products are extremely sensitive to very high or low temperatures and their properties can be severely damaged. For instance, in the IT industry, micro processors require certain temperatures in order not to get damaged. The pharmaceutical industry as well requires certain levels of temperatures so that the chemical compounds do not get ruined or lose their healing properties.

There are different kinds of temperature sensors available in the market according to the manufacturing process in which they are required. Amongst the most widely used and most convenient ones we can definitely mention the infrared thermometers. They are especially used to measure the temperature of the surface of a given object without needing to touch it. Thus, infrared thermometers are extremely useful in those environments in which the object or product to be measured cannot be reached easily. In fact, factory operators that regularly use this temperature sensor instrument agree on the fact that they are very reliable and that the only thing needed is to aim at the object correctly in order to be able to tell in a couple of minutes how hot or cold it is.

As infrared thermometers are not the most accurate temperature measurement instruments, it is highly advisable that certain advice is followed so that you achieve a result that can be relied on.

Heat-Treatment Terms Used in Aircraft Processes

Heat-Treatment related terms used in aircraft processing

Critical Range:
Critical range, applied to steel, refers to the range of temperature between 1300'F and 1600'F. When steel passes through this temperature range, its internal structure is altered. Rapid cooling of the metal through this range of temperature will prevent the normal change of the structure, and unusual properties will be possessed by the material so treated. The heat treatment of steel is based on this phenomenon.

Annealing:
Annealing id the process of heating steel above the critical range, holding it at that temperature until it is uniformly heated and the grain is refined, and then cooling it very slowly. Other materials do not possess critical ranges, but all are annealed by a similar heating process which permits rearrangement of the internal structure, followed by cooling (either slowly or quickly), depending on the material. The annealing process invariably softens the metal and relieves internal strains.

Normalizing:

Normalizing is similar to annealing, but the steel is allowed to cool in still air - a method that is somewhat faster than annealing cooling. Normalizing applies only to steel. It relieves internal strains, softens the metal somewhat less than annealing, and at the same time increases the strength of the steel about 20% above that of annealed material.

Heat treatment:

Heat treatment consists of a series of operations which have as their aim the improvement of the physical properties of a material. In the case of steel these operations are hardening (which is composed of heating and quenching) and tempering.

Hardening:

Hardening of steel is done by heating the metal to a temperature above the critical range and then quenching it. Aluminum alloys are hardened by heating to a temperature above 900'F and quenching.

Quenching

Quenching is the immersion of heated metal in a liquid, usually either oil or water, to accelerate its cooling.

Tempering:

Tempering is the reheating of the hardened steel by heating to a temperature below the critical range, followed by cooling as desired. Tempering is sometimes referred to as drawing.

Carburizing:

Carburizing is the addition of carbon to steel by heating it at a high temperature whiles in contact with a carbonaceous material either in solid, liquid, or gaseous form. Carburizing is best performed on steels containing less than 0.25% carbon content.

Casehardening:

Casehardening consists of carburizing, followed by suitable heat treatment to harden the metal.