The Art and Science of Analysis

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The Art and Science of Analysis N H OH OH Final Program November O 17–19, 2014 H Garden State Exhibit Center Somerset, New Jersey

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Message from the President of the Governing Board The Art and Science of Analysis November 17-19, 2014

Anne-Françoise Aubry President, EAS 2014 “Science is spectral analysis. Art is light synthesis.” I choose to start my message with a quote from the Austrian writer Karl Kraus to illustrate this year’s theme of “the Art and Science of Analysis.” Although not written by a chemist, the quote’s terminology will be familiar to all analytical scientists, and some of you will appreciate the amusing juxtaposition of the words “analysis” and “synthesis.” The theme of this year’s EAS was inspired by a hallway conversation with a colleague who halfseriously observed that chromatography may be more an art than a science. As a chromatographer myself, I vehemently disagreed but there is no doubt that analytical chemistry, and particularly instrumental analysis, relies greatly on the savoirfaire and experience of the practitioner to achieve results. Yet, the art and sophistication of operation of modern analytical chemistry should not distract from the science so necessary in designing sound assays, explaining experimental observations, and inventing new applications. The technical program, short courses, and exposition at the Eastern Analytical Symposium are here to give you both the science - the underlying principles behind the techniques and innovative applications, and the art - the practical solutions, technological advancements, and inventive new approaches that allow analytical scientists to advance other sciences by applying the tools available to them in creative ways. The 2014 theme also works well as a celebration of an important milestone in the history of EAS; the 20-year anniversary of our collaboration with the New York Conservation Foundation, joined this year by the New York Microscopical Society, to host an annual conference on Art and Heritage Conservation. Their sessions – held on Monday and Tuesday - are the epitome of art and science, combining innovative science and unique applications related to the preservation of works of art

and precious artifacts. I am proud and honored that they have chosen EAS for their annual meeting and hope this collaboration will continue for many years to come. Another celebration taking place at the 2014 EAS is the 60th anniversary of the Coblentz Society. Anyone interested in spectroscopy and in the history of science should not miss their anniversary session on Monday afternoon, which features presentations on the past, present and “bright future” of chemical imaging, and mid-IR, Raman and Terahertz spectroscopies. The best part of attending EAS is being able to access a network of scientists outside your immediate field of study or employment. While I certainly hope each of you finds enough interesting presentations within your own area to keep you engaged, I encourage you to venture into a session that you would not normally attend. Listening to other people’s problems and solutions will invariably make you think of new ways to solve your own problems. I extend my congratulations to all the award winners, who showcase a range of scientific disciplines that underline the strength and broad appeal of this symposium. I particularly recognize our undergraduate and graduate student awardees, who, I hope, will be inspired by their visit to EAS to pursue a career in analytical sciences. It has been an honor to preside over the 53rd Eastern Analytical Symposium and Exposition. I am grateful to all the contributors to this year’s symposium: the session chairs, presenters, instructors, exhibitors and sponsors. Recognition must go to the staff and Governing Board of EAS, who have spent many volunteer hours in the planning of this event. Finally, whether you have been coming every year or this is your first visit, thank you for attending the 2014 EAS. I trust you will find the program inspiring and energizing and your visit to the exposition fruitful and enjoyable. Anne-Françoise Aubry President of EAS 2014

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2014 EAS Final Program

General Information

General Information & Schedule Technical Sessions

Employment Bureau

Registration Hours

All oral technical sessions are held in the Doubletree Hotel, located behind the Garden State Exhibit Center. Poster sessions are held in the Garden State Exhibit Center. Room assignments for the various sessions are located in the Final Program.

The Employment Bureau is located in the Garden State Exhibit Center in the EAS Exposition Hall.

Sunday Exhibitors – 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM All Others –3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM

Schedule Oral Technical Sessions Sunday No oral sessions Monday 9:00 AM to 11:30 AM / 2:00 PM to 4:20 PM *Note: there is a Plenary Lecture on Monday, November 17th at 4:30 PM in the Ballroom at the DoubleTree Hotel. All registrants are invited to attend; reception to follow Tuesday & Wednesday 9:00 AM to 11:30 AM / 2:00 PM to 4:20 PM

Schedule Poster Sessions Posters are displayed only on the day of the poster session Sunday No poster sessions Monday & Tuesday Poster Set-Up: 9:00-10:00 AM Posters on display: 10:00 AM-3:30 PM Authors Available: Noon-2:00 PM Posters Removed: 3:30-4:00 PM Wednesday Poster Set-Up: 9:00-10:00 AM Posters on display: 10:00 AM-2:00 PM Authors Available: Noon-2:00 PM Posters Removed: 2:30-3:30 PM

Exposition The Exposition is located in the Garden State Exhibit Center.

Exposition Schedule Sunday Open for exhibitor set-up only Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday Hours: 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM Free light lunch: 12:00 PM AND 1:30 PM

Employment Bureau Hours Full Conferee or Exhibit Only registration is required to participate in the Employment Bureau. Monday & Tuesday 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM Wednesday 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM

EAS Short Courses EAS Short Courses are held in the Somerset Holiday Inn, located across Davidson Avenue from the Garden State Exhibit Center. You must pick up your Full Conferee registration information at the Garden State Exhibit Center prior to going to the Holiday Inn (Mon.-Wed.) Sunday - Wednesday 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM *Note: there is a Plenary Lecture on Monday, November 17th at 4:30pm in the Ballroom at the Double Tree Hotel. All registrants are invited to attend; reception to follow

Seminars Seminars are held in the Doubletree Hotel, which is located behind the Garden State Exhibit Center. Pre-registration is required. Sunday 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM

Workshops Workshops are held in the Doubletree Hotel, which is located behind the Garden State Exhibit Center. Full Conferee registration is required; no additional fee to attend the workshops. Pre-registration for each workshop is requested, remaining seats are on a first-come, first serve, space available basis. Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM

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Photography and Cell Phone Use The use of cameras and cell phones is not permitted during program sessions. Cameras are permitted on the exhibit floor; however, permission from the exhibitors involved must be obtained before photographs of booths or their contents may be taken.

Badges Your badge is your admission to many of the activities at the 2014 EAS. Please make sure that you remember to bring it with you when you come to the meeting. There is a $25 fee for the processing of lost or misplaced badges. Badges are non-transferable

EAS Shuttle Service EAS Shuttle Buses will run between the Garden State Exhibit Center, the Double Tree Hotel and the Holiday Inn MondayWednesday. For schedules and information, please check at the EAS Information Center in the Exhibit Center.

More Information To obtain answers to EAS-related questions before and after the meeting: EAS Hotline: 732-449-2280 EAS E-mail: [email protected] Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition, Inc. P.O. Box 185 Spring Lake, NJ 07762, USA

2014 EAS Final Program

Volume #23, Number 4, Whole Number 87 Contents Copyright ©2014 by the Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition, Inc. All Rights Reserved The EAS Final Program Published by the Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition, Inc.

Please note our email, address, & phone number are as follows: P.O. Box 185, Spring Lake, NJ 07762 EAS HOTLINE: 732-449-2280 EAS WEBSITE: www.eas.org Send e-mail to: [email protected] OFFICERS President: Anne-Françoise Aubry, Bristol-Myers Squibb Immediate Former President: Kim Huynh-Ba, Pharmalytik President-Elect: Oscar Liu, Merck Treasurer: Daryl Cobranchi, Kuraray America Secretary: Justin Pennington, Merck KEY COMMITTEE CHAIRS Arrangements: Herk Felder, American Biltrite Awards: Mary Ellen McNally,   E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Comp. Employment: Lee Craven, Ethicon Exposition: Penny Moore Housing: Frank Romano, Agilent Technologies Message Center: James Stuart, University of Connecticut Program: Andrew Teplyakov, University of Delaware Publicity: Judy Lin, Bristol-Myers Squibb Registration: Shirley Fischer-Drowos, Widener University Seminars: Peter Bratin, ECI Technology Short Courses: Barbara Hillery, SUNY-Old Westbury Social Media: Lydia Breckenridge, Bristol-Myers Squibb Special Functions: Cecil Dybowski, University of Delaware Sponsorship: Nathan Tzodikov, Novartis Workshops: Christina Robb,   CT Agricultural Experiment Station EXPOSITION DIRECTOR Sheree Gold at [email protected] EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Bernadette Taylor at [email protected] The Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition is sponsored by the Analytical Division, the North Jersey and the New York Sections of the American Chemical Society; the American Microchemical Society; the Chromatography Forum of Delaware Valley; the Coblentz Society; the New York Microscopical Society; the Delaware Valley, New England, New York Sections of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy; the Association of Laboratory Managers (ALMA); and the New Jersey Association of Forensic Scientists

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Message from the 2014 President.............. 1 General Information & Schedule............... 2 Time Table................................................ 4 Corporate Sponsors................................... 5 Highlights in the Exposition Area.............. 6 Message from the Program Chair............... 7 Plenary Lecture......................................... 7 Conferences-in-Miniature.......................8-9 Technical Program..............................10-30 Award Recipients................................31-34 2014 Technology Tour............................ 35 Short Courses Schedule......................36-37 Student Awards....................................... 38 2015 EAS Webinars................................. 39 2015 EAS Save-the-Date......................... 40 2015 EAS Call for Papers......................... 41 EAS Workshops....................................... 45 Seminars.................................................. 46 Employment Bureau................................ 47 Exhibitor Product Descriptions...........48-58 Special Events.....................................59-62 EAS Past Presidents................................. 63 Previous Award Recipients..................64-65 Author Index......................................66-76 Floor Plans of Hotels..........................77-78 Floor Plan of Exposition Hall................... 79 Exhibiting Companies.............................. 80 For updates and discussions follow us on:

Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition, Inc. reserves the right, without notice, to modify the material or schedules, as well as to amend the roster of presenters or instructors.

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2014 EAS Final Program

Time Table

The The 2014 2014 Eastern Eastern Analytical Analytical Symposium Symposium at at a a glance glance Sunday Nov. 16

Tuesday Nov. 18

8:00 AM Exhibitor Registration opens - GSEC 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM Exposition setup (Exhibitors only) - GSEC 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM Short courses - Holiday Inn 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Teacher seminar “The Best Way to Teach   Forensic Science is to Teach Science” - Double Tree 3:00 PM Attendee registration opens - GSEC 5:00 PM Exhibitor registration closes - GSEC 5:00 PM Attendee registration closes - GSEC

8:00 AM Registration opens - GSEC 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM Short courses - Holiday Inn 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Exposition – GSEC 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Employment Bureau – GSEC 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM Agilent Technologies Special Event - GSEC 9:00 AM - 12:30 PM Thermo Scientific Special Event - GSEC 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM Morning Oral Sessions – Double Tree 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM Poster setup - GSEC 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Workshop “Using Social Media to Network   Your Way to a Job and More” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM Student Seminar “Analytical Chemistry and   Forensic Science” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 3:30 PM Posters on display - GSEC 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM Poster Sessions - GSEC

Monday Nov. 17 8:00 AM Registration opens - GSEC 8:30 AM - 4:00 PM Short courses - Holiday Inn 9:00 AM Ribbon cutting - GSEC 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Exposition - GSEC 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Employment Bureau - GSEC 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Bruker Special Event - GSEC 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM Morning Oral Sessions - Double Tree 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM Poster setup - GSEC 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Workshop “Getting Hired - Secrets of a   Contingency Recruiter” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM Student Seminar “Chemical Identity via   Mass Spectrometry” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 3:30 PM Posters on display - GSEC 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM Poster Sessions - GSEC

12:30 PM AND 1:30 PM Light Lunch in Exposition Hall 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Triclinic Labs Special Event - GSEC 2:00 PM - 4:20 PM Afternoon Oral Sessions - Double Tree 2:30 PM Tech Tour Prize Drawing - GSEC 3:30 PM - 4:00 PM Posters removed - GSEC 4:00 PM Registration closes

Wednesday Nov. 19 8:00 AM Registration opens - GSEC 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM Short courses - Holiday Inn 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM Exposition - GSEC 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM Employment Bureau - GSEC 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM Morning Oral Sessions - Double Tree 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM Poster setup - GSEC 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Workshop “Sharpening your Presentation   Skills – an Interactive Workshop” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM Student Seminar “What Does an Analytical   Chemist do in Industry” - Double Tree 10:00 AM - 2:30 PM Posters on display - GSEC 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM Poster Sessions - GSEC 12:30 PM AND 1:30 PM Light Lunch in Exposition Hall 2:00 PM - 4:20 PM Afternoon Oral Sessions - Double Tree 2:30 PM Tech Tour Prize Drawing - GSEC 2:30 PM - 3:30 PM Posters removed - GSEC 4:00 PM Registration closes

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM PerkinElmer Special Event - GSEC 12:30 PM AND 1:30 PM Light Lunch in Exposition Hall 2:00 PM - 4:20 PM Afternoon Oral Sessions - Double Tree 2:30 PM Tech Tour Prize Drawing - GSEC 3:30 PM - 4:00 PM Posters removed - GSEC 4:00 PM Registration closes 4:30 PM Plenary Session - Double Tree Open to all attendees. 5:30 PM Symposium Reception and Prize Drawing   Double Tree Open to all attendees. 7:00 PM Coblentz Society Reception   Double Tree Members of the Coblentz Society only 7:00 PM NJ Chromatography Discussion Group Meeting and   Dinner - Double Tree Additional registration fee applies

GSEC = Garden State Exhibit Center

Conclusion of 2014 EAS! 4

2014 EAS Final Program

Corporate Sponsors

2014 EAS Corporate Sponsorship The Governing Board of EAS would like to thank the following sponsors for their support.

SPONSORS OF THE 2014 EAS AWARDS PROGRAM EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN THE FIELDS OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY

EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN MAGNETIC RESONANCE

Bristol-Myers Squibb

Metrohm USA

Bruker BioSpin New Era Enterprises

EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN CHEMOMETRICS

EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY

EAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SEPARATION SCIENCE

Eigenvector Research

Thermo Fisher Scientific

Agilent Technologies

EAS STUDENT AWARDS PROGRAM

Merck

Support for the Enhancement of Education ACS North Jersey Mass Spectrometry Topical Group

Support for the Technical Activities • Agilent Technologies • Cambridge Isotope Labs • Chromatography Forum of DE Valley • New England Section of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy

• New Jersey Association of Forensic Scientists • North Jersey Chromatography Group • TAKA Instructional Agency, Inc. • Thermo Fisher Scientific

Sponsorship of the Food Carts in the Poster Area Agilent Technologies • CAS • Cosa Xentaur • Shimadzu

There are numerous opportunities for sponsorship and co-sponsorship of technical sessions, awards, and other activities at the 2015 EAS. For more information, please contact the EAS Executive Secretary [email protected]

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2014 EAS Final Program

Highlights in the Exposition Area

Highlights in the Exposition Area Take time out to relax and meet with colleagues and exhibitors in our pleasant courtyard area in the center of the Exhibit Hall Free Light Lunch for all Conferees and Exhibitors: Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 12:00 PM and 1:30 PM Have lunch or a snack and see the latest offerings from our exhibitors. Food Carts are sponsored by Agilent Technologies, CAS, Cosa Xentaur, and Shimadzu Be sure to check out the Technology Tour and win a choice of GREAT PRIZES! See details in your Technology Tour Passport and on page 35 in your Final Program.

Added this year to the Tech Tour - a daily drawing for a Fitbit Zip.

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2014 EAS Final Program

Message from the Program Chair

Message From the 2014 Program Chair Andrew V. Teplyakov, PhD, University of Delaware Welcome to the 53rd Eastern Analytical Symposium and Exposition! The theme of this year’s gathering is “The Art and Science of Analysis” and it reflects many aspects of our work. It is more than the cutting edge research and development, more than the most sophisticated instrumentation, more than an outstanding opportunity for networking, education, and collaboration; it is the high respect that all of us in analytical sciences have for what makes us a part of this community. On behalf of the program committee I welcome you to Somerset, NJ for the annual meeting of the broad and diverse fields of analytical science. This year we expanded the opportunities for oral presentations and composed a diverse set of poster sessions, all designed to promote interaction among industry, academia, and government scientists. The 2014 program contains a number of topics that come up every year, but with novel, cutting-edge ideas, methods, and approaches. This selection was, to some extent, affected by the specifics of the EAS awards. The EAS award in Mass Spectrometry this year highlights industrial and biological applications of this technique. Similarly, the EAS award in near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy brings up extended interest in pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical applications. With intense focus on nanoparticles and nanomaterials this year, there are several sessions on spectroscopy of materials based on nanostructures and nanoparticles. We have seen a renewed interest for dried blood spot sampling in pharmaceutical and medical applications, and proteins are more than ever a subject of research in all analytical fields. Forensic applications have become a major player in EAS interests, and this year two dedicated sessions focus on applications of chemometrics and spectroscopy in criminal investigations and in the detection of counterfeit pharmaceuticals. NMR spectroscopy has grown into a full three-day set of talks with two different award sessions that attract a high-profile audience not only from the Northeast, but

from all over the world. All of these developments are triggered by the most recent breakthrough in science and technology, and also by the most recent demands imposed by political and economic changes. The success of last year’s plenary session will be difficult to match. However, we intend to continue and develop this tradition and I want to invite all the EAS attendees to the plenary session on Monday afternoon at 4:30 pm in the DoubleTree Ballrooms. The plenary address will be delivered by Professor Joseph Caruso from the University of Cincinnati, the recipient of the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry. As the title of the award suggests, the recipient of this award is someone who has made a broad impact on our community that goes beyond a single field of analysis. The event is designed to bring together the entire constituency of the EAS, regardless of their specific discipline. Refreshments will be served and there will be time to network with speakers and other attendees. We will provide you with the first drink and an entry into a drawing for an iPad mini. The winner will be announced immediately after the lecture and must be present to win. The technical program is complemented by a series of short courses covering a wide range of topics, from introductory technical training on chromatographic or spectroscopic techniques to specialized analysis approaches. The professional development workshops are centered on job search techniques and interviewing skills. With nearly 70 oral and poster sessions, more than 130 exhibitors, and a wide variety of other activities, there is a lot to see. The EAS’s Conference-in-Miniature in the program booklet should help you decide how to best fill your day. We are happy to introduce the new mobile app, which will help you navigate through all the events, search for topics or speakers, and map out your visit to EAS ahead of time. I am honored and humbled by the opportunity to serve as a Program Chair for this year’s meeting. I hope that it will go beyond a professional conference and will broaden our views, perceptions, and opinions about “The Art and Science of Analysis”. I want to thank all the presenters, sponsors, and exhibitors. I want to thank all of you for making this gathering possible. Enjoy the meeting!

PLENARY LECTURE We are excited to announce that our award winner of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry, Dr. Joseph Caruso, from the University of Cincinnati, will present a plenary lecture for

all EAS registrants, on Monday, Nov. 17th at 4:30pm in the Double Tree Hotel Ballroom. This presentation will be followed by a time of networking, refreshments and a raffle for an iPad mini! All registrants of EAS are encouraged to attend. This is not an event to miss.

