## Abstract **Summary:** Emerging from the field of biochemistry and pharmaceutical research, combinatorial and high‐throughput synthesis and screening methodologies are rapidly being adopted in polymer and materials research. Alternative solutions to cost intensive custom‐made synthetic robot syst
Instrumentation for Combinatorial and High-Throughput Polymer Research: A Short Overview
✍ Scribed by Stefan Schmatloch; Michael A. R. Meier; Ulrich S. Schubert
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 624 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1022-1336
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Starting in biochemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry, combinatorial methods, automated synthesis and high‐throughput characterization are being further developed for organic synthesis and polymer research. The development is strongly driven by the achievements in biochemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry and the need to minimize the time‐to‐market for novel polymeric products. The success of high‐throughput methodologies in polymer science is partially limited by the commercially available hardware (synthesizers, workstations, robots, online‐characterization instruments, etc.) and software. A short overview of commercially available equipment for polymer research is provided in this Review.
magnified image
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract **Summary:** Combinatorial and high‐throughput experimentation has, over the past few years, started to play an increasingly important role in the area of materials and polymer science. However, many of the informatics tools currently available to support combinatorial experimentation w
During the last decade, combinatorial and high-throughput techniques have revolutionized the way of performing research in biochemistry, genetics and the pharmaceutical industry. The present research and product development in these areas cannot be imagined without the extensive application of a wid
## Abstract Combinatorial techniques, parallel experimentation and high‐throughput methods represent a very promising approach in order to speed up the preparation and investigation of new polymeric materials: a large variety of parameters can be screened simultaneously resulting in new structure/p
## Abstract **Summary:** For speeding‐up preparation as well as investigating new polymeric materials, combinatorial techniques, parallel experimentation, and high‐throughput screening methods represent a very promising approach in polymer chemistry: a large variety of parameters can be screened si