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2014 EAS Final Program

Conferences-in-Miniature

2014 EAS Conferences-in-Miniature BIOANALYSIS

ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS

Technical Sessions

Technical Sessions

•• American Microchemical Society Benedetti-Pichler Award, Honoring Gene Hall (11/17 AM) •• Quality Control and Bioanalysis of Protein Therapeutics (11/17 AM) •• Detection and Fate of Nanoparticles in Biota (11/18 AM) •• Dried Blood Spot (DBS) Analysis and its Alternatives: Recent Advances in Clinical, Forensic and Pharmaceutical Applications (11/18 PM) •• Bioanalytical Applications of Vibrational Spectroscopy (11/19 AM) •• Poster Session: Bioanalysis I (11/18) •• Poster Session: Bioanalysis II (11/19)

•• Detection and Fate of Nanoparticles in Biota (11/18 AM) •• The Role of Analytical Chemistry in Water Quality (11/18 PM) •• New Approaches to the Analysis of Analytes in Difficult Environmental Matrices (11/19 AM)

FORENSIC ANALYSIS Technical Sessions •• •• •• •• •• ••

Analysis of Textiles and Other Materials (11/17 AM) Poster Session: Forensic Analysis (11/17) Detecting Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals (11/18 AM) Chemometric and Spectroscopic Applications in Forensics (11/18 AM) Forensic Toxicology (11/18 PM) Dried Blood Spot (DBS) Analysis and its Alternatives: Recent Advances in Clinical, Forensic and Pharmaceutical Applications (11/18 PM) •• Forensic Microscopy VIII “What is it? Who does it?” (11/19 AM) •• Hal Ferrari Memorial Session: Microchemistry and Microanalysis (11/19 PM)

Short Courses •• Therapeutic Peptide and Protein Bioanalysis by LC-MS/MS (11/18)

CHEMOMETRICS Technical Sessions •• Chemometric and Spectroscopic Applications in Forensics (11/18 AM) •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics, Honoring Marcel Maeder (11/18 PM) •• Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Dissolution, Chemometrics, PAT (11/19)

GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY Technical Sessions

Short Courses

•• Poster Session: Sample Preparation (11/17) •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Sciences, Honoring Thomas Chester (11/18 AM) •• Chromatography Challenges: Large and Small Molecules (11/19 AM) •• Poster Session: Gas Chromatography (11/19)

•• Chemometrics Without Equations I & II (11/16-11/17) •• Introduction to Chemometrics Without Equations (11/16) •• Intermediate Chemometrics Without Equations (11/17)

CONSERVATION SCIENCE

Short Course

All sessions and short course are produced by the New York Microscopical Society and New York Conservation Foundation

•• •• •• ••

Technical Sessions •• •• •• ••

Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part I (11/17 AM) Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part II (11/17 PM) Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part III (11/18 AM) New York Microscopical Society Ernst Abbe Award Symposium on Atomic Force Microscopy Infrared Spectroscopy (11/18 PM) •• Poster Session: Food Analysis, Microscopy, Conservation, Electro-chemistry, Synthesis (11/19)

Practical Gas Chromatography (11/16-11/17) Troubleshooting Chromatographic Systems (11/16-11/17) Getting the most from GC and GC/MS (11/17) Sample Preparation: The Chemistry Behind the Techniques (11/18)

INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY Technical Sessions •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in NIR, Honoring Mark Westerhaus (11/19 AM) •• Poster Session: Spectroscopy: NMR, Raman, Laser Diffraction, NIR (11/19) •• Pharmaceutical and Biopharmaceutical Applications of Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (11/19 PM)

Short Course •• Infrared Microspectroscopy and Chemical Mapping at the Nanoscale Using AFM-IR Spectroscopy and Imaging (11/19)

LABORATORY MANAGEMENT

CONSUMER PRODUCTS / FOOD ANALYSIS

Technical Sessions

Technical Sessions

•• Electronic Workflow – A New Frontier of Lab Management (11/17 AM) •• Innovative Practices in Analytical Testing (11/17 AM)

•• Analysis of Textiles and Other Materials (11/17 AM) •• Food and Additive Analysis (11/18 AM) •• Poster Session: Consumer Products (11/18)

Short Course •• How to Create a more Effective Lab Safety Program (11/16)

EDUCATION

LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY

Technical Session

Technical Sessions

•• Integrating Analytical Chemistry Research in the Undergraduate Curriculum (11/17 PM) •• Poster Session: Student Awards (11/18)

•• Poster Session: HPLC/UHPLC Techniques I (11/17) •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Sciences, Honoring Thomas Chester (11/18 AM) •• LC Productivity Through Particle Change: Size, Type, Shape (11/18 AM) •• Understanding Supercritical Fluid Chromatography and Using It (11/18 PM) •• Separation Efficiency, Reagent Reduction, Microfluidics, and Multidimensionality (11/18 PM) •• Poster Session: HPLC/UHPLC Techniques II (11/18) •• Chromatography Challenges: Large and Small Molecules (11/19 AM) •• Advances in HPLC and Dissolution (11/19 PM) •• Innovative Directions in Sample Preparation for Chromatography (11/19 PM)

ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS Technical Session •• Elemental Impurities in Pharmaceuticals - Requirements, Applications, Techniques (11/17 AM) •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry, Honoring Joseph Caruso (11/17 PM)

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2014 EAS Final Program

Conferences-in-Miniature

LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (continued)

PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS continued •• Drug Quality Fundamentals Part I: Introduction to Drug Discovery and Development Processes (11/18 AM) •• Drug Quality Fundamentals Part II: Quality Control of Small Molecule Drugs and Recombinant Biologics (11/18 PM) •• Quality-by-Design Fundamentals for Analytical Chemists: A New Paradigm for the Analytical Laboratory (11/19) •• The Chemistry of Drug Degradation (11/19) •• Development, Validation, Verification and Transfer of Analytical Methods: A Lifecycle Approach of Analytical Methods (11/19)

Short Courses •• •• •• ••

Troubleshooting Chromatographic Systems (11/16-11/17) Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC I and II (11/16-11/17) Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC I: Fundamentals and Applications (11/16) Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC II: Practice, Operation, Trouble- shooting and Method Development (11/17) •• How to Develop Validated HPLC Methods: Rational Design with Practical Statistics and Troubleshooting (11/18-11/19)

MASS SPECTROMETRY

SAMPLE PREPARATION

Technical Sessions •• •• •• ••

Technical Sessions

Poster Session: Mass Spectrometry (11/17) Novel Applications of Mass Spectrometry to Solve Analytical Challenges (11/18 PM) Improving the Applications of Mass Spectrometry Through Fundamentals (11/19 AM) EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry, Honoring Catherine Fenselau (11/19 PM)

•• Poster Session: Sample Preparation (11/17) •• Sample Preparation Techniques (11/19 PM) •• Innovative Directions in Sample Preparation for Chromatography (11/19 PM)

Short Course •• Sample Preparation: The Chemistry Behind the Techniques (11/18)

Short Courses •• LC/MS Method Development for Small Molecule Pharmaceuticals (11/16) •• Principles of Trace Level Structure Elucidation: High Sensitivity Mass Spectrometry and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (11/16-11/17) •• Getting the most from GC and GC/MS (11/17) •• LC/MS: Theory, Instruments, and Applications (11/17-11/18) •• Interpretation of Mass Spectra with Practical Solutions to Problems (11/18) •• Therapeutic Peptide and Protein Bioanalysis by LC-MS/MS (11/18)

SURFACE ANALYSIS Technical Sessions •• Functional Surfaces: Preparation and Analysis (11/18 AM) •• Surface Spectroscopy and Microscopy (11/18 PM)

SPECTROSCOPY Technical Sessions

NMR SPECTROSCOPY

•• New York Section of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy Gold Medal Award, Honoring Larry A. Nafie (11/17 AM) •• Handheld Vibrational Spectrometers and Imagers: Innovations and Novel Applications (11/17 AM) •• Process and Analysis and Instrumentation (11/17 AM) •• Coblentz 60th Anniversary Session Development of Vibrational Micro Spectroscopy and Imaging (11/17 PM) •• Chemometric and Spectroscopic Applications in Forensics (11/18 AM) •• Bioanalytical Applications of Vibrational Spectroscopy (11/19 AM) •• Spectroscopy: Sample Analysis, Data Analysis, and Detection (11/19 AM) •• Molecular Spectroscopy of Composites and Related Materials (11/19 PM)

Technical Sessions •• NMR Spectroscopy of Molecules Small and Large: Methods and Applications, Part I (11/17 AM) •• NMR Spectroscopy of Molecules Small and Large: Methods and Applications, Part II (11/17 PM) •• EAS New Faculty Award in NMR Spectroscopy Honoring Megan MacNaughtan (11/18 AM) •• Frontiers in Biological NMR Spectroscopy (11/18 PM) •• EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Magnetic Resonance, Honoring Robert Tycko (11/19 AM) •• Poster Session: Spectroscopy: NMR, Raman, Laser Diffraction, NIR (11/19) •• NMR Spectroscopy of Pharmaceuticals and Materials (11/19 PM)

Short Courses •• Introduction to Vibrational Spectroscopy for Real Time Analysis (11/18) •• Infrared Microspectroscopy and Chemical Mapping at the Nanoscale Using AFM-IR Spectroscopy and Imaging (11/19)

Short Course •• Principles of Trace Level Structure Elucidation: High Sensitivity Mass Spectrometry and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (11/16-11/17)

PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS Technical Sessions •• Elemental Impurities in Pharmaceuticals - Requirements, Applications, Techniques (11/17 AM) •• Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Cleaning Verification, Impurities, Compendial Testing (11/17) •• Development of Pharmaceutical Generics: Analytical Challenges (11/17 PM) •• The Breath of Inhalation Analytical (11/18 AM) •• Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Drug Product Analysis, Particulates, Inorganics (11/18) •• Dried Blood Spot (DBS) Analysis and its Alternatives: Recent Advances in Clinical, Forensic and Pharmaceutical Applications (11/18 PM) •• Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Dissolution, Chemometrics, PAT (11/19) •• Pharmaceutical and Biopharmaceutical Applications of Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (11/19 PM) •• Separation Challenges in Biopharmaceuticals (11/19 PM)

Short Courses (Please also see MS and LC listings for additional courses) •• •• •• ••

LC/MS Method Development for Small Molecule Pharmaceuticals (11/16) cGMP and Laboratory Controls for Pharmaceutical Development (11/16) Polymers: An Introduction and Characterization Techniques (11/16) Drug Quality Fundamentals Part I and II (11/18)

9

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

Technical Program 2014 Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition Dr. Joseph Caruso of the University of Cincinnati, winner of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry, will present a plenary lecture to all of EAS on Monday, November 17th at 4:30pm in the Center Ballroom at the Double Tree Hotel. This presentation will be followed by a time of networking and complimentary refreshments. We encourage all registrants of EAS to attend this special event. 9:20

Monday Morning, November 17, 2014 American Microchemical Society Benedetti-Pichler Award Honoring Gene Hall, Rutgers University Chair: Robert Vetrecin 9:00

1 Finger Prick Blood Analysis: The Omega-3 Index, Ken D. Stark, University of Waterloo

9:30

2 Forensic DNA Analysis: The Gold Standard for Criminal Investigation of Biological Evidence, Lawrence Kobilinsky, John Jay College

9:40 12 A Novel HILIC Column for the High Speed Analysis of N-Linked Glycans, James Martosella, Oscar Potter, Jia Liu, Agilent Technologies 10:00 Break 10:20 13 The Influence of Biocompatible Coating Thickness of Non-porous Polymer Beads on Protein Recoveries and Resolution, Michael Lu, BioChrom Labs

10:00 Break 10:20

3 Doing a Lot with a Little: Ambient Ionization and Microchemistry, Robert B. Cody, Jeol USA Inc.

10:50

4 Chemical Microscopy for the 21st Century: SurfaceEnhanced Raman Microspectroscopy for the Ultrasensitive Detection of Organic Colorants, Marco Leona, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

11:20

5 From Archimedes Palimpsest to Water Analysis: My 35 Years of Instrumental Analytical Chemistry at Rutgers, Gene S. Hall, Rutgers University

10:40 14 Development, Validation and Comparison of a Competitive Ligand Binding and a Functional Cell-Based Assay for Neutralizing Antibody (NAb) Detection, Weifeng Xu, Michael Sank, Jennifer Cummings, Xuefeng Li, Robert Dodge Renuka Pillutla, Binodh DeSilva, Bristol Myers Squibb 11:00 15 Okra Seed Phytochemicals: Potential Treatments for Glycemic Control and Regulators of Enzyme Cholesterol 7-alpha-Hydroxylase in Bile Acid Biosynthesis, Bishambar Dayal, Rutgers Medical School

New York Section of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy Gold Medal Award Honoring Larry A. Nafie, Syracuse University Chair: Deborah A. Peru, Colgate-Palmolive Co. 9:00

6 Vibrational Optical Activity: An Established Tool for Research and Routine Analytical Applications, Laurence A. Nafie, Syracuse University

9:30

7 Two-Dimensional Correlation Spectroscopy in Materials Development, Isao Noda, University of Delaware

Elemental Impurities in Pharmaceuticals: Requirements, Applications, Techniques Chair: Nancy Lewen, Bristol-Myers Squibb 9:00 16 USP Analysis of DMSO Soluble Drug Substances and Excipients Using NexION ICPMS, Jonathan L. Sims, Fadi Abou-Shakra, PerkinElmer 9:30 17 Determination of Elemental Impurities: A Practical Approach from a Contract Lab, Samina Hussain, Exova 10:00 Break

10:00 Break 10:20

8 Electrospun PHA (polyhydroxyalkanoate) Fibers: Influence of Processing on Structure, Bruce Chase, Liang Gong, Isao Noda, John Rabolt, University of Delaware

10:50

9 UV Resonance Raman Spectroscopic Studies of Protein Structure and Dynamics, Sanford (Sandy) A. Asher, University of Pittsburgh

11 Quality-by-Design Method Development of the 2nd Generation Peptide Map Assays for Therapeutic Proteins, Yimin Hua, Francisca Gbormittah, Alekhya Pochiraju, Qian Guan, Robert W. Donaldson, Jianmei Kochling, Genzyme

10:20 18 Use of EDXRF for the Determination of Elemental Impurities in Pharmaceutical Materials, Randy S. Rarig Jr., PANalytical, Nancy Lewen, Bristol-Myers Squibb 10:50 19 An Update on General Chapters and and Implementation Timelines, Kahkashan Zaidi, United States Pharmacopeia

Quality Control and Bioanalysis of Protein Therapeutics Chair: Wenying Jian, Janssen 9:00 10 Application of UPLC-High Resolution MS in Drug Product Comparability Studies, Pilsoo Kang, Jianmei Kochling, Yimin Hua, Robert W. Donaldson, Genzyme

Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part I, organized with the New York Conservation Foundation and New York Microscopical Society Chair: John Scott, New York Conservation Foundation 9:00 20 Simple Magnification, Optical Phase Contrast Microscopy, and Desktop SEM-EDS: Characterizing a Cleaning Agent, John Scott, New York Conservation Foundation

10

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

9:30 21 SEM-EDS and Multi-Instrumental Analysis: Studying the Corrosion of Ag 999 and Ag 925 Inside and Outside Vitrines, Paula Homem, University of Porto 9:50 Break 10:10 22 Accessible Microanalysis in Authentication and Attribution: A Case Study, Soraya Alcalá, Hèléne Fontoira, The Hispanic Society of America, Thiago Assan Piwowazrczyk, Marcelo Myada Redígolo, Interface Research Analysis Solutions 10:40

11:00

9:00 32 Fit-for-Purpose Miniature NIR Spectroscopy for Solid Dosage Continuous Manufacturing, Krizia Karry, Rutgers University 9:30 33 The Next Generation of Long Wavelength Handheld Raman Spectrometers for Raw Material Inspection and Beyond, Claire Dentinger, Mark Mabry, Claude Robotham, Rigaku Raman Technologies

23 Scientific Analysis of Pietro da Cortona’s The Triumph of David, Kristen E. Watts, Amanda Norbutus, Anthony Lagalante, Villanova University, Kristin deGhetaldi, University of Delaware

10:00 Break

24 Synchrotron X-Ray Microtomography, Confocal Laser Microscopy and SEM Imaging Applied to Characterization of Fungal Biodeterioration of Paper in the Context of Cultural Heritage Collections, Hanna M. Szczepanowska, Smithsonian Institution, Diwaker Jha, University of Copenhagen, Thomas G. Mathia, CNRS

Analysis of Textiles and Other Materials Chair: Sandra Ferris, The Dow Chemical Company

9:20 26 Differentiation of Human, Animal, and Synthetic Hair by ATR FTIR Spectroscopy, Jeremy M. Manheim, Kyle Doty, Greg Mclaughlin, Igor K. Lednev, University at Albany 9:40 27 Quantitation of Dyes in Forensic Fibers Using UHPLC-TOF MS and Building a Dye Database with AxION EC ID Software, Sharanya Reddy, Joanne Mather, Bonnie Marmor, PerkinElmer

10:50 35 Miniaturized Multi-Spec (UV-NIR, Raman and Hyperspectral) Instruments in Practical In-Situ Analysis, Fredrick Haibach, BaySpec Process Analysis and Instrumentation Chair: Yuwen Wang, Boehringer Ingelheim

9:20 37 Achieving Greater Process Understanding Through On-Line Reaction Monitoring, Michael L. Hall, Nancy L. Jestel, Eylem Tarkin-Tas, Mark Denniston, Carolyn Degonzague, SABIC 9:40 38 In-Line PAT Method Development for Flowing Pharmaceutical Blend Homogeneity Monitoring, Fan Zhang-Plasket, John P. Higgins, Cat MacConnell, Mano Ramasamy, Robert F. Meyer, Charles E. Miller, Jennifer Pai, Merck 10:00 Break

10:00 Break 10:20 28 Characterization of the Binding Medium Used in Roman Encaustic Paintings on Wall and Wood, Ruben M. Savizky, John L. Bove, Pedro Cuni, Jorge Cuni, Brielle Eisen, The Cooper Union 10:40 29 Structural Characterization of Manmade Fiber Using Fluorescence Microscopy and Image Analysis, Shailesh P. Nagarkar, Prasad Panzade, Aditya Birla Science and Technology Company

11:20 31 Withdrawn by the author.

10:20 34 Mixture Analysis Using Handheld Raman Spectrometer, Dawn Yang, B&W Tek

9:00 36 Off-Line and In-Line Monitoring of Mulling Processes, Savitha S. Panikar, Suyang Wu, Benjamin J. Glasser, Rohit Ramachandran, Rutgers University

9:00 25 Investigation of Body Products on Worn Clothing Substrate Found at a Fire Scene Conflicting with Ignitable Liquid Residue Identification by GC-MS, Gina M. Guerrera, Brooke W. Kammrath, University of New Haven, Erika Chen, Michael Valetutti, New York City Police Department

11:00 30 Differentiating Authentic from Counterfeit Drugs by Raman Microscopy, Fran Adar, Horiba Scientific, Pauline E. Leary, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, John A. Reffner, John Jay College

Handheld Vibrational Spectrometers and Imagers: Innovations and Novel Applications Chair: Heinz W. Siesler, University of Duisburg-Essen

10:20 39 NIR Analyses in the Field; how to get better Answers, Franklin E. Barton, James A. de Haseth, Light Light Solutions Instruments 10:40 40 High-Throughput Virtual Slit Technology: Benefits for Polymer Extrusion, Yusuf Bismilla, Jeffrey T. Meade, Bradford B. Behr, Andrew T. Cenko, Brandon DesRoches, Jared Slaa, Arsen R. Hajian, Tornado Spectral Systems Innovative Practices in Analytical Testing Chair: Richard B. Nguyen, Merial 9:00 41 Analytical Testing for the Cannabis Industry: A New Era Presents New Opportunities, Christopher J. Hudalla, Nathan M. LaCroix, ProVerde Laboratories 9:20 42 Impact of Method Robustness to the Success of Product Commercialization - Lesson Learned, Xin Bu, John Castoro, Joel Young, Bristol-Myers Squibb 9:40 43 Incorporation of Benchtop NMR Spectroscopy into Undergraduate Laboratories: An Active-Learning Approach, Susanne Riegel, Nanalysis 10:00 Break

11

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

10:20 44 Analytical Pipetting of Serum and Serum-Like Liquids, John T. Bradshaw, Richard H. Curtis, Rachel Parshley, Artel Inc.

12:00-2:00

56 Automated Kinetic Forced Degradation Development and Validation, Lina Liu, Timothy Rhodes, Roy Helmy, Keri Joy McNamara, Donna Carroll, Merck

12:00-2:00

57 Resolving the Isolation Challenges of Color Impurities in NOXAFIL, Weidong Tong, Merck

12:00-2:00

11:20 47 Innovative Approach to Helium Carrier Gas Conservation in Analytical Gas Chromatography, Lori Dolata, Edward B. McCauley, Massimo Santoro, Paolo Magni, Alexander N. Semyonov, Thermo Fisher Scientific

58 Analytical Challenges Encountered in Compatibility Testing of Parenteral Dosage Formulations Used in Preclinical Studies, Lara D. Penn, Samantha Devine, Oksana Leidy, Michelle Mathe, Julie Novak, Elizabeth Sander, Merck

12:00-2:00

11:40 48 Automated, Rapid, Reliable Determination of Dissolved Gases in Water by Static Headspace Gas Chromatography, Lori Dolata, Andrea Caruso, Richard Jack, Massimo Santoro, Thermo Fisher Scientific

59 Migration of Ink Components into Transdermal Patch, Kenneth Wong, Richard Bunnell, Sushmeet Singh, Gayatri Trivedi, Terry Panetta, Xinjie Song, SGS Life Science Services

12:00-2:00

60 Direct Determination of Native N-linked Glycans by HPLC with Charged Aerosol Detection, Matthew W. Neely, Marc Plante, David H. Thomas, Ian N. Acworth, Thermo Fisher Scientific

12:00-2:00

61 Identification of a Unique, Metformin Related, Impurity in a Drug Product Stability Sample, Jonathan Marshall, Yande Huang, David Ayers, Michael Peddicord, Scott Miller, BristolMyers Squibb

12:00-2:00

62 Ultra-High Speed USP Analysis within the New USP General Chapter 621 Allowed Limits, Kenichiro Tanaka, William Hedgepeth, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

12:00-2:00

63 Quantitation and Characterization of Polysorbate in Biotherapeutic Products Using Two-Dimensional HPLC, Kenichiro Tanaka, William Hedgepeth, Keiko Yamabe, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

12:00-2:00

64 High Sensitivity Profiling of Glycans Using High-Performance Liquid Chromatography with Fluorescence Detection, Peter Ratsep, Kenichiro Tanaka, William Hedgepeth, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

12:00-2:00

65 A Two Level Limit Test for the Detection of Trace Hydrazine in a Drug Substance by InSitu Derivatization Headspace GC-MS, Sarah G. Westerbuhr, Peter A. Lobue, Philip N. Anderson, Array BioPharma

12:00-2:00

66 Coupling of PXRD, ssNMR and HPLC for Impurity Identification in a Batch of an AntiDiabetic Agent, Roxana F. Schlam, Anuji Abraham, Ian Young, George Crull, BristolMyers Squibb

12:00-2:00

67 Effect of Organic Additives in Running Buffer on Capillary-Electrophoretic Analysis of Amino Acids, Jinmo Huang, Margaret Chen, Kimberly Benitez, The College of New Jersey

12:00-2:00

68 A New Ion Chromatography Method for the Trace Level Analysis of Hydrazine in Povidone and Crospovidone, Lawrence J. Feeley Jr., James E. Brady, Ashland Specialty Ingredients

10:40 45 S.M.A.R.T. Laboratory Practices, Julius Neil Buenconsejo, Keppel Seghers Engineering 11:00 46 Taking the Pain Out of Chromatographic Peak Integration, Peter Bodsky, Shaun Quinn, Thermo Fisher Scientific

NMR Spectroscopy of Molecules Small and Large: Methods and Applications, Part I Chair: Bernie O’Hare, Bruker 9:00 49 Assessing Qualitative and Quantitative NMR Limits in a Drug Metabolism Environment, Gregory Walker, Raman Sharma, Pfizer, Shuai Wang, University of Illinois-Chicago 9:30 50 Pulsed Field Gradient Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (PFGNMR) Studies of Nanoparticle Surfaces and their Interactions, Kebede Beshah, Aslin Izmitli, Antony Van Dyk, The Dow Chemical Company 10:00 Break 10:20

10:40

11:00

51 High-Throughput Screening of Solid Pharmaceuticals with 35Cl Solid-State NMR, Robert W. Schurko, Michael J. Jaroszewicz, Anthony R. Sandre, Andrew M. Namespetra, Kristopher J. Harris, University of Windsor, Adonis Lupulescu, Lucio Frydman, Weizmann Institute 52 Strategies to Enhance the Sensitivity and Reduce the Ambiguity of NMR Spectra of Complex Biological Assemblies, Galia Debelouchina, Princeton University 53 Understanding the Behavior of Different Tablet Disintegrants Using High-Resolution FLASH Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Anuji Abraham, Dolapo Olusanmi, David Good, Denette Murphy, Daniel McNamara, Venkatramana Rao, BristolMyers Squibb, Andrew J. Ilott, Alexej Jerschow, New York University

Monday Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Cleaning Verification, Impurities, Compendial Testing 12:00-2:00

54 Cleaning Verification: TOC or HPLC?, Elizabeth C. Moroney, Mariann Neverovitch, Bristol-Myers Squibb

12:00-2:00

55 Justification of Applying Acceptable Residual Limit (ARL) Based on Toxicological Data and Visual Inspection, Mariann Neverovitch, Bristol Myers Squibb

12

2014 EAS Final Program 12:00-2:00

69 Examining the Thermal Stability of Compound A and Methacrylic Copolymer Solid Dispersion Formulation, Sanjaykumar Patel, Pranav Gupta, Merck

12:00-2:00

70 Finding the Needle in the Haystack – Characterization of Trace Crystallinity in a Commercial Formulation of Paclitaxel ProteinBound Particles by Raman Spectroscopy and Synchrotron X-Ray Diffraction Enabled by Second Harmonic Generation Microscopy, Paul D. Schmitt, Niraj S. Trasi, Shijie Zhang, Fengyuan Deng, Lynne S. Taylor, Garth J. Simpson, Purdue University

Technical Program

12:00-2:00

71 Comparison of the Performance and Spray Behavior of a New Nasal Microemulsion to the Commercial Suspension, Tina Masiuk, Elaine Pu, Zhenyu Wang, Oscar Liu, Julianne Berry, Samir Shah, Merck

12:00-2:00

72 Using Skin-Pampatm for Transdermal Patch Testing, David A. Kwajewski, Balint Sinko, Pion Inc.

12:00-2:00

73 Pharmaceutical Residual Solvent Analysis Using (FT-MRR) Spectroscopy: Fourier Transform Molecular Rotational Resonance, Brent J. Harris, Robin L. Pulliam, Roger Reynolds, Justin L. Neill, Matthew T. Muckle, Dave McDaniel, Brooks H. Pate, BrightSpec

12:00-2:00

81 The Raptor™ ARC-18 Stationary Phase: Selectivity Accelerated, Ty W. Kahler, Art Marigliano, Hanna Rutter, Restek

12:00-2:00

82 The Raptor™ Biphenyl Stationary Phase: Selectivity Accelerated, Hanna Rutter, Ty W. Kahler, Art Marigliano, Restek

12:00-2:00

83 Withdrawn by the author.

12:00-2:00

84 A Novel Core-Shell HPLC Column with Unique Shape Selectivity, Ken Tseng, Toshi Ono, Tsunehisa Hirose, Kazuhiro Kimata, Nacalai USA

12:00-2:00

85 The Use of Sequential Elution Liquid Chromatography of Increasingly Complex Combinations of Compounds for Increased Peak Capacity and Decreased Separation Disorder, Erin J. Ennis, Michael R. Fletcher, Donna M. Blackney, Catherine A. Kita, Joe P. Foley, Drexel University

12:00-2:00

86 Increasing Efficiency while Decreasing Solvent Usage: The Development of a HighThroughput uHPLC Method for Determination of the Aerodynamic Particle Size Distribution (APSD) by Andersen Cascade Impaction (ACI) and Emitted Dose Uniformity (EDU) for Dry Powder Inhalers (DPI), Jagruti Patel, Justin Pennington, Merck

12:00-2:00

87 Use of Additives for Improving LC-MS Analysis, Shyam Verma, Rudolf Kohling, Supelco/Sigma-Aldrich

12:00-2:00

88 Retention Characteristics of Fluorophenyl HPLC Stationary Phases, Brittany George, Eric Williamsen, Ursinus College

12:00-2:00

89 Analysis of the Retention Characteristics of Fluorinated and Non-Fluorinated Octyl HPLC Stationary Phases, Peter Willard, Eric Williamsen, Ursinus College

12:00-2:00

90 The Concept of Standard Adsorption Isotherms: Comparison of Excess Adsorption of Binary Aqueous Organic Mixtures on Classical Packing Material Modified with Alkylated and Fluorinated Ligands, Margaret Figus, Yuri V. Kazakevich, Alexander Y. Fadeev, Seton Hall University

12:00-2:00

91 Outperforming Sub-2-μm Totally Porous Particles Using Fused-Core Technology, Robert E. Moran, Stephanie A. Schuster, Barry E. Boyes, William L. Miles, Advanced Materials Technology

12:00-2:00

92 Selection of Mobile Phase Modifiers for High Efficiency HILIC Separations, William L. Miles, Robert E. Moran, Stephanie A. Schuster, Barry E. Boyes, Advanced Materials Technology

12:00-2:00

93 Integrating Real-World Chemical Separation Research Projects into Analytical Chemistry Curriculum, Yuegang Zuo, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth

Monday Poster Session: HPLC-UHPLC Techniques 12:00-2:00

74 HPLC Separation Polar Compounds with a Focus on the Role Stationary Phase, Matthew Przybyciel, ES Industries

12:00-2:00

75 Characterization of Copaxone® by Viscotek TDAmax, Revital Krispin, Arthur Komlosh, Teva Pharmaceutical

12:00-2:00

76 Charged Aerosol Detection and Evaporative Light Scattering Detection – Fundamental Differences Affecting Analytical Performance, Matthew W. Neely, Marc Plante, David H. Thomas, Ian N. Acworth, Qi Zhang, Thermo Fisher Scientific

12:00-2:00

77 Automated Pre-Column Derivatization and High Speed LC Separation of Primary and Secondary Amino Acids, Wilhad M. Reuter, PerkinElmer

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

78 Determination of Zonyl FSA Surfactant in Anti-Bleed Additive Using Ion-Pairing, Light Absorption Spectrophotometry, and HPLC Methods, Peter Yeh, Shelby Hale, MacDermid 79 Characterization of HILIC Columns with Zwitterionic Functional Groups: Correlation between Retention, Selectivity, Stationary Phase and Water Layer Thickness, David Lentz, Tobias Jonsson, Phuoc Dinh, Patrik Appelblad, EMD Millipore 80 Analysis of Phytosterols in Whole Blood by HPLC-ECD, Michael Hvizd, Marc Plante, Bruce Bailey, Ian Acworth, Thermo Fisher Scientific

13

2014 EAS Final Program 12:00-2:00

94 Withdrawn by the author.

12:00-2:00

95 Quantitation of Creatinine and Albumin Biomarkers in Mouse Urine by HPLC and Affinity Chromatography, Joe Shao, Yingru Zhang, Preeti Sejwal, Bristol-Myers Squibb

Technical Program 12:00-2:00 108 High-Throughput Methodology for Mechanical Testing of Polymer Films, Sara Reynaud, Jun Fang, Liang Fang, Evan Crocker, Arkema 12:00-2:00 109 Xinjin Temple Reinforcement Materials Selecting, Linjuan Zhao, Shaanxi Conservation Institute

12:00-2:00

96 Simultaneous Analysis of APIs and their Counterions Using a Mixed-Mode Column, Peter Ratsep, Kenichiro Tanaka, William Hedgepeth, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

12:00-2:00

97 Fast GPC Analysis of Residual Lauryl Methacrylate in Polymer Products, Tian Lu, Fan Wu, Ashland

12:00-2:00

98 Use of New YMC-Meteoric Core CoreShell and YMC-Triart Hybrid Material for an Improved USP Chlorhexidine Gluconate Assay Method, Jeffrey A. Kakaley, Ernest J. Sobkow, YMC America

12:00-2:00 111 Development of an Analytical Method for Nootropic “Smart” Drugs in Biological Fluids, Mollie M. Mares, Iryna Kurochka, Rini Gupta, Dymere Taylor, Mandi Mohr, Barry Logan, The Forensic Sciences Mentoring Institute

12:00-2:00

99 A Rapid Hydrophilic Interaction Liquid Chromatography (HILIC) Method for Determination of Trace Nitrate and Nitrite in Snow and Rain Samples, Xiaofei Lu, Yuegang Zuo, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth

Monday Poster Session: Sample Preparation

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

100 Two-Dimensional GPC Analysis for Blends of Polymers, Yejia Li, Martin Nosowitz, Mark Lavach, Joseph Mitchell, Robert Barsotti, Florence Mehlmann, Arkema 101 High-Speed Amino Acid Analysis (AAA) on a New 2.7-μm Superficially Porous High pH Stable Reversed-Phase (RP) Column, William J. Long, Anne E. Mack, Jason Link, Agilent Technologies

Monday Poster Session: Forensic Analysis 12:00-2:00 102 Lead and Cadmium in Counterfeit Cigarettes: Implications for Public Health and Research on the Illegal Cigarette Trade, Yi He, Klaus von Lampe, John Jay College, Laura Wood, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Marin Kurti, Rutgers University, 12:00-2:00 103 Blood Alcohol Determination Using Static Headspace Analysis with Optimized Sample Throughput, Anne Jurek, Mike Moses, Lindsey Pyron, Kelly Cravenor, EST Analytical 12:00-2:00 104 Application of Infrared Microscopy for the Chemical Analysis of Security Documents, Ronald Rubinovitz, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Monica Joshi, West Chester University of Pennsylvania 12:00-2:00 105 The Use of Automated Direct Sample Analysis (DSA-TOF) for the Rapid Screening of Illicit Street Drugs, Bonnie Marmor, Joanne Mather, Sean Daugherty, PerkinElmer 12:00-2:00 106 Lawsone’s Derivatives for Fingerprint Detection, Joo Meang, Natalia Fernandez, Gloria Proni, John Jay College 12:00-2:00 107 Analytical and Synthetic Studies on Substituted 1-n-Pentyl-3-Benzoylindoles: Isomeric Synthetic Cannabinoids, Karim M. Abdel-Hay, Jack DeRuiter, Forrest Smith, C. Randall Clark, Auburn University

12:00-2:00 110 Method Implementation for THC, THC-OH, and THC-COOH Testing and Application for Blood in Experimental Subjects, Alex J. Krotulski, Kathryn Peavy, Ian WietechaReiman, Samiyah Cornwell, The Forensic Sciences Mentoring Institute

12:00-2:00 112 Automating Liquid-Liquid Extractions Using a Bench-Top Workstation, Fredrick D. Foster, Oscar G. Cabrices, Jacqueline A. Whitecavage, John R. Stuff, Edward A. Pfannkoch, Gerstel 12:00-2:00 113 New Stationary Phases for Large Volume SPE, Pranathi R. Perati, Jing Hong, Rosanne Slingsby, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 114 Adsorption of Steroid Hormones on Filter Membranes during Analytical Sample Preparation, Jingjing Xie, Si Zhou, Yuegang Zuo, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth 12:00-2:00 115 New Advances in Environmental Air Monitoring, Charles Haws, Pete Grosshans, Nicola Watson, Markes International 12:00-2:00 116 Increasing Extraction Efficiency of Pesticides and Dioxins from Wet Samples Using a Novel New Polymer during Accelerated Solvent Extraction, Aaron Kettle, Pranathi Perati, Kannan Srinivasan, Rahamt Ullah, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 117 Automated Solid-Phase Extraction of Organochlorine Pesticides from Drinking Water, Aaron Kettle, Rosanne Slingsby, Jing Hong, Pranathi Perati, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 118 Development of Jatropha Oil Extraction from Biodiesel Feedstocks Using Accelerated Solvent Extraction, Peter Bodsky, Aaron Kettle, Linda Lopez, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 119 Accelerated Solvent Extraction for Alternative Fuel Research, Peter Bodsky, Aaron Kettle, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 120 Applying a New and Unique Microwave Sample Digestion Technique Towards the Determination of Metals Present in Wine, Berry and Soil Samples, Reynhardt Klopper, Anton Paar 12:00-2:00 121 SmartSample™ Titration Weighing Technology, David Zavich, Matt Eby, Mettler Toledo

14

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

12:00-2:00 122 Trace Determination of Some Heavy Metals by Solid-Phase Extraction and Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometry, Sevgi Kocaoba, Zeynep Aslan, Gonul Celen, Yildiz Technical University

Monday Afternoon, November 17, 2014

2:00 132 3-D Digital Microscopy and Cultural Heritage: A Successful Marriage, Ilaria Cacciari, Salvatore Siano, IFAC-CNR

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry Honoring Joseph A. Caruso, University of Cincinnati Sponsored by Bristol-Myers Squibb Chair: William R. Heineman, University of Cincinnati

2:30 133 Pairing 3-D Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy with Reflectance Transformation Imaging to Gain Insight into the Techniques Used to Create Relief and Contour Lines on Greek Red-Figure Vases, Philip A. Klausmeyer, Paula Artal-Isbrand, Worcester Art Museum

Plenary Lecture and Awards Presentation to Joseph Caruso, University of Cincinnati, immediately follow this session. ALL EAS attendees are invited to attend the lecture and complimentary reception

3:00 Break 3:20 134 Optical Coherence Tomography for the NonInvasive 3-D Volume Imaging of Cultural Heritage, Haida Liang, Nottingham Trent University

2:00 123 New Sources for Ambient Desorption-Ionization Mass Spectrometry, Gary M. Hieftje, Jacob T. Shelley, Steven J. Ray, Kevin P. Pfeuffer, Indiana University, Gregory T. Schilling, Leco Corp.

3:50 135 Pump-Probe Microscopy Enables Noninvasive, Three-Dimensional Imaging of Artwork, Warren S. Warren, Tana Villafana, Martin Fischer, Duke University

2:30 124 The Liquid Sampling-Atmospheric Pressure Glow Discharge (LS-APGD) Microplasma: An Example of What I Learned from Joe Caruso – It’s More Fun Living (a little) Outside of the Box, R. Kenneth Marcus, Clemson University

Coblentz 60th Anniversary Session Development of Vibrational Micro Spectroscopy and Imaging, organized by the Coblentz Society Chair: James Rydzak, GlaxoSmithKline

3:00 Break 3:20 125 Plasma Sources Pushing the Limits in Analytical Chemistry, David W. Koppenaal, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 3:50 126 Spectroelectrochemistry as a Strategy for Improving Sensor Selectivity, William R. Heineman, University of Cincinnati, Samuel A. Bryan, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 4:30 Presentation of the EAS Award in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry 4:35 127 From Solution Chemistry to Mass Spectrometry – My Fields of Analytical, Joseph A. Caruso, University of Cincinnati Development of Pharmaceutical Generics: Analytical Challenges Chairs: Leonel M. Santos, United States Pharmacopeia and Kim Huynh-Ba, Pharmalytik Consulting and Training 2:00 128 Regulatory Perspectives on Good Analytical Practices, Linda Ng, United States Food and Drug Administration 2:30 129 Impact of New Stability Guidance on Generic Drug Development, Kim Huynh-Ba, Pharmalytik Consulting and Training 3:00 Break 3:20 130 Advances on the Modernization of USP Monographs, Clydewyn M. Anthony, Leonel M. Santos, United States Pharmacopeia 3:50 131 Comparison of Dissolution Profiles Including Bioequivalence, Method Transfer/Validation, and f2, Vivian A. Gray, V. A. Gray Consulting

Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part II, organized with the New York Conservation Foundation and New York Microscopical Society Chair: Soraya Alcalá, The Hispanic Society of America

2:00 136 Diffuse Reflections on Chemical Imaging, Neil Lewis, Malvern Instruments 2:30 137 Historical Development of Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy, John A. Reffner, John Jay College 3:00 Break 3:20 138 Historical Development of Raman Imaging - the Impact of the Instrumentational Developments on the Quality of the Results, Fran Adar, Horiba Scientific 3:50 139 Terahertz Spectroscopy: Past, Present and a Very Bright Future, Richard A. McKay, Advantest America Electronic Workflow – A New Frontier of Lab Management, organized by ALMA Chairs: Dennis Swijter, International Flavors and Fragrances and Judy Lin, Bristol-Myers Squibb 2:00 140 Paper on Glass: A Practical Guide to the Implementation of an Electronic Lab Notebook, James Exarchakis, Colgate-Palmolive Company 2:30 141 Implementing a Process Intelligence System for Pharmaceutical Development, Edward Keefe, Megerle Scherholz, Bristol-Myers Squibb 3:00 Break 3:20 142 The Role of the BIOVIA (Accelrys) Laboratory Execution System (LES) and Inventory Management System (IM) in a CRO cGMP Environment, Kathy Shanks, PPD 3:50 143 Electronic Orchestration of Knowledge Creation and Management, Joel Young, Ronald Behling, Larry Fulton, Bristol-Myers Squibb

15

2014 EAS Final Program Integrating Analytical Chemistry Research into Curriculum Chair: Dil Ramanathan, Kean University 2:00 144 Incorporating Research Method Development into the Analytical Lab, Kimberley Frederick, Maryuri Roca, Lisa Quimby, Skidmore College 2:30 145 Integrating Teaching and Research: Strategies and Practices for Building a Research-Supportive Curriculum, Roger S. Rowlett, Colgate University 3:00 Break 3:20 146 Integration of Research into the Curriculum Using XRD and NMR Structural Analysis, Benny Chan, Abby R. O’Connor, The College of New Jersey 3:50 147 Involving Undergraduate Students in Collaborative Research: The Union College Aerogel Team, Mary K. Carroll, Union College NMR Spectroscopy of Molecules Small and Large: Methods and Applications, Part II Chair: David Rovnyak, Bucknell University 2:00 148 Structure/Function Studies of Obscurin Ig58/59, Nathan T. Wright, James Madison University 2:30 149 Liquid State, High-Resolution 14N-NMR of Symmetrically Substituted Nitrogen-Containing Compounds, Benjamin Liu, Istvan Pelczer, Princeton University 3:00 Break 3:20 150 Noncanonical Polyubiquitin Chains: Insights from Structural and Dynamical Studies, Carlos Castañeda, Syracuse University, Susan Krueger, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Ashton Cropp, Virginia Commonwealth University, David Fushman, University of Maryland

Tuesday Morning, November 18, 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Science Honoring Thomas L. Chester, University of Cincinnati Sponsored by Agilent Technologies Chair: J. David Pinkston, Kellogg Company  9:00 Presentation of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Science 9:05 151 Using Complexity To Make Separations Simpler, Thomas L. Chester, University of Cincinnati 9:30 152 Liquid Chromatographic Estimates of Octanol Water Partitioning: Is there a Rational Stationary Phase Choice?, John G. Dorsey, Florida State University 10:00 Break 10:20 153 Ultra High-Performance Supercritical Fluid Chromatography of Lipophilic Compounds with Emphasis on Synthetic and Commercial Biodiesel, Larry T. Taylor, Mehdi Ashraf-Khorassani, Virginia Tech, Kenneth J. Fountain, Giorgis Isaac, Waters

Technical Program 10:50 154 Thinking Outside the Valve: Pressure Control and Other Important Questions in Supercritical Fluid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (SFC-MS), J. David Pinkston, Kellogg Company EAS New Faculty Award In NMR Spectroscopy Honoring Megan Macnaughtan, Louisiana State University Chair: Patrick van der Wel, University of Pittsburgh 9:00 155 Spherical Nanoparticle Supported Lipid Bilayers for the Study of Membrane Proteins, Fang Tian, Richard L. Gill Jr., Pennsylvania State University 9:30 156 Probing Dynamic Protein-Glycosaminoglycan Interactions Using Paramagnetic Ligands, Xu Wang, Arizona State University 10:00 Break 10:20 157 NMR Studies of Bacterial Masonry that Provide Protective Barriers, Charles V. Rice, University of Oklahoma 10:50 Presentation of the EAS New Faculty Award in NMR Spectroscopy 10:55 158 Challenges and Triumphs in Glycoprotein NMR, Megan Macnaughtan, Louisiana State University The Breath of Inhalation Analytical Chair: Justin Pennington, Merck 9:00 159 Solid-State Characterization Techniques for Inhalation Product Development, Matthew Lamm, Merck 9:30 160 Real-Time Inhalation Analytics Using Single Particle Aerosol Mass Spectrometry (SPAMS), David P. Fergenson, Livermore Instruments, Maria Balaxi, David Kohler, Solvias AG, Anna Susz, Bradley D. Morrical, Novartis 10:00 Break 10:20 161 Using Particle and Polymer Properties to Tailor Aerosol Formulations, Christopher Kuehl, Nashwa El-Gendy, Laird Forrest, Cory Berkland, University of Kansas 10:50 162 Using Spray Pattern Area as a Surrogate for SAC in Optimizing pMDI Test Methods, Dino Farina, Zachary Pitluk, Proveris Scientific Detecting Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals, sponsored by the New Jersey Association of Forensic Scientists Chair: Matthew Wood, Ocean County Sheriff’s Office Forensic Laboratory  9:00 163 Near-Real Time Detection of Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals, William E. Mayo, Veracity Networks Inc. 9:30 164 Analytical Testing of Counterfeit Drugs in the Field Using Vibrational Spectroscopy and GCMS, Pauline Leary, Graduate Center, City University of New York, John A. Reffner, John Jay College 10:00 Break

16

2014 EAS Final Program 10:20 165 Paper Test Cards for Presumptive Identification of Falsified and Very Low Quality Pharmaceuticals, Marya Lieberman, University of Notre Dame 10:50 166 Analysis of Counterfeit Pharmaceutical Products Using Visible and Vibrational Spectroscopies Inside and Outside of the Laboratory, Adam Lanzarotta, Nicola Ranieri, United States Food and Drug Administration Forensic Chemistry Center Microscopy and Microanalysis for Cultural Heritage, Part III, organized with the New York Conservation Foundation and New York Microscopical Society Chair: John Scott, New York Conservation Foundation  9:00 167 Jackson Pollock’s Number 1A (1948): Using Spatially Resolved XRF and Multivariate Analysis to Characterize the Artist Palette and Process, Ana Martins, Jim Coddington, Museum of Modern Art, Donald Dahlberg, Lebanon Valley College, Geert van der Snickt, University of Antwerp, Birgit van Driel, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Joris Dik, Delft University of Technology 9:20 168 Multiphoton Microscopy: An Efficient and Promising Tool for In-Situ Characterization of Historical Artifacts, Gaël Latour, Laboratory Imagery and Modelisation in Neurobiology et Cancerology, Laurianne Robinet, Museum National Natural History, Jean-Philippe Echard, Marie Didier, Musée de la Musique, Marie-Claire Schanne-Klein, Ecole Polytechnique 9:50 Break 10:10 169 Advances in the Imaging and Microscopy of Semiconductor Pigments: From Laser-Based Time-Resolved Luminescence Imaging to Micro X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis Using Synchrotron Radiation, Austin Nevin, Sara Bellei, Institute of Nanotechnologies and Photonics, Anna Cesaratto, Valentina Capogrosso, Gianluca Valentini, Daniela Comelli, Politecnico di Milano, Caroline Tokarski, Hervé Vezin, University Lille 10:40 170 Laser Ablation Surface-Enhanced Raman Microspectroscopy, Pablo Londero, Marco Leona, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Anna Cesaratto, Politecnico di Milano, John R. Lombardi, City College of New York LC Productivity Through Particle Change: Size, Type, Shape Chair: Peter Broske, Agilent Technologies  9:00 171 Method Development with Zirconia Based Stationary Phases, Clayton McNeff, Daniel Nowlan, Kelly S. Johnson, ZirChrom Separations, Richard A. Henry, Consultant 9:20 172 High-Pressure Ion Chromatography: Following the Lead of Ultra High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography, Peter Bodsky, Frank Hoefler, Maria Rey, Thermo Fisher Scientific 9:40 173 Achieving Maximum Kinetic Performance from UHPLC Columns, Richard A. Henry, William H. Campbell, David S. Bell, Sigma-Aldrich/Supelco 10:00 Break

Technical Program 10:20 174 Halophase: A Novel Stationary Phase with Tunable Retention Properties through Functionalized Carboxylate Deposition of Halogenated Small Molecules, Brian A. Logue, Michael W. Stutelberg, Venkataiah Mallam, Robert P. Oda, Raj K. Bhandari, South Dakota State University 10:40 175 The Use of Elevated Temperature in HPLC Biomolecule Separation to Shorten Analysis Time and Improve Peak Shape with Wide-Pore, CoreType Silica Columns, Stacy Squillario, Roy Eksteen, Hillel Brandes, Sigma-Aldrich/Supelco 11:00 176 Easy Method Transfer and Scalability with Superficially Porous Particles, Anne E. Mack, William J. Long, Wu Chen, Xiaoli Wang, Jason Link, Maureen Joseph, Agilent Technologies 11:20 177 Monolithic Silica’s for “Dirty Sample” HPLC Analysis with Less Sample Preparation, Egidijus Machtejevas, EMD Millipore Chemometric and Spectroscopic Applications in Forensics, organized by the Coblentz Society Chair: Brandye Smith-Goettler, Merck  9:00 178 Discriminating Power of Fiber Associations in Forensic Examination Practice, Edward G. Bartick, George Washington University, Stephen L. Morgan, University of South Carolina, Kevin Roberts, Suffolk University 9:30 179 Raman Microspectroscopy and Advanced Statistics for the Analysis of Biological Stains and Gunshot Residue, Igor K. Lednev, Greg McLaughlin, Kyle C. Doty, Justin Bueno, University at Albany 10:00 Break 10:20 180 Chemometrics in Action: Deployment of Handheld Spectroscopic Devices for First Responders, Suzanne Schreyer, Lin Zhang, Michael Hargreaves, Thermo Fisher Scientific 10:50 181 Hyperspectral Imaging and Its Applications in Forensics Science, Carley Chwal, Jeffrey Beckstead, ChemImage Corporation Detection and Fate of Nanoparticles in Biota Chair: Jason White, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station  9:00 182 Fate and Effects of Engineered Nanomaterials in Agricultural Systems, Jason White, Joseph Hawthorne, Roberto De la Torre-Roche, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station 9:30 183 Locating Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Transformation in Plants Using Synchrotron X-Rays, Jorge GardeaTorresdey, Jose Hernadez-Viezcas, University of Texas-El Paso, Hiram Castillo-Michel, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility 10:00 Break 10:20 184 Determination of Carbon Nanotube Fate and Exposure Using a Microwave-Induced Heating Method, Jacyln Cañas-Carrell, Amanda Parra, Sabrina Deleon, Fahmida Irin, Mohammad Saed, Texas Tech University, Micah Green, Texas A&M University

17

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

10:50 185 Identification and Avoidance of Potential Artifacts and Misinterpretations in Nanomaterial Ecotoxicity Measurements, Elijah Petersen, Vincent Hackley, Teresa Kirschling, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Theodore Henry, Heriot-Watt University, Jian Zhao, Baoshan Xing, Stockbridge School of Agricultural, Robert MacCuspie, Florida Polytechnic University, Marina Dobrovolskaia, Leidos Biomedical Research Inc., Jason White, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station

10:20 195 Development of SERS Methods for Rapid Detection of Multi-Pesticides in Food, Hua Zhang, Lili He, University of Massachusetts-Amherst 10:40 196 Very Large Range Pesticide Screening in Food Using GC Triple Quadrupole MS, Lori Dolata, Massimo Santoro, Thermo Fisher Scientific 11:00 197 Analysis of Beer, Wine and their Agricultural Constituents (Hops, Grapes, Grains) for Pesticides Using QuEChERS Extraction and High-Throughput Sample Preparation, Patricia L. Atkins, SPEX CertiPrep

Functional Surfaces: Preparation and Analysis Chair: Robert Opila, University of Delaware

11:20 198 Vacuum Ultraviolet Detection for the Identification and Quantification of Pesticides by Gas Chromatography, Hui Fan, Doug D. Carlton, Jr., Ian Sawicki, Kevin A. Schug, University of TexasArlington, Phillip Walsh, Dale Harrison, VUV Analytics

 9:00 186 Silicon Surface Functionalization to Control the Oxidation State of Copper during Metalorganic Chemical Vapor Deposition of Cu(I) and Cu(II) Precursors, Yichen Duan, Andrew Teplyakov, University of Delaware

11:40 199 Development of a Sensitive LC-UV Method to Determine Two Trace Aldehydes in Maltitol, George Wang, Zhen Wu, Holly M. Shackman, Mark S. Bolgar, David K. Lloyd, Bristol-Myers Squibb

9:20 187 Mechanism of Electrical Passivation of Silicon Surfaces with Quinhydrone, Meixi Chen, Nicole A. Kotulak, Nikolas J. Schreiber, Robert L. Opila, University of Delaware

Tuesday Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Drug Product Analysis, Particulates, Inorganics

9:40 188 Electron Beam Induced Reactions of Adsorbed π-Allyl Ruthenium Tricarbonyl Bromide: Towards Design of Electron Beam Induced Deposition (EBID)-Specific Precursors, Julie A. Spencer, Rachel Thorman, Michael Barclay, Howard Fairbrother, Johns Hopkins University, Joseph A. Brannaka, Lisa McElwee-White, University of Florida, Oddur Ingólfsson, University of Iceland

 12:00-2:00

10:00 Break 10:20 189 Formation of High-Coverage Nanoparticle Monolayers through Click Chemistry, Mackenzie G. Williams, Yue Liu, Timothy Miller, Andrew Teplyakov, University of Delaware 10:40 190 Correlation of Carbon Growth on Ru-Capped Multilayer Mirrors Irradiated by Extreme-Ultraviolet Light and Electrons, Michael S. Barclay, Nadir S. Faradzhev, Howard Fairbrother, Johns Hopkins University, Shannon B. Hill, Thomas B. Lucatorto, National Institute of Standards and Technology 11:00 191 Controlled Synthesis and Optical Studies of ZnO Nanostructures, Zhengxin Li, Jolie Blake, Lars Gundlach, University of Delaware Food and Additive Analysis Chair: Michael Ruberto, Materials Need Consulting  9:00 192 Detection of Olive Oil Adulteration Using Benchtop NMR Spectroscopy, Susanne Riegel, Nanalysis 9:20 193 Determination of Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA) from the Surface of Cookware under Simulated Cooking Conditions Using Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE) and LC-MS-MS, Changling Qiu, Douglas Raynie, South Dakota State University 9:40 194 HPLC Analysis of a Commercial Whirlpool Hopping Process in the Beer Brewing Industry, Jessica S. Henry, Kelsey A. Packard, Elizabeth A. Brady, Sterling A. Tomellini, University of New Hampshire, Austin D. Gregoire, Craft Brew Alliance 10:00 Break

200 Particulate Contamination Control - Current Technology Versus State-of-the-Past, Oliver Valet, rap.ID Inc.

12:00-2:00 201 Determination of Crystallinity in Amorphous Solid Dispersions, Cynthia S. Randall, Particle Sciences, Ajoy Koomer, University of MissouriKansas City, Rabi Bello, Drexel University 12:00-2:00 202 Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Aerosol Reactions, Ho Yeon Yoo, Stanley Bruckenstein, Stanley Bruckenstein Chemical Consulting 12:00-2:00 203 Intrinsic Viscosity as a Tool for Characterizing Microcrystalline Cellulose, Tara S. Hundley, Anton Paar 12:00-2:00 204 Moisture Determination in Rubber Stoppers Using Relative Humidity Sensing Technology; A Karl Fischer Titration Alternative, Garrett Rowe, Christopher Altamirano, Arizona Instrument 12:00-2:00 205 Detection and Quantification of As, Cd, Hg, and Pb in API and FDP Using Procedure 2 of Updated USP , Michael Murphy, Philip Costello, Diana Buro, Intertek Pharmaceutical Services 12:00-2:00 206 Impact of Croscarmellose Sodium on Recovery of Active from Formulated Capsules, Songling Yu, Xiaolu Liao, Mauro Solorzano, Naijun Wu, Celgene Corporation 12:00-2:00 207 Characterizing Ligand Binding to Serum Albumin Using Taylor Dispersion Analysis, David Goodall, Thomas Allen, Alexander Chapman, Paraytec 12:00-2:00 208 Dual Wavelength Imaging of Whole Tablet Dissolution, Alexander Chapman, David Goodall, Paraytec

18

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

12:00-2:00 209 Development of a 2-Butanol Background Electrolyte for Non-Aqueous Chiral Capillary Electrophoresis, Erin J. Ennis, Joe P. Foley, Drexel University

12:00-2:00 220 Benefits of Using Wide Pore Superficially Porous Particles for Biomolecule Separations, Wu Chen, Anne Mack, Jim Martosella, Kunqiang Jiang, Agilent Technologies

12:00-2:00 210 Determination of the Enantiomeric Purity of Dextromethorphan via Polarimetry, Mark Canestrano, Anton-Paar USA

12:00-2:00

221 Analysis of Phenolic Compounds in New Hampshire Sugar Maple Sap by LC-MS, Elizabeth Brady, Sterling Tomellini, Martha Carlson, Barrett N. Rock, University of New Hampshire, Walter C. Shortle, USDA Forest Service

12:00-2:00

222 Rapid Identification and Determination of Polyphenols in Herbal Plants by UPLC-MSMS, Saliha Esin Çelik, Burcu Bekdeşer, Ayşe Nur Tufan, Mustafa Özyürek, Kubilay Güçlü, Reşat Apak, Istanbul University

12:00-2:00

223 Determination of Corilagin by Hybrid SolidPhase Extraction (SPE) Ultra-Performance Liquid Chromatography Coupled with Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry in Rat Plasma and its Application to Pharmacokinetic and Bioavailability Studies, Atul S. Rathore, Sathiyanarayanan Lohidasan, Kakasaheb R. Mahadik, Poona College of Pharmacy

12:00-2:00

224 Rapid Quantitative Determination for Comparative Analysis of Biologically Active Piperamides, Phenolics, Flavonoids and Terpenoid in Fruits and Leaves of Ten Piper Species Using UPLC-ESI-MS-MS, Preeti Chandra, Renu Pandey, Brijesh Kumar, Central Drug Research Institute

12:00-2:00

225 Analysis of Emulsifiers in Foods by High Pressure Liquid Chromatography and Charged Aerosol Detection, Marc Plante, Bruce Bailey, Ian Acworth, Qi Zhang, Thermo Fisher Scientific

Tuesday Poster Session: HPLC of Peptides, Proteins and Other Biomolecules  12:00-2:00 211 Determination of Carbohydrates in Various Matrices by Capillary HPAE-PAD, Terri T. Christison, Peter Bodsky, Carl Fisher, Hua Yang, Monika Verma, Linda Lopez, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 212 High-Throughput and Highly Reproducible Sub-4 min Separation of Proteins and Antibodies Using Size Exclusion Chromatography, Justin Steve, Atis Chakrabarti, Tosoh Bioscience 12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

213 Environmentally Friendly HPLC Methods for the Determination of Renal Function Biomarkers, Creatinine and Uric Acid, in Human Fluids, Si Zhou, Zhuo Zhu, Ruiting Zuo, Xiaofei Lu, Yuegang Zuo, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth 214 Simultaneous Determination of 4-Cumylphenol, 2,4-Bis-(dimethylbenzyl) phenol and Bisphenol A in Blue Crab and Prawn Samples, Zhuo Zhu, Mohammed Alshanqiti Alshanqiti, Joseph Michael, Sarah Pereira, Yuegang Zuo, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth

12:00-2:00 215 The Building Blocks of Life: Comparing Methods for Amino Acid Analysis, William Hedgepeth, Kenichiro Tanaka, Steve Wishnies, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments 12:00-2:00

216 Glycerophospholipids Analysis by Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Liquid Chromatography, William Hedgepeth, Kenichiro Tanaka, Tetsuo Iida, Yoshiyuki Watabe, Junichi Masuda, Yoshihiro Hayakawa, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

12:00-2:00 217 Development of Stability Indicating HPLC Assay and Degradation Product Methods for a Peptide Drug Product, Kaimeng Zhou, Jing Zhang, Zheng Zhao, Wendy Zhong, Claudia Neri, Yun Mao, Merck 12:00-2:00 218 Carbohydrate Analysis in Beverages and Food Using Pulsed Amperometric and Charged Aerosol Detection, Michael Hvizd, Qi Zhang, Marc Plante, Bruce Bailey, David Thomas, Ian Acworth, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00 219 Targeted Research of Peptides by LCxLCMS-SQD, Noelle Elliott, Joanne Mather, Sean Daugherty, PerkinElmer, Sabine Heinisch, Institute of Analytical Sciences

12:00-2:00 226 Analysis of Phospholipids in Natural Samples by Normal Phase HPLC and Corona Charged Aerosol Detection, Marc Plante, Bruce Bailey, Ian Acworth, Qi Zhang, Thermo Fisher Scientific 12:00-2:00

227 Proteomic Investigation of Saliva from People with Smith-Lemli-Opitz Syndrome (SLOS) and Controls, Emmalyn J. Dupree, Megan M. Borland, Costel C. Darie, Alisa G. Woods, Kelly L. Wormwood, Clarkson University

12:00-2:00

228 Investigation of Tumor Differentiation Factor (TDF)-Induced Cell Differentiation Using Mass Spectrometry Based Proteomics, Devika Channaveerappa, Clarkson University

12:00-2:00

229 Reverse-Phase UPLC Assay for Purity and Concentration Determination during Admixtrue Compatibility Study of a Therapeutic Protein Program, Shenjiang Yu, Shuai Shi, Joseph Rizzo, Venus Hashemi, Chakravarthy Narasimhan, Valenthyn Antochshuk, Daisy Richardson, Mohammed Shameem, Merck

12:00-2:00

230 The Use of Diamond-Based Core-Shell HPLC Particle in the Analysis of Proteins, David S. Jensen, Janusz Zukowski, Andrew E. Dadson, Diamond Analytics

19

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

Tuesday Poster Session: Mass Spectrometry

12:00-2:00

242 Developing a Sensitive and Robust Method for Container Closure Integrity (CCI) Testing, Casey A. Tyrrel-Pawlowic, Nikunj Vasoya, Chris Knutsen, Jayshree Patel, Steve Klohr, Antonio Fernandez, Bristol-Myers Squibb

12:00-2:00

243 Characterizing Nanoparticles in Cosmetic Formulations to Quantitate and Compare the Contribution of Absorbance from Large Particle and Nanoparticle Scattering, Chris Lynch, Jeffrey Taylor, PerkinElmer

12:00-2:00

244 Authentication of Extra Virgin Olive Oil Using Fluorescence and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, Fred Behringer, Emily Paine, Surveillant LLC

12:00-2:00

245 Analysis of Cocoa Content in Chocolate Using Tribo-Rheometry and its Correlation to Mouthfeel Alina Higham-Latshaw, TA Instruments

12:00-2:00

246 Analysis of Lead in Commercial Wine Samples by Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy, Samuel M. Abegaz, Matthew Mireles, Kydric Smith, Columbus State University

12:00-2:00

247 The Determination of Preservatives in Cosmetic Products by LC-MS-MS, Emily A. Myers, Thomas A. Brettell, Thomas H. Pritchett, Cedar Crest College

12:00-2:00

248 Rapid and Inexpensive Method for Olive Oil Adulteration and Identification, Harri Harma, University of Turku

 12:00-2:00

231 Accelerated Solvent Extraction and In-Cell Sample Clean-Up of Marine Sediment for the Analysis of Persistent Organic Pollutants by GC-MS-MS, Emma L. Gatley, Emmanuel O. Omari, Aliaksandr V. Yeudakimau, James D. Stuart, Christopher R. Perkins, Molly B. Williams, Anthony A. Provatas, University of Connecticut

12:00-2:00 232 Characterization of the Points and Extent of Glycosylation in Steviol Glycosides, Li Chen, Richard Hiserodt, International Flavors & Fragrances 12:00-2:00

233 Evaluation of Low- and High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry Techniques for Metabolite Profiling and Identification, Khushbu G. Gajjar, Dil Ramanathan, Kean University

12:00-2:00 234 Gas-Phase Fragmentation of Metal-Cationized Acid Salts, Robert D. Hale, Athula B. Attygalle, Stevens Institute of Technology, Carl S. Weisbecker, Merck 12:00-2:00

235 Recognition of N-Oxides and Quaternary Ammonium Compounds by Chloride Ion Attachment LCMS, Shirley A. Rodriguez, Keith B. McKellop, Scott Pennino, Daniel L. Norwood, Boehringer Ingelheim

12:00-2:00

236 Analysis of Drugs of Abuse by LC-TOF MS: A Unique Quantitation Viewer for Streamlining Workflows, Bill Hahn, Leslie Sullivan, George Perkins, PerkinElmer, John Moncur, Scott Campbell, Stephen Roberts, SpectralWorks

Tuesday Poster Session: Bioanalysis I 

12:00-2:00 237 High-Throughput UPLC-MS-MS Method Development for Phenolic Acids (Chlorogenic Acids) Determination in American Cranberry, Yifei Wang, Nicholi Vorsa, Ajay P. Singh, Rutgers University 12:00-2:00 238 Screening and Sequencing of Gangliosides from Human Glioblastoma Multiforme by HighPerformance Mass Spectrometry, Loredana M. Lupu, Megan Borland, Clarkson University 12:00-2:00

239 Identification of the O-Glycoforms Expressed in the Urine of a Patient Suffering from Schindler Disease Using Chip-Based Nanoelectrospray Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Adrian C. Robu, Megan Borland, Costel C. Darie, Clarkson University, Mirela Sarbu, Aurel Vlaicu, Jasna Peter-Katalinic, Alina D. Zamfir

Tuesday Poster Session: Consumer Products

12:00-2:00

249 Forensic Genetic Analyses of Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups and Control Region Variation in the Korean Population, Wook Kim, Ki Cheol Kim, Dankook University, Seung Beom Hong, Korean National Forensic Service

12:00-2:00

250 Using Pure Shift HSQC to Characterize Microgram Quantities of Metabolites, Yong Liu, Mitchell D. Green, Rosemary Marques, Tony Pereira, Roy Helmy, Robert T. Williamson, Wolfgang Bermel, Gary E. Martin, Merck

12:00-2:00

251 The Power of the Combination of HILICMS-MS and 31P-NMR Techniques for the Characterization of Phospholipid Compositions in Different Lecithin Products, Ying Yang, Richard Hiserodt, Jing Li, International Flavors and Fragrances

12:00-2:00

252 Ultrasensitive Carbohydrate-Peptide Microarray for Diagnosing IgE Mediated Peanut Allergy Using Surface Plasmon Resonance Imaging, Amit A. Joshi, Mark W. Peczuh, Challa V. Kumar, James F. Rusling, University of Connecticut

12:00-2:00

253 Versatile Low-Cost Electrochemical Microfluidic Immunosensors for Cancer Diagnostics, Brunah A. Otieno, Colleen E. Krause, Gregory W. Bishop, James F. Rusling, University of Connecticut

 12:00-2:00 240 Air Sampling of Fragrance Compounds Using the Gerstel GSS-FP Automated Sampler, John Stuff, Jacqueline Whitecavage, Gerstel 12:00-2:00 241 An Investigation of Biodiesel Stability: A Study of the Behavior of Antioxidants in Soybean and Canola Derived Biodiesel, Casey Camire, James D. Stuart, Anthony A. Provatas, University of Connecticut

20

2014 EAS Final Program 12:00-2:00

254 A Novel Device for Plasma Micro-Sampling Technique Developed for Bioanalysis, Ji Zhang, David Lok, Jesse Gray, Kelly Connolly, Steve Grossman, Takeda Pharmaceutical International

12:00-2:00

255 Use of New 1.9-μm YMC-Triart C18 and 2.7-μm YMC-Meteoric Core C18 Bio Stationary Phases for Fast Peptide Mapping of Monoclonal Antibodies, Jeffrey A. Kakaley, Ernest J. Sobkow, YMC America

12:00-2:00

Technical Program 12:00-2:00

265 Photochemical and Thermal Control over Electrolessly Gold-Plated Film Structure on Thin Silicon Nitride to Target Sensing Applications, Caitlin M. Masterson, Brian D. Velleco, Buddini Iroshika Karawdeniya, Julie C. Whelan, Y.M. Nuwan D.Y. Bandara, Jason R. Dwyer, University of Rhode Island

12:00-2:00

266 Quantification of Local Bonding Environments in Cesium Silicate Glasses Using Si-29 Magic– Angle Flipping NMR, Pyae Phyo, Jay H. Baltisberger, Berea College, Kevin Sanders, Eric Keeler, Philip J. Grandinetti, The Ohio State University

256 Development of a Quantitative Method for Synthetic Cannabinoid Metabolites in Urine Using Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS-MS), Craig T. Leopold, Alonzo Elias, Christina Bangura, Monica Marcuse, The Forensic Sciences Mentoring Institute

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

257 Metabolic Profile Determination of Novel Psychoactive Substances by Use of Human Liver Microsomes, Sarah E. Wolf, Noah Gubernick, Timothy Martin, Grace Pak, The Forensics Mentoring Institute

267 Mass Spectrometry Analysis of NXS/T Glycosylation Sites in Recombinant Glycoproteins, Armand G. Ngounou Wetie, Izabela Sokolowska, Urmi Roy, Alisa G. Woods, Costel C. Darie, Clarkson University

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

258 LC-MS-MS Method Development and Analysis of Sofosbuvir Metabolites Using PGC (Porous Graphitic Carbon) Column: Determination of the Metabolites in Human Liver and Lung Cell Lines, Prabhakar G. Reddy, Taylor J. Evers, Adhitya R. Katkam, Gregory Bluemling, Michael G. Natchus, Damien Kuiper, Manohar Saindane, Shuli Mao, Mark Lockwood, Michael Hager, Richard F. Arrendale, Emory Institute for Drug Development

268 Using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Techniques to Study Small (d = 2-3 nm) GoldTransition Metal Nanoparticle Alloys, Lauren Marbella, Christopher M. Andolina, Jill E. Millstone, University of Pittsburgh

12:00-2:00

269 Toxicity of Silver Nanoparticles in the Environment, Maral P.S. Mousavi, Ian L. Gunsolus, Christy L. Haynes, Philippe Bühlmann, University of Minnesota, Carlos E. Pérez De Jesús, University of Puerto Rico

12:00-2:00

270 Enzyme Modulator Screening Using Droplet Samples and Sub-Second Microchip Electrophoresis, Erik Guetschow, Robert T. Kennedy, University of Michigan

Tuesday Poster Session: Graduate Student Awards

12:00-2:00

259 Supported Liquid Extraction as a Bioanalytical Sample Preparation Technique, Matthew Cleeve, Kinesis Ltd

12:00-2:00

260 Extraction of Indomethacin and Ibuprofen from Small Volume Biological Fluid Samples, Matthew Cleeve, Kinesis Ltd

Tuesday Afternoon, November 18, 2014

12:00-2:00

261 Development of an Ultra-Sensitive Affinity Capture Method for the Quantification of Microdosed Dog Toxicology Samples, Lorell N. Discenza, John Mehl, Georgia Cornelius, Charu Chaudhry, Randy Talbott, Jinping Gan, Celia D’Arienzo, Timothy Olah, Bristol-Myers Squibb

EAS Award For Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics Honoring Marcel Maeder, University of New Castle Sponsored by Eigenvector Research Chair: Paul Gemperline, Eastern Carolina University

12:00-2:00

262 Finding Order Amid Chaos: In-Vitro Challenges Working with Boronic Acids, Teresa Mulder, Xiaorong Liang, Chenghong Zhang, Hoa Le, Matt Baumgardner, Quynh Ho, Savita Ubhayakar, Yuan Chen, S. Cyrus Khojasteh, Cornelis E.C.A. Hop, Peter Fan, Genentech

2:30 272 Hybrid Hard and Soft-Modeling and Local Rank Analysis: Two Relevant Ideas to Describe and Explore Chemical Systems, Anna de Juan, University of Barcelona 3:00 Break

Tuesday Poster Session: Undergraduate Student Awards

3:20 273 Calculation of Feasible Bands for Visualizing the Constraint Effects in Model-Free Methods, Hamid Abdollahi, Institute for Advanced Studies in Basic Sciences

12:00-2:00 263 Aggregation Behavior of Ionic Liquids in Low Polarity Solvents, Elise Cade, Markus Hoffmann, The College at Brockport 12:00-2:00

2:00 271 Hard-Modelling - From Titrations to Solving Climate Tribulations, Graeme Puxty, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization

264 Linked Scanning of He and Compensation Voltage to Improve the Resolving Power of Differential Ion Mobility Separations, Rachel Harris, Brandon Santiago, Samantha Isenberg, Gary Glish, University North Carolina-Chapel Hill

3:50 Presentation of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics 3:55 274 Chemometrics: The Balance Between ‘Chemistry’ and ‘Metrics’, Marcel Maeder, University of New Castle

21

2014 EAS Final Program Dried Blood Spot (DBS) Analysis and its Alternatives: Recent Advances in Clinical, Forensic and Pharmaceutical Applications Chairs: Daniel Norwood, Boehringer Ingelheim and Naiyu Zheng, Bristol-Myers Squibb 2:00 275 History of DBS and its Development from Clinical to Pharmaceutical Application, Daniel L. Norwood, Boehringer Ingelheim 2:30 276 Dried Blood Spots - from Newborn Screening to Forensic Science, Donald Chace, Pediatrix Medical Group 3:00 Break 3:20 277 Recent Progress in Implementing Dried Blood Spot Technology in Drug Development, Qin Ji, BristolMyers Squibb 3:50 278 Automated Bioanalysis of Dried Blood Spots and Dried Plasma Spots Coupled with High Resolution Mass Spectrometry and SRM LC-MS Technologies, Jack Henion, Robert Sturm, Regina Oliveira, Quintiles Bioanalytical and ADME Labs Understanding Supercritical Fluid Chromatography and Using It, sponsored by the Chromatography Forum of Delaware Valley Chair: Mary Ellen McNally, E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company 2:00 279 Enhanced-Fluidity Liquid Chromatography (EFLC) for Highly Polar Biologically Relevant Compounds, Susan Olesik, Martin Beres, Rafael Bennett, Ohio State University 2:30 280 Recent Advances in Supercritical Fluid Chromatography Applications, Jennifer Van Anda, Rick Wikfors, Agilent Technologies 3:00 Break 3:20 281 Effect of Particle Size on the Speed and Resolution of Chiral Separations Using Supercritical Fluid Chromatography, Mirlinda Biba, Erik L. Regalado, Christopher J. Welch, Merck, Naijun Wu, Celgene 3:50 282 The Power of Ultra Performance Convergence Chromatography: Theoretical Considerations and some Examples of Use, Francois J. Huby, Robert M Campbell, The Dow Chemical Company Forensic Toxicology, sponsored by the New Jersey Association of Forensic Scientists Chair: Barry K. Logan, NMS Labs 2:00 283 Comparison of GCMS, EIA, and LC-QTOF Screening Methods for Novel Psychoactive Substances in Urine Samples, Jill Yeakel, Lehigh Valley Toxicology, Mandi Mohr, Center For Forensic Science Research and Education, Barry Logan, NMS Labs

Technical Program 2:30 284 Screening Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS) by High Resolution Accurate Mass Spectrometry (HRAMS), Jared Castellani, South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, Alex L. Magitti III, Barry Logan, Francis X. Diamond, Matthew M. McMullin, NMS Laboratories 3:00 Break 3:20 285 Determination of 22 Antiepileptic Drugs in PostMortem Blood, Serum and Plasma Using LCMS-MS with Focus on their Rule in Forensic Cases, Karen Scott, Arcadia University, Shaza Deeb, University of Glasgow 3:50 286 Development of a Pyrrolidinophenone Panel in Blood and Detection in Toxicology Case Work, Donna M. Papsun, Barry K. Logan, Robert Middleberg, NMS Labs, Carol Beck, Thomas Jefferson University New York Microscopical Society Ernst Abbe Award Symposium on Atomic Force Microscopy Infrared Spectroscopy, organized with the New York Conservation Foundation Honoring Dr. Alexandre Dazzi, University of Paris-Sud Chair: John Reffner, John Jay College 2:00 287 How Photoacoustic and Nanomechanics Combine to Perform IR Spectroscopy at the Nanoscale, Alexandre Dazzi, University of Paris-Sud 2:30 288 Extending AFM-Based Infrared Spectroscopy to a Wide Range of Applications, Craig Prater, Anasys Instruments 3:00 Break 3:20 289 AFM-IR: Nanoscale IR Spectroscopy for the Materials and Life Sciences, Curtis Marcott, Light Light Solutions, Craig Prater, Qichi Hu, Michael Lo, Kevin Kjoller, Anasys Instruments 3:50 290 Tip-Enhanced Infrared Nanospectroscopy via Molecular Expansion Force Detection, Mikhail A. Belkin, Feng Lu, Mingzhou Jin, University of TexasAustin 4:20 291 NanoIR to Investigate Parchment and its Degradation, Laurianne Robinet, Center of Research for Conservation, Gaël Latour, Ariane Deniset-Besseau, Alexandre Dazzi, University of Paris-Sud, Marie-Claire Schanne-Klein, Laboratory for Optics and Biosciences Novel Applications of Mass Spectrometry to Solve Analytical Challenges Chair: Fenghe Qiu, Boehringer Ingelheim 2:00 292 Quantitating Protein Panels and Normalizing Hematocrit from Dried Blood Spots (DBS) Using an Automated SISCAPA® Mass Spectrometry Workflow, Morteza Razavi, Selena S. Larkin, Terry W. Pearson, Leigh Anderson, SISCAPA Assay Technologies

22

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

2:20 293 Validated Determination of Dapagliflozin and Qualitative Determination of Its Glucuronide Metabolite in Human Dried Blood Spot: MultipleSite Pediatric Clinical Experience, Xiaohui Xu, Jane Liu, Jim Shen, Melanie Pe Benito, Marsha Epstein, Guowen Liu, David Boulton, Pathanjali Kadiyala, Mark E. Arnold, Qin C. Ji, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Michael Waldron, PPD

3:50 305 Understanding the Electron Stimulated Surface Reactions of Organometallic Complexes to Enable Design of Precursors for Electron Beam Induced Deposition, Howard Fairbrother, Julie Spencer, Mike Barclay, Samantha Rosenberg, Johns Hopkins University, Lisa McElwee-White, University of Florida Separation Efficiency, Reagent Reduction, Microfluidics, and Multidimensionality Chair: Nina Gonnella, Boehringer Ingelheim

2:40 294 Advantages and Challenges of Applying LC-MS-MS to Regulated Protein Bioanalysis, Hao Jiang, Jianing Zeng, Craig A. Titsch, Linlin Luo, Dharmesh D. Desai, Anne-Françoise Aubry, Binodh S. DeSilva, Mark E. Arnold, Bristol-Myers Squibb 3:00 Break 3:20 295 Improved LC-MS Method Development for Pain Management Panels, Thomas A. Russell, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments 3:40 296 Identification of Volatile Organic Compounds in Beer by TurboMatrix Headspace Trap System-Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Hetal Rana, Dil Ramanathan, Kean University

2:20 307 The Importance of Tolerance Limits in UHPLC Method Modelling for Robustness Evaluation, Imre L. Molnár, Hans-Jürgen Rieger, Molnár-Institute 2:40 308 The Use of Eluent Generation in Ion Chromatography, Peter Bodsky, John Madden, Thermo Fisher Scientific

The Role of Analytical Chemistry in Water Quality, sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific Chair: Sut Ahuja, Ahuja Consulting

3:00 Break 3:20 309 What Performance can we Expect from Microfluidic LC-MS System?, Martin Gilar, Thomas S. McDonald, Gregory Roman, Jay S. Johnson, James P. Murphy, Waters

2:00 297 Assuring Water Purity by Monitoring Water Contaminants at Ultratrace Levels, Satinder (Sut) Ahuja, Ahuja Consulting 2:30 298 Recent Developments in Stationary Phases for Ion Chromatography, Christopher A. Pohl, Thermo Fisher Scientific

3:40 310 Investigation of Multidimensional Chromatography for Chromatographic Separation of Complex Mixtures of Closely Related Species, Erik L. Regalado, Christopher J. Welch, Merck

3:00 Break 3:20 299 Novel Electrochemical and Reflectance Photometric Techniques for the Measurement of Trace Arsenic in Water, Abul Hussam, Douglas Mays, Jinsoo Hong, Joan Rozario, George Mason University 3:50 300 Pharmaceuticals in Environment and Water Quality: The Role of Analytical Chemistry, Hua Yao, BristolMyers Squibb

Surface Spectroscopy and Microscopy Chair: Andrew Teplyakov, University of Delaware

Frontiers in Biological NMR Spectroscopy Chair: Scott Showalter, Pennsylvania State University

2:00 302 Analysis of High and Low Dielectric Constant Oxides for Microelectronics Applications, Robert Opila, Jonathon Church, James Krajewski, Dan Yang, University of Delaware, Venkateswara Pallem, Air Liquide, Conan Weiland, National Institute of Standards and Technology, David Gidley, University of Michigan 2:30 303 Interface Analysis of Nano-Scale Materials, Leonard Feldman, Rutgers Institute for Advanced Materials, Devices and Nanotechnology 3:20 304 Structural Motifs in Carbon Nanoparticle Films: Nanoparticle Functionalization and Nanorystallization, Janice Reutt-Robey, University of Maryland

4:00 311 Determination of Common Counter and Impurity Anions in Pharmaceutical Using a High-Pressure Modular Capillary Ion Chromatography System (HPIC) with Suppressed Conductivity (CD) and Charge (QD) Detection, Hua Yang, Linda Lopez, Thermo Fisher Scientific 4:20 312 Recent Compendial Activity for Dissolution Testing when Gelatin Crosslinking is an Issue, Gregory P. Martin, Complectors Consulting, Vivian A. Gray, V. A. Gray Consulting

4:20 301 Withdrawn by the author.

3:00 Break

2:00 306 Reducing Solvent Consumption in HighPerformance Liquid Chromatography during Column Re-Equilibration after Gradient Elution, Michael R. Fletcher, Erin J. Ennis, Donna M. Blackney, Catherine A. Kita, Joe P. Foley, Drexel University

2:00 313 Characterizing the Dynamic Formation of Disease Protein Aggregates Using Dark-State Exchange Saturation Transfer (DEST) NMR, Nicolas L. Fawzi, Brown University 2:30 314 Structure, Dynamics, and Function of Opa60: A Neisserial Beta-Barrel Membrane Protein that Mediates Host Phagocytosis, Linda Columbus, Alison K. Criss, Peter M. Kasson, University of Virginia 3:00 Break 3:20 315 Characterization of the Active Site of Vanadium Chloro-Peroxidase by 51V Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy, Rupal Gupta, Guangjin Hou, Tatyana Polenova, University of Delaware

23

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

3:40 316 13C-Detect NMR and Mass Spectrometry Applied to Study the Effects of Post-Translational Modifications on Disordered Proteins, Eric B. Gibbs, Debashish Sahu, Scott A. Showalter, Penn State University 4:00 317 Studying Networks of Weak Protein Interactions by NMR, Assen Marintchev, Nabanita Nag, Jielin Yu, Devika Nadkarni, Boston University School of Medicine, Katherine A. Edmonds, Indiana University, Boriana Marintcheva, Bridgewater State University

Chromatography Challenges: Large and Small Molecules, sponsored by North Jersey Chromatography Group Chair: Landon Greene, Rutgers University 9:00 326 Finding Homes for all of the Orphan Assays, Brian Buckley Ill, Yang, Min Liu, Kyle Buckley, Stephanie Marco, Elizabeth McCandlish, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute Rutgers University, Andreia Valente, University of Lisbon, Frances Acevedo Mariani, University of Puerto Rico

Wednesday Morning, November 19, 2014

9:30 327 Agroecosystem Analysis Using Chromatographic Methods, Jeffrey S. Buyer, United States Department of Agriculture

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Near-Infrared Spectroscopy Honoring Mark Westerhaus, FOSS Sponsored by Metrohm USA Chair: Lars Nørgaard, FOSS

10:00 Break 10:20 328 Deciphering 4-Billion Year Old Meteorite Chemistry Through Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Michael P. Callahan, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Space Flight Center

9:00 Presentation of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Near-Infrared Spectroscopy

10:50 329 Utilizing a Semi-Automated Sample Preparation Workflow to Achieve Accurate, Precise, Rugged and Robust Analytical Assay Methods for Pharmaceutical Solid Oral Dosage Forms, Khanh Ha, Bristol-Myers Squibb

9:05 318 My Contributions to NIR Spectroscopy, Mark Westerhaus, FOSS 9:30 319 Classification and Interpretation of NIR Data: Recursive Weighted Partial Least Squares Discriminant Analysis (rPLS-DA), Søren B. Engelsen, University of Copenhagen

Improving the Applications of Mass Spectrometry Through Fundamentals, sponsored by Cambridge Isotope Labs Chair: Murray Johnston, University of Delaware

10:00 Break 10:20 320 Two Major Advanced Algorithms in NIRS: Cloning Instruments and Local Calibration, Pierre Dardenne, Walloon Agricultural Research Centre 10:50 321 Application of Non-Linear Chemometric Models to NIR Data, Lars Nørgaard, Morten With Pedersen, Pedro Højen-Sørensen, FOSS

9:00 330 Matrix-Assisted Ionization: A Simple Low Energy Ionization Approach for Volatile and Nonvolatile Compounds, Charles McEwen, Khoa Hoang, Milan Pophristic, University of the Sciences 9:30 331 From Laser Ablation and Electrospray Fundamentals to Ambient Ionization by LAESI, Akos Vertes, Tarek R. Mansour, Sylwia A. Stopka, Hang Li, Bindesh Shrestha, George Washington University

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Honoring Robert Tycko, National Institutes of Health Sponsored by Bruker BioSpin and New Era Enterprises Chair: David Weliky, Michigan State University

10:00 Break 10:20 332 Mass Spectrometry: A Tool for Studying Metabolomics, Ann M. O’Brien, DuPont

9:00 322 Solid-State NMR of Viral Fusion Proteins, David Weliky, Michigan State University

10:50 333 Biological Applications of FTICR Imaging Mass Spectrometry: Overcoming the Analytical Challenges of Direct Tissue Analysis, Jeffrey Spraggins, Raf van de Plas, Richard Caprioli, Vanderbilt University

9:30 323 Structural Examination of Amyloid Proteins and Graphene-Based Nanomaterials by Solid-State NMR, Yoshitaka Ishii, University of Illinois - Chicago 10:00 Break

Bioanalytical Applications of Vibrational Spectroscopy Chair: Lydia Breckenridge, Bristol-Myers Squibb

10:20 324 Structural and Dynamic Studies of Protein Assemblies by Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy, Christopher P. Jaroniec, Ohio State University 10:50 Presentation of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 10:55 325 Solid-State NMR of Protein Assemblies: New Methods and New Results, Robert Tycko, Jun-Xia Lu, Marvin Bayro, Alexey Potapov, Eric Moore, Dylan Murray, Kent Thurber, Wai-Ming Yau, National Institutes of Health

9:00 334 Quantitative Analysis of Moisture in Intact Lyophilized Protein Samples by NIRS, Suzanne Schreyer, Michelle Pressler, Thermo Fisher Scientific 9:20 335 Noninvasive In-Vivo Glucose Sensing on Human Subjects Using Mid-Infrared Light, Sabbir Liakat, Kevin A. Bors, Callie M. Woods, Claire F. Gmachl, Princeton University

24

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

9:40 336 Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering Characterization of One HydroxylPolymethoxylflavones, Changchu Ma, Hang Xiao, Lili He, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

New Approaches to the Analysis of Analytes in Difficult Environmental Matrices Chair: Amy Birch, Boehringer Ingelheim

10:00 Break

9:00 348 Fast GC-TOFMS for High-Throughput Screening of Environmental Contaminants, Pete Grosshans, Nicola Watson, Charles Haws, Laura McGregor, Nick Bukowski, Markes International

10:20 337 Bacterial Identification Using Raman Spectroscopy: How does the Technique Perform with many Species of Bacteria?, Bradford G. Clay, Pierre Mahe, Maud Arsac, Brenna Moss, Olivia Jobes, Chris Huff, Virginia D. Shortridge, Ron Robinson, Sonia Chatellier, Alex van Belkum, bioMérieux, Inc.

9:20 349 Using Solid-Phase Extraction to Concentrate Human Hormones in Drinking Water and HighPerformance Liquid Chromatography to Analyze the Recovery, Carl A. Fisher, Hua Yang, Pranathi Perati, Thermo Fisher Scientific

10:40 338 Terahertz Spectral Profiling and Imaging of Human Skin for early Detection of Cancer, Aisha Masud, Babar Rao, Rao Dermatology, Aunik Rahman, Anis Rahman, Applied Research & Photonics

9:40 350 Low Level Chrysotile in Soil: A Method Assessment, Frank Ehrenfeld, Raymond Kennedy, Kristen Goedde, Thomas Barkley, International Asbestos Testing Laboratories

Forensic Microscopy VIII, sponsored by the New York Microscopical Society and TAKA Instructional Agency Chair: Thomas Kubic, John Jay College

10:00 Break 10:20 351 Direct Mercury Analysis of Gaseous Samples Using Sorbent Tubes, Sumedh P. Phatak, Milestone Inc.

9:00 339 Microscopy’s Importance in Cases I Have Worked, Peter R. DeForest, Anna S. Duggar, Forensic Consultants

10:40 352 Novel QCell Technology for Inference Removal in ICP-MS: Combining Low Mass Filtration with Kinetic Energy Discrimination, Fergus Keenan, Craig Seeley, Thermo Fisher Scientific

9:30 340 Microscopy of Tattoo Inks, Michelle Miranda, SUNYFarmingdale

11:00 353 Single Particle ICP-MS (SP-ICP-MS) a New Analytical Technique for Counting and Sizing Metal Based Nanomaterials: Theory and Application, Chady Stephan, PerkinElmer

10:00 Break 10:20 341 Microscopy of Shotgun Buffers (not your Common pH), Peter Diaczuk, John Jay College, Jack Hietpas, Pedico Research Institute 10:50 342 Microscopy of Dust Samples, Skip Palenik, Micro Trace Spectroscopy: Sample Analysis, Data Analysis, and Detection Chair: Shirley Rodriguez, Boehringer Ingelheim 9:00 343 Enhancement of Curcumin Fluorescence by Ascorbic Acid in Bicontinuous Microemulsion, Maurice O. Iwunze, Morgan State University 9:20 344 An Investigation of Solution Phase Copper ESR Spectra as a Means to Study Speciation by Ligands in Aqueous Solution, Including those of Geochemical Significance, Christopher J. Bender, Fordham University 9:40 345 Raman, Infrared and Microwave Spectra, r0 Structural Parameters, and Conformational Stability of Isopropylisocyanate, Bhushan S. Deodhar, James R. Durig, University of Missouri-Kansas City

11:20 354 Quad vs. Magnet, Battle of the ICP-MS Instruments for Superiority of Cr Speciation in NJ Drinking Water Samples, Elizabeth McCandlish, Sanjeev Rai, Brian Buckley III, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute Rutgers University, Lee Lippincott, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection 11:40 355 Polyol Induced Extraction (PIE) of Water from Organic Solvents, Mithilesh Deshpande, Seton Hall University Wednesday Poster Session: Pharmaceutical Analysis: Dissolution, Chemometrics, PAT 12:00-2:00

356 Biphasic Dissolution Studies of Felodopine: Understanding the Effect of Amorphous Solubility on the Rate of Partition, Jon Mole, Karl Box, John Comer, Rebeca Ruiz, Robert Taylor, Sirius Analytical, Lynne S. Taylor, Purdue University

12:00-2:00

357 Dissolution Performance of Inhaled Product APIs in Simulated Lung Fluid Using Novel Low Volume Assays, Jon Mole, Rebeca Ruiz, Karl Box, John Comer, Robert Taylor, Sirius Analytical, Antonio Llinàs, Johan Solandt, Ulrika Tehler, AstraZeneca

12:00-2:00

358 Characteristics of Felodipine: HPMCAS Solid Dispersions: Dissolution Performance and Particle Size Effects, George Butcher, Jon Mole, Karl Box, John Comer, Robert Taylor, Rebeca Ruiz, Brian Stockton, Darren Matthews, Sirius Analytical

10:00 Break 10:20 346 Comparison of Target Detection and Maximum Signal Factors, Neal B. Gallagher, Eigenvector Research 10:40 347 Polymer Gel Permeation Chromatography with Luminescence Detection, Martin Nosowitz, Arkema

25

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

12:00-2:00 359 A PCA Model of Atypical Andersen Cascade Data, Lauren Seabrooks, Jennifer Wylie, Justin Pennington, Merck 12:00-2:00

360 New Dispersive Technology (Grinder) Sample Preparation Improvements for Disintegration and Dissolution of a Challenging Extended Release Solid Oral Dosage Form, Peter I. Tattersal, Nalini Anand, Marlon Rutherford, Shan Xiao, Khanh Ha, John Castoro, BristolMyers Squibb

12:00-2:00 361 NMR Spectroscopy as a Tool in PAT: An Essential Tool in Chemical Process Understanding, Brian L. Marquez, Kim Colson, Anna Codina, Bruker Corporation

372 Application of Micro Flow Image (MFI), ARCHIMEDES, and Quartz Crystal Microbalance with Dissipation (QCM-D) on the Particle Characterization for a Therapeutic Protein in Formulation Development, Songyan Zheng, Aastha Puri, Vishal Nashine, Jinjiang Li, Monica Adams, Bristol-Myers Squibb

12:00-2:00

373 Thromboembolic Disease Discrimination through an Ultrasensitive Assay of Microdosed Synthetic Urinary Biomarkers, Kevin C. Ngan, Shonda T. Gaylord, Milena Dumont Milutinovic, David R. Walt, Tufts University, Andrew D. Warren, Gabriel A. Kwong, Sangeeta N. Bhatia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

12:00-2:00 374 Determination of Latanoprost and Latanoprost Acid by UPLC-MS-MS, Hemantkumar Naik, Monish Chaddha, Teresa Pekol, Ram Bhat, Millennium Research Laboratories

12:00-2:00 362 Optimized Karl Fischer Titration of Lyophilized Substances, David Zavich, Matt Eby, Mettler Toledo 12:00-2:00 363 Continuous Improvement in Productivity of Pharmaceutical Development through Enhanced Usage of UV Fiber Optic Dissolution, Lili Lo, Xujin Lu, Bristol Myers Squibb

12:00-2:00 375 Fluorescence-Based Sugar Sensor on a Gold Nanoparticle Platform, Ishan V. Soni, Zachary M. Semian, Gary A. Baker, Thomas A. Betts, Kutztown University

12:00-2:00 364 Turbidity Measurement of Infusion Solutions, Alex White, Anton Paar USA 12:00-2:00 365 Material Identification with Advanced Handheld 1064 nm Raman Spectrometers, Claire Dentinger, Mark Mabry, Jen Lynch, Rigaku Raman Technologies 12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

366 In-Situ Monitoring of Form Change as a Function of Relative Humidity in the SolidState by VTIRaman, Candice Choi, Duohai Pan, Denette Murphy, Anisha Patel, Roxana Schlam, Shawn Yin, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Sruthi Janakiraman, Drexel University

12:00-2:00

367 An Attempt to Increase Hot Melt Extrusion Drug Loading without Compromising Dissolution, Julie M. Novak, Karen Pica, Melanie J. Marota, Pavithra Sundararajan, Mary Ann Johnson, Wei Xu, Paul A. Harmon, Merck

12:00-2:00

368 Application of Multivariate Curve Resolution Approach to Complex Thermal Desorption Data Jing Zhao, Jia-Ming Lin, Andrew V. Teplyakov, University of Delaware, Juan Carlos F. Rodriguez-Reyes, University of Engineering and Technology

12:00-2:00

369 Evaluation of a Low-Cost Mass Spectrometer: Waters QDa, Michael W. Dong, Christine C. Gu, Genentech

12:00-2:00 376 Generic Ligand Binding Immunoassay Method for Rat IgG1-Based Surrogate Biopharmaceuticals, Wonmi K. Rooney, BristolMyers Squibb 12:00-2:00

377 Proteomic Investigation of Saliva and Sera from Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Matched Controls, Kelly L. Wormwood, Armand G. Ngounou Wetie, Izabela Sokolowska, Katherine M. Beglinger, Alisa G. Woods, Costel C. Darie, Clarkson University, Jeanne P. Ryan, SUNY Plattsburgh

12:00-2:00

378 Human Breast Milk Proteomics for Cancer Biomarkers Discovery, Roshanak Aslebagh, Devika Channaveerappa, Armand G. Ngounou Wetie, Costel C. Darie, Clarkson University, Sallie S. Schneider, Pioneer Valley Life Sciences Institute, Susan R. Sturgeon, Kathleen F. Arcaro, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

12:00-2:00

379 The Separation and Identification of Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Commercially Available Fish Oil Products Using Capillary Electrophoresis, Pasquale W. Carione, Donna M. Blackney, Joe P. Foley, Drexel University

12:00-2:00

380 Simplified Strategy to Develop a Robust UHPLC-MS-MS Assay with Emphasis on Assay Performance and Metabolite Interference Avoidance, Adela Buzescu, Naiyu Zheng, Jianing Zeng, Anne-Françoise Aubry, Mark Arnold, Bristol-Myers Squibb

Wednesday Poster Session: Bioanalysis II 12:00-2:00 370 Performance Comparison of Gel-IEF and cIEF with a Recombinant Model Protein, Leu-Fen Lin, Jeffrey Hulmes, SGS Life Science Services

12:00-2:00 381 Electrochemical Sensor Using Redox Polymer as an Indicator, Zahilis Mazzochette, Amos Mugweru, Rowan University

12:00-2:00 371 The Development and Validation of a LC-MSMS Method for the Determination of CEP32496 in Human Plasma, Charisse Green, Edward Hellriegel, Teva Pharmaceutical

26

2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

Wednesday Poster Session: Spectroscopy: NMR, Raman, Laser Diffraction, NIR 12:00-2:00

382 Determination of PCDD-Fs and Dioxin-Like PCBs in the Ambient Air of the Cement Industry in Sour El Ghozlane Suburban Atmosphere, Algiers, Using the CALUX Bioassay and the Sensitive H1L7.5c1 Mouse Hepatoma Cell Line, Khedidji Sidali, Université Akli Mohand Oulhaj Bouira, Croes Kim, Vreiji University Brussel

12:00-2:00 383 Unknown Identification via Vibrational Spectroscopy Coupling with Databases and Analysis Algorithms, Dana Garcia, Arkema, Farrel Borden, Marie Scandone, Bio-Rad Laboratories

12:00-2:00

393 Withdrawn by the author.

12:00-2:00

394 Quantitative Trace Metals Analysis Using Hydrofluoric Acid Alternatives, Jane Ramsey, Thomas Connell, E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Daniel Iversen, Robert Lockerman, Michael Karney, CEM Corporation

12:00-2:00

395 NMR Analysis of Synthetic Polymers Utilized in Medical Devices, Robert A. Schiksnis, Wendy Feng, Johnson and Johnson Global Surgery Group

12:00-2:00

396 Comparison of FT-NIR and NMR Spectral Analysis, Herman He, Thermo Fisher Scientific

12:00-2:00

397 Stereochemical Analysis of Organophosphates, Kristi Tami, Cristina Kinahan, Gloria Proni, John Jay College

12:00-2:00

398 Withdrawn by the author.

12:00-2:00 384 Monmouth County Coastal Lakes: Analysis of Nutrients, Dissolved Oxygen, and Salinity, Ellen Rubinstein, Katlynn Muratore, Payal Patel, Monmouth University

12:00-2:00

399 SERS Detection and Characterization of Gold Nanoparticles on Spinach Leaves, Zhiyun Zhang, Lili He, University of MassachusettsAmherst

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

400 Wide Field Raman Chemical Imaging for Determination of Content Uniformity in Pharmaceutical Blends, Lauren Seabrooks, Justin Pennington, Merck

12:00-2:00

401 Chemical Analysis and Characterization of Dried Figs and Dried Dates, Jerzy Mierzwa, Tennessee State University

12:00-2:00

402 Spectral Studies of Dipicolinic Acid with Bovine Serum Albumin, Anne E. Okafor, Enju Wang, Neil Jespersen, St. John’s University

12:00-2:00

403 Chiral Analysis by Fourier Transform Rotational Spectroscopy, Brooks H. Pate, Kevin K Lehmann, Simon Lobsiger, Cristobal Perez, Luca Evangelisti, University of Virginia

12:00-2:00

404 Comprehensive Ion Analysis of Various Water Matrices in the Hydraulic Fracturing Process, Stuart J. Procter, Jay Gandhi, Anne Shearrow, Metrohm USA

12:00-2:00

405 Developing Mobile LIBS Solutions for Real World Applications, Qun Li, Katherine Bakeev, Jing Li, Sean Wang, B&W Tek

12:00-2:00

406 Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance of Gold Nanoparticle Random Arrays, Julie A. Jenkins, Sravan Thota, Xiangdong Tian, Xiaowen Zhao, Jing Zhao, University of Connecticut, Yadong Zhou, Shengli Zou, University of Central Florida

12:00-2:00

407 Determination of BPA in Aqueous Solution Using Fluorescence, Sarah J. Pereira, Yuegang Zuo, University of MassachusettsDartmouth

12:00-2:00

408 Coupled Exciton and Charge-Transfer Resonances in the Raman Enhancement of Phonon Modes of CdSe Quantum Dots (QDs), Syed K. Islam, John R. Lombardi, Mohammad A. Sohe, City College, City University of New York

385 Low Temperature 13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance to Explore the Formation and Structure of a Carbamoyllithium Anion Used in Diastereoselective Synthesis of AlphaAmino Amides, Scot Campbell, Nina Gonnella, Jonathan Reeves, Keith Fandrick, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals

12:00-2:00 386 Automated On-line Desorption and Analysis of DNPH Derivatives of Airborne Aldehydes and Ketones, Fredrick D. Foster, John R. Stuff, Kurt C. Thaxton, Edward A. Pfannkoch, Gerstel 12:00-2:00 387 Portable Raman Spectroscopy for Monitoring Polymorphic Transitions, Philip Zhou, B&W Tek 12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

388 Unique Porous QCM Sensor Coatings: A High Sensitivity Vapor Sensor Based on Porous Poly(Methyl Methacrylate), Ho Yeon Yoo, Stanley Bruckenstein, Stanley Bruckenstein Chemical Consulting 389 Factors that Contribute to the Air Pressure Dependence of Particle Size Analysis by Laser Diffraction, Zheng (Eric) Li, William Thompson, Guanglou Cheng, Chi-San Wu, Ashland Specialty Ingredients

12:00-2:00 390 Accurate Determination of Moisture Content of Soft Contact Lenses by Near-Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy, Keith Freel, Hari Narayanan, Metrohm USA 12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

391 Combined Headspace Karl Fischer and NIR for Quick, Safe, and Reliable Method Development, Validation, and Routine Analysis as Demonstrated with Lyophilized Products, Keith Freel, Hari Narayanan, Denise Root, George E. Porter III, Metrohm USA 392 Three-Dimensional Solution Structure of Cyclic Antibiotic Teicoplanin Aglycone Using NMR Distance and Dihedral Angle Restraints in a DMSO Solvation Model, Nina C. Gonnella, Nelu Grinberg, Shengli Ma, Mark Mcloughlin, Boehringer Ingelheim

27

2014 EAS Final Program 12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

12:00-2:00

Technical Program

409 New Techniques for the Analysis of Volatiles and Gases: FT-MRR Spectroscopy (Fourier Transform Molecular Rotational Resonance), Justin L. Neill, Robin L. Pulliam, Roger Reynolds, Matthew T. Muckle, Brent J. Harris, Dave McDaniel, Brooks H. Pate, BrightSpec

Wednesday Afternoon, November 19, 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry Honoring Catherine Fenselau, University of Maryland Sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific Chair: Burnaby Munson, University of Delaware

410 Mid-Infrared Optical Coherence Tomography System Using a High Power, Low Coherence Quantum Cascade Superluminescent Source, Deborah M. Varnell, Ahmed Musse, Nyan Aung, Mei Zheng, Germano Penello, Claire Gmachl, Princeton University

2:00 420 Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance and Infrared Multiphoton Dissociation Studies of Cadmium Sulfide Metal Clusters, Douglas P. Ridge, Kaitlin Papsin, Una Kim, University of Delaware, Giel Berden, Jos Oomens, Radboud University Nijmegen

411 Optimizing Bio-Energy Production by Imaging Nutrient Exchange in the Plant Root Rhizosphere Using Infrared Microspectroscopy, Tiffany Victor, Stony Brook University

2:30 421 Mass Spectrometry of Airborne Particulate Matter: How it Works and what it Tells Us About the Air We Breathe, Murray Johnston, University of Delaware

Wednesday Poster Session: Gas Chromatography

3:00 Break

12:00-2:00

412 Effect of Split Ratio on USEPA Method 8260 Compounds, Anne Jurek, Mike Moses, Lindsey Pyron, Kelly Cravenor, EST Analytical

12:00-2:00

413 Synthesis, Spectroscopic and Electrochemical Characterization and Catalytic Activity of Mn(III) Complexes of Tridentate Schiff Base for the Epoxidation of Olefins, Rita N. Egekenze, Yilma Gultneh, Howard University

12:00-2:00

414 GCxGC-TOFMS with Variable-Energy Electron Ionization for Enhanced Screening of Pollutants in Complex Environmental Matrices, Pete Grosshans, Laura McGregor, Nick Bukowski, Nicola Watson, Charles Haws, Markes International

12:00-2:00

415 Residual Solvent Analysis of N-Methylpyrrolidone Using Headspace Sampling and NPD Detection, Amy F. Birch, Johanna Ubben, Boehringer Ingelheim

12:00-2:00

416 GCxGC Column Kits offer Choice Plus Convenience, Len Sidisky, Gustavo Serrano, Dan Shollenberger, Jamie Desorcie, Greg Baney, Michael Buchanan, Supelco/SigmaAldrich

12:00-2:00

417 Determination of Natural Gas Components in Drinking Water by Gas Chromatography and Vacuum Ultraviolet Detection, Ling Bai, Hui Fan, Kevin A. Schug, University of TexasArlington, Jonathan Smuts, Phillip Walsh, Dale Harrison, VUV Analytics, Zacariah L. Hildenbrand, Inform Environmental

3:20 422 Mass Spectrometry to Support Industrial Fermentation, Barbara Larsen, DuPont 3:50 Presentation of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry 3:55 423 Mass Spectrometry Explores Communication in the Tumor Environment, Catherine Fenselau, Suzanne Ostrand-Rosenberg, Meghan Burke, Rebecca Rose, Lucia Geis-Asteggiante, University of Maryland Pharmaceutical and Biopharmaceutical Applications of NearInfrared Spectroscopy, organized by the Coblentz Society Chairs: Brandye Smith-Goettler, Merck 2:00 424 The Incredible Shrinking NIR Instrument; and why that is Great for the Pharmaceutical Industry, Emil Ciurczak, Doramaxx Consulting 2:30 425 Validation and Transfer of NIR Methods for Real-Time Release Testing for Continuous Manufacture, Jianfeng (Frank) Qi, Kelly A. Swinney, Henrik T. Rasmussen, David E. Nadig, Vertex Pharmaceuticals 3:00 Break 3:20 426 Understanding Hot Melt Extrusion via NIRS, Brandye Smith-Goettler, Merck 3:50 427 Advances in Applying Near-Infrared Measurements to Cell Cultures and Fermentation Processes, Gary Ritchie, Infratrac

12:00-2:00

418 Analysis of a PIONA Sample Using Gas Chromatography and Vacuum Ultraviolet Spectroscopy, Phillip Walsh, Jonathan Smuts, Daniel Klopp, Dale Harrison, VUV Analytics

Separation Challenges in Biopharmaceutics, sponsored by Agilent Technologies Chair: Irena Maksimovic, Bristol-Myers Squibb

12:00-2:00

419 Gas Chromatography–Vacuum Ultraviolet Spectroscopy in Fatty Acid Methyl Ester Analysis, Hui Fan, Kevin A. Schug, University of Texas-Arlington, Jonathan P. Smuts, Phillip Walsh, Dale Harrison, VUV Analytics

2:00 428 Fast and Efficient Peptide Mapping of Monoclonal Antibodies Using Superficially Porous Particles, Timothy Rice, Agilent Technologies 2:30 429 Chromatographic Analysis and Separation of Short RNA Oligonucleotides with Novel Liquid Chromatography Methods, Mirlinda Biba, Christopher J, Welch, Merck, Joe P. Foley, Drexel University

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2014 EAS Final Program

Technical Program

3:00 Break

2:20 442 The Introduction of PDMS-Overcoated Adsorbent Based Fiber Coatings, Len Sidisky, Robert Shirey, Yong Chen, Supelco/Sigma-Aldrich

3:20 430 Case Study of Challenges in ADC Method Development, Girija Krishnamurthy, Bristol-Myers Squibb

2:40 443 Comparison of Green Solvents during Chemical Extraction by Diffusion Studies, Shanmugapriya Dharmarajan, Douglas Raynie, South Dakota State University

3:50 431 iCE3: a Powerful Analytical Tool for Antibody Drug Conjugate, Jiaqi Wu, ProteinSimple Innovative Directions in Sample Preparation for Chromatography, sponsored by the Chromatography Forum of Delaware Valley Chairs: Xiaoli Wang and Bruce Richter, Agilent Technologies

3:00 Break 3:20 444 Expanding Method Capabilities through Dynamic Sample Preparation, Keith Griswold, Pepsico 3:40 445 Extraction of Steroids from Water and Herbal Medicines Using QuEChERS Sample Preparation, Michelle L. Schmidt, Nicholas H. Snow, Seton Hall University

2:00 432 Application of SPME in High-Throughput and In-Vivo Drug Quantification, Janusz Pawliszyn, University of Waterloo

4:00 446 Single Reaction Chamber Microwave Digestion: Sample Prep for Better Trace Analysis, David Gunn, Njies Pedjie, Milestone Inc

2:30 433 Investigations into Analytical Extractions Using Green Solvents, Douglas Raynie, South Dakota State University

Molecular Spectroscopy of Composites and Related Materials Chair: Alan J. Rein, Agilent Technologies

3:00 Break 3:20 434 Selective Extraction of DNA Using Magnetic Ionic Liquids, Jared L. Anderson, Kevin D. Clark, Omprakash Nacham, Honglian Yu, University of Toledo

2:00 447 Improved Bonding of Composites, Polymers and Coatings by Monitoring Surface Preparation with Handheld FTIR Spectroscopy, John Seelenbinder, Agilent Technologies

3:50 435 Advances in Sample Preparation for Dietary Supplements and Other Complex Matrices, Derick Lucas, Jerry Zweigenbaum, Bruce Richter, Irina Dioumaeva, Agilent Technologies

2:30 448 Non-Contact Material Characterization Using MidInfrared Quantum Cascade Laser Spectroscopy, Mark Norman, Anish Goyal, Block Engineering

Advances in HPLC and Dissolution Chair: Judy Lin, Bristol-Myers Squibb

3:00 Break 3:20 449 Portable Raman Spectroscopy Opens the Door for Site Analysis, Katherine Bakeev, Dawn Yang, Philip Zhou, B&W Tek

2:00 436 HPLC Method Development Strategies for Molecules with Multiple Chiral Centers, Michael W. Dong, Kelly Zhang, Meenakshi Goel, Nik P Chetwyn, Genentech 2:20 437 Strategies of Advanced LC-MS-MS Screening and Development for Regulated Bioanalysis, Jian Wang, Ryan Gu, Eliza Fung, Ang Liu, John Lute, Mark Arnold, Anne Aubry, Bristol-Myers Squibb 2:40 438 Selected Ion Flow Tube Mass Spectrometry (SIFTMS): Real-time, Sensitive Detection of Residual Solvents in Pharmaceuticals, Barry J. Prince, Daniel B. Milligan, Vaughan S. Langford, Syft Technologies, Chuck Renner, Quantum Analytics 3:00 Break 3:20 439 Real-Time Dissolution Behavior of Indomethacin in Spray Dried Dispersion (SDD) in Biorelevant Media Using UV Surface Imaging Technology, Steven Ponce, Xujin Lu, Christopher Zordan, Bristol-Myers Squibb 3:40 440 Understanding the Dynamic Process of Dissolution and Hydrolysis of Aspirin by ATR-FTIR, Vrushali M. Bhawtankar, Seton Hall University

3:50 450 Repair of CFRP Composite with Localized Incipient Thermal Damage Guided by Handheld FTIR Inspection, Tucker Howie, Ashley Tracey, Brian Flinn, University of Washington, Paul Vahey, Paul Shelley, Boeing NMR Spectroscopy of Pharmaceuticals and Materials Chair: Gary Martin, Merck 2:00 451 What’s in your “Natural” Supplement? Application of NMR Spectroscopy to Natural Products, Kim Colson, Jimmy Yuk, Mark Garvey, Christian Fischer, Bruker BioSpin 2:30 452 Enabling Strategies and Platforms for NMR Metabolite Characterizations, Janet Caceres Cortes, Xiaohua Huang, Kim Johnson, Sarah Traeger, Haiying Zhang, Yue-Zong Shu, Michael Reily, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Xiaohong Liu, Covance, Vikram Roongta, North East Bioanalytical Laboratories 3:00 Break

Sample Preparation Techniques Chair: Bill Barber, Agilent Technologies

3:20 453 New Methods for the Simultaneous Measurement of Homo- and Heteronuclear Coupling Constants, Josep Sauri, Merck, Teodor Parella, Autonomous University of Barcelona

2:00 441 Extraction of Volatile Organics Using Carbonnanotubes Immobilized Composite Membranes, Smruti Ragunath, Somenath Mitra, New Jersey Institute of Technology

3:40 454 Experiment Approaches to Probe Long-Range H-X Correlations in 2-D NMR Spectroscopy, Ronald Crouch, NMR Consultant, Craig Butts, Bristol University

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2014 EAS Final Program Hal Ferrari Memorial Session: Microchemistry and Microanalysis Chairs: Robert Vetrecin and Vincent Venturella 2:00 455 What can Non-Destructive Micro Multi-Elemental Analyses of Counterfeit Banknotes Reveal?, Gene Hall, Rutgers University

Technical Program 3:00 Break 3:20 457 Emerging Designer Drugs: The New Frontier for Microcrystalline Testing, Thomas Brettell, Cedar Crest College 3:50 458 Microscopy and Microanalysis Applied to Pharmaceuticals, John A. Reffner, John Jay College 4:20 Personal Presentations and Conclusions

2:30 456 TBA, John Scott, New York Conservation Foundation

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2014 EAS Final Program

2014 EAS Awards EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry, Sponsored by Bristol-Myers Squibb On Monday, November 17, 2014, at 4:30pm there will be a special Plenary Lecture honoring Dr. Joseph Caruso, University of Cincinnati, who will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry. All registered attendees are invited to join us in the Double Tree Ballroom for the lecture and complimentary refreshments.

Joe Caruso holds a Ph.D. from Michigan State University. After a one-year postdoctoral fellowship at The University of Texas-Austin, he joined the University of Cincinnati Chemistry faculty and since then he has authored or coauthored greater than 400 scientific publications and presented more than 350 invited lectures at universities, scientific meetings, government and industry labs. His current research interests are in metallomics studies in biomedical research areas and involve metal toxicities and their molecular consequences. Caruso is a member and Fellow of the American Chemical Society, Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Fellow of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy. He served as first Chair of the RSC Metallomics editorial board. He has been honored many times including the 2000 Spectrochemical Analysis Award given by the Analytical Division of the American Chemical Society, the University of Cincinnati - Excellence in Doctoral Student Mentoring Award in 2006, and in 2007 he received the Rieveschl Award for Distinguished Scientific Research. Recently he was promoted to Distinguished Research Professor and in 2013 he was awarded the Royal Society of Chemistry Theophilus Redwood Lectureship.

Awards

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Magnetic Resonance, Sponsored by Bruker BioSpin and New Era Enterprises On Wednesday, November 19, 2014, Dr. Robert Tycko, NIH, will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Magnetic Resonance.

Dr. Robert Tycko is a Senior Investigator in the Laboratory of Chemical Physics, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health. He was born in New York City, raised on Long Island, and educated in physical chemistry at Princeton University (A.B. in 1980) and the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D. in 1984). His Ph.D. thesis work with Alex Pines focused on new theoretical methods for analyzing excitation sequences in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. After postdoctoral research in biological NMR with Stan Opella at the University of Pennsylvania from 1984 to 1986, he joined the Physical Chemistry Research Department of AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey. At Bell Labs, Dr. Tycko discovered new magnetic resonance phenomena, such as quantum adiabatic rotational splittings in nuclear quadrupole resonance and zero-field NMR entirely in high field. He also used NMR to study of novel materials, such as fullerenes and superconducting alkali fullerides. Using optically pumped NMR, he carried out the first experimental studies of skyrmions in semiconductor quantum wells. In 1994, Dr. Tycko moved to the Laboratory of Chemical Physics, a biophysical chemistry and biophysics research department in NIDDK. Since then, he has made numerous contributions to solid state NMR methods for structural studies of proteins and has explored numerous applications of these methods. A major project in recent years has been the elucidation of the molecular structures of protein fibrils that are associated with amyloid diseases, especially Alzheimer’s disease. Other ongoing projects include structural studies of HIV-1 proteins, studies of protein folding using solid state NMR methods, and the development of technology for biomolecular solid state NMR and magnetic resonance imaging at very low temperatures. Dr. Tycko received the American Physical Society’s Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular

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Spectroscopy in 2005, the Chemical Society of Washington’s Hillebrand Prize in 2007, and an NIH Director’s Award in 2001. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the International Society of Magnetic Resonance. Dr. Tycko has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Chemical Physics, the Journal of Magnetic Resonance, the Journal of Biomolecular NMR, and Molecular Physics. He chaired the Gordon Research Conference on Magnetic Resonance in 2001 and co-organized the first U.S.-Canada Winter School on Biomolecular Solid State NMR in 2008.

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Science, Sponsored by Agilent Technologies On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Dr. Thomas L. Chester, University of Cincinnati, will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Science.

Thomas L. Chester is an Adjunct Professor of Chemistry at the University of Cincinnati. He obtained a B.S. degree from Florida State University in 1971. Tom then worked for the Verona Division of the Baychem Corporation (now Bayer) in 1971 and 1972 before resuming his education. In 1976 he received a Ph.D. degree in chemistry from the University of Florida under the direction of Professor James D. Winefordner. Tom then joined The Procter & Gamble Company where he worked until 2007, most recently as Research Fellow in P&G’s Analytical Global Capability Organization and as Technical Coordinator for P&G’s global HPLC community. Tom’s research interests revolve around theory-based decision making in separations. This includes the use and further development of theory, materials, and techniques to meet practical needs, and the application of theory and best capabilities to direct problem solving, method development, and understanding in the workplace. Tom and coworkers developed both theory and numerous capabilities in the fields of HPLC and SFC. Among these are businessgoal-focused numerical modeling and optimization for HPLC methods, identifying and mapping parameter interactions in HPLC optimization, automated pH control in HPLC and its use in method development, the first

2014 EAS Final Program practical flame-ionization detection in SFC, thermodynamic studies of retention in SFC, chemical derivatization of solutes for SFC, a flow-injection method for mapping critical loci in binary fluid mixtures, retention-gap injection for quantitative open-tubular SFC, selectivity tuning with temperature and pressure in SFC, and the phase-diagram perspective of unified chromatography. Tom received the Keene P. Dimick Award in Chromatography at the 1994 Pittsburgh Conference and has also received several regional awards. He has published 76 papers, given over 120 presentations, and co-edited the book Unified Chromatography. He was President of Supercritical Conferences, a notfor-profit educational corporation. Tom also served as Chair of the Chromatography and Separations Chemistry Subdivision of the ACS Analytical Division, and as Trea surer of the Tri-State Supercritical Fluids Group. He served on committees and task groups for ACS, ASTM, and The Chemical Research Council. He collaborated in organizing six international scientific meetings and twenty additional symposia, workshops, and training events. Tom currently serves on editorial advisory boards of the Journal of Chromatography A and The Journal of Liquid Chromatography, and previously served on various boards of Analytical Chemistry, Instrumentation Science and Technology, The Journal of High Resolution Chromatography and Chromatography Communications, The Journal of Microcolumn Separations, The Journal of Supercritical Fluids, and The Journal of Separation Science.

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in NearInfrared Spectroscopy, Sponsored by Metrohm USA On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Mr. Mark Westerhaus, FOSS, will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Near-Infrared Spectroscopy.

Mark Westerhaus received his B.A. and M.A. degrees in psychology from Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio. Mark continued his academic career in the Department of Statistics at The Pennsylvania State University where he became interested in statistical applications in agronomy. In 1978, he joined John Shenk as a graduate assistant in the USDA NIRS Forage Network, supplying programming and chemometrical support.

Awards In 1983, John, Mark and Don Nichol formed Infrasoft International (ISI) to provide practical software and calibrations to the feed and forage industries for NIRSystems spectrophotometers. Mark served as vice-president and was responsible for the chemometric development and statistical programming in WinISI. In 1996, ISI sold controlling interest to Perstorp. Subsequently, Foss acquired the NIR division including ISI. Mark became president of ISI in 2005, continuing in that position until ISI was incorporated into Foss in 2010. Mark currently holds the position of senior chemometrician at Foss. Mark has been applying chemometrics to NIR data for 35 years. Along the way, he developed several chemometric advancements which were incorporated into WinISI. These include instrument standardization, MPLS, LOCAL and repeatability files. Instrument standardization is a patented procedure to characterize and correct for instrument differences. MPLS is a modification of partial least squares, designed to be more sensitive to small absorption peaks. LOCAL is a patented procedure to make a custom calibration for each sample prediction using similar samples contained in a large product library. Repeatability files are used to reduce the impact of instrument or environmental variation on NIR calibrations. Mark has authored or co-authored numerous scientific papers and book chapters. He has taught many advanced training classes in WinISI software. He holds three patents.

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry, Sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific On Wednesday, November 19, 2014, Dr. Catherine Fenselau, University of Maryland, will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry.

Catherine Fenselau received her A.B. at Bryn Mawr College and her Ph.D. at Stanford University, where she joined Carl Djerassi in the first studies of mass spectrometric fragmentation of amines, amides and esters. Her postdoctoral research was conducted with Melvin Calvin and A.L. Burlingame at UC Berkeley. In 1967 she joined the faculty of the Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at Johns Hopkins as one of the first two formally trained mass spectroscopists to join the faculty of a U.S. medical school. At Hop-

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kins she and O. Michael Colvin (Oncology) were the first to elucidate the structure of the active metabolite of cyclophosphamide. With collaborators from the FDA she determined the structure of commercial Laetrile as a glycoside, not the patented glucuronide. With John Anhalt (Pathology) she first demonstrated that bacteria could be distinguished at the species level by direct desorption of chemical biomarkers into the mass spectrometer. Partnering with Robert Cotter, in 1978 she established a National Science Foundation Regional Instrumentation Facility at Hopkins, which catalyzed both instrument development and novel applications. In 1988 she moved her laboratory to University of Maryland – Baltimore County, where among many contributions, her team used a four sector tandem mass spectrometer to measure the proton affinity of arginine for the first time. She is currently Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the University of Maryland, where she is funded to develop new methods for proteomics and to characterize cell surface proteins, extracellular vesicles and polyubiquitins. Her contributions to mass spectrometry and its biomedical applications have been recognized by awards from the American Chemical Society, the International Mass Spectrometry Foundation, the American Society for Mass Spectrometry, the Eastern Analytical Symposium, the Pittsburg Conference, American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Human Proteome Organization and others.

EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics, Sponsored by Eigenvector Research On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Dr. Marcel Maeder, New Castle University, will receive the 2014 EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics.

Marcel Maeder was born 1951 Basel, Switzerland. He received a Diploma in Chemistry, from the University of Basel, Switzerland in 1975. In 1980 he received his Ph.D. with Prof. Silvio Fallab at the University of Basel (summa cum laude), Kinetics of the interactions of Co(II) complexes with molecular oxygen. Then in 1988 he received Habilitation from the University of Basel in Chemometrics, EFA. During his professional career he held teaching positions at the University of Basel, was a Post-doctoral Research Fellow at the Re-

2014 EAS Final Program search School of Chemistry at the Australian National University and was appointed to the University of Newcastle, Australia in 1988. Dr. Maeder’s research is quantified by 160 publications in peer reviewed scientific journals, 8 book chapters, 1 monograph on data analysis, numerous research seminars and conference attendances with many plenary and section presentations, H-index of 33, some 5000 citations. Dr. Maeder made several important contributions in chemometrics. Undoubtedly, the most important is Evolving Factor Analysis or EFA. EFA is well recognised as a standard and as a fundamentally important algorithm of preliminary data analysis and has been used in a large number of applications. Maeder also published the first paper in a chemistry journal on the algorithm now known as Alternating Least Squares, ALS. More recent developments are concentrated on hard-modelling methods which resulted in commercially successful and widely used packages: SPECFIT (no longer supported) and ReactLab Equilibrium, ReactLab Kinetics and ReactLab KinSim (Marcel is founder and co-director of Jplus consulting, a software company dedicated to the development of data analysis software for kinetic and equilibrium studies. Hard-modelling algorithms have been further developed to allow the analysis of industrial processes where parameters like pH, ionic strength or temperature cannot be kept constant. Recent developments for model-free analyses include methods like Resolving Factor Analysis and the investigation of rotational ambiguity. Image Analysis is an interesting field of applications for the above methods. While chemometrics continues to be a central research interest, Marcel Maeder is a very versatile chemist with some 80 publications in the field of coordination chemistry where the research concentrates on equilibrium and kinetic investigations of transition metal complexes in aqueous solution. Recently Marcel generalised the research into generalised Lewis Acid-Base reactions, in particular the chemistry of CO2 is aqueous solution with the aim of improving the understanding and subsequently the efficiency of Post Combustion Capture of CO2 in power plants (some 20 publications). The hard-modelling experience proved most important in all this research. Dr. Maeder is also a versatile teacher; his teaching involves general chemistry, inorganic chemistry, analytical chemistry, physical chemistry, environmental chemistry and, of course, chemometrics at all levels. Some 25 honors and 22 Ph.D. projects have been undertaken under the supervision and cosupervision of Dr. Maeder. He has given several post-graduate courses in chemometrics at overseas Universities (Thailand, Brazil), including prestigious EU Erasmus Mundus scholarships with courses delivered in Gdan-

Awards sk, Poland, Barcelona and Cádiz, Spain. Marcel is a member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Chemometrics since 2003. He is a very active reviewer with over 100 publication reviews; he was Reviewer of the Year in 2008 for Analytica Chimica Acta. Marcel Maeder was always adamant to heed the wisdom of the late Professor Jean Thomas Clerc, former editor of the Chemometrics Section of Analytica Chimica Acta: “Never … ever … under no circumstances … use chemometrics to make up for poor experimentation.”

American Microchemical Society Benedetti Pichler Award On Monday, November 17, 2014, Dr. Eugene S. Hall, Rutgers University, will receive the 2014 American Microchemical Society Benedetti Pichler Award.

EAS New Faculty Award in NMR Spectroscopy On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Prof. Megan A. Macnaughtan, Louisiana State University will receive the 2014 EAS New Faculty Award in NMR Spectroscopy.

Megan A. Macnaughtan is an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at Louisiana State University. She received her bachelor’s degree in chemistry at Ohio University in 1998, and her Ph.D. in analytical chemistry in 2003 from Purdue University. She worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center at the University of Georgia with James Prestegard before joining the faculty at Louisiana State University in 2008. Dr. Macnaughtan is an expert in bioanalytical nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. As a graduate student with Dr. Daniel Raftery, she studied surface photo-catalysis using solidstate NMR and developed NMR probes for multiplex sample analysis. Her postdoctoral research in the Prestegard lab focused on biological NMR, including method development and structural biology of proteins and carbohydrate ligands. Her work on post-expression isotopic labeling of proteins for characterizing glycoproteins was supported by an NIH Pathway to Independence grant. As an assistant professor, Dr. Macnaughtan’s research group investigates the structural conformations of proteins, carbohydrates, and enzyme-bound substrate using NMR. Her research program is focused on three areas: developing an E. coli strain to produce glycoproteins suitable for study by NMR, investigating the mechanism of Notch activation by NMR, and determining the structure-activity relationship of a bi-functional Chlamydia trachomatis enzyme.

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Eugene S. Hall (Gene) was born in Plainfield, NJ where he attended public schools and graduated from Plainfield High School in 1969. He then went on to Tusculum College in Greeneville, TN where he was a dual major and graduated in 1973 with a B.S. in Mathematics and Chemistry. He then went on to graduate school at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University where he studied radioanalytical chemistry using anti-matter (positrons) to probe different molecular environments. Subsequently, he graduated with a Ph.D. in Radioanyltical Chemistry in 1978. Ever since Gene was five years old, playing with chemicals in the basement of his Plainfield home, he wanted to be a chemistry professor. This dream became a realty when he joined the Chemistry Department at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, in July 1979 as a lecturer. He then worked his way through the ranks where he is now full professor. He enjoys teaching students both at the undergraduate and graduate level. In addition, he has served as a role model by mentoring inspiring high school chemistry students. Gene’s analytical toolbox includes FT-IR, Raman, GC-MS/FID, micro EDXRF, and ICP-MS instrumentation that is used in several analytical settings such environmental, forensic, nutraceuticals, consumer counterfeit goods, and ephemera. Gene has been at Rutgers for 35 years where he has mentored more than 210 students serving as undergraduate research and Ph.D. advisors. He has published more than 50 refereed publications and given more than 30 invited presentations and lectures at conferences. He has refereed numerous scientific publications and has served as an associate editor on journals. He continues to be a volunteer for the Eastern Analytical Symposium. In Gene’s 35 years at Rutgers, some of his most exciting projects included: Non-destructive micro EDXRF characterization of hidden text on the Archimedes Palimpsest, authentication of The Grinnell Hawaiian Missionary Postage stamps, identifying inks of color on early American paper money, and character-

2014 EAS Final Program ization of weapons of mass economic destruction (WMED) such as Operation Andrew and Operation Bernhard counterfeit British Currency printed during World War II. In addition, our laboratory has done extensive studies on childhood lead poisoning and maternal transfer of Pb to the fetus using ICP-MS stable Pb isotope ratios. Gene has also enjoyed being a public servant for state residents wishing to characterize various collectables and questioned documents and questioned consumer products such as Rolex watches and Coach Handbags.

New York Society for Applied Spectroscopy Gold Medal Award On Monday, November 17, 2014, Dr. Laurence A. Nafie, Syracuse University, will receive the 2014 New York Society for Applied Spectroscopy Gold Medal Award.

Laurence (Larry) A. Nafie received his Ph.D. from the University of Oregon in 1973, studying resonance Raman scattering, and from 1973 to 1975 he was a postdoctoral associate at the University of Southern California, working on the discovery and confirmation of infrared vibrational circular dichroism (VCD). In 1975 he joined the Chemistry faculty at Syracuse University to establish a research program in VCD and Raman optical activity (ROA). In 1978, he was named an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow and was promoted to Professor in 1982. In 1978 he proposed and carried out the first measurements of Fourier transform VCD, now the basis of all commercial VCD instrumentation. He was appointed Chairman of the Chemistry Department in 1984 and served until 2000. In 1988 he measured the scattered circular polarization (SCP) form of ROA for the first time that is now used in the only commercially available ROA spectrometer. In

Awards 1989 he predicted theoretically a new form of ROA called dual circular polarization (DCP) ROA that was confirmed experimentally in his laboratory in 1991. In 1995 he became founding Editor of the journal Biospectroscopy, published by John Wiley & Sons and continued as Associate Editor of Biopolymers until 2010. In 1996, he co-founded with Dr. Rina Dukor the company BioTools, Inc. to market advanced vibrational spectroscopy instrumentation, including the ChiralIR VCD and ChiralRAMAN ROA spectrometers. In 1996 he published the theory of resonance ROA and its predictions were confirmed by its first observation in 1998. In 2000, he was named Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Syracuse University. He was awarded the Coblentz Award (1981), the Bomem Michelson Award (2001), the William F. Meggers Award (2001) and the Distinguished Service Award of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy (2007). He served on the Governing Board of the Coblentz Society from 1984 to 1988 and was President from 1993 to 1995. In 2003, he served as President of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy, and in 2008 he became a Fellow of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy. In January 2010 he retired from full-time service at Syracuse University to become Distinguished Professor Emeritus and at the same time Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Raman Spectroscopy published by John Wiley & Sons. In 2011 he published a comprehensive book on the fundamental theory, instrumentation, measurement, calculation and application of vibrational optical entitled Vibrational Optical Activity: Principles and Applications Wiley, Chichester (2011). Most recently, he was named winner of the 2013 Pittsburgh Spectroscopy Award of the Spectroscopic Society of Pittsburgh, presented at Pittcon 2013. He has over 300 publications and several patents.

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New York Microscopical Society Ernst Abbe Memorial Award, organized with the New York Conservation Foundation On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Dr. Alexandre Dazzi, University Paris-Sud, will receive the 2014 New York Microscopical Society Ernst Abbe Memorial Award.

Dr. Alexandre Dazzi has a research program focused on nanoscale IR Spectroscopy, a technique that he invented. Specific research objectives including applying the technique to solve interesting problems in microbiological and cellular imaging, while simultaneously pushing the limits of the technique itself. He obtained his Ph.D. in Physics in 1998 at the Université de Dijon, and did post-doctoral work at the Centre de Recherche Paul Pascal at Bordeaux. This training gave him a solid background in near field optics techniques. In 2000 Dr. Dazzi took an associate professor position at the CLIO FEL facility, where he worked on near-field techniques in the infrared region. After initially focusing on infrared Scanning Near-field Optical Microscopy (SNOM), Dr. Dazzi invented a technique called Photothermal Induced Resonance (PTIR) that enables an AFM probe to act as a detector that can provide information on infrared spectroscopy at the nanoscale. This patented technique has been commercialized by Anasys Instruments in its nanoIR product. Dr. Dazzi received his habilitation in October 2008 and was the 2009 laureate for France’s national instrumentation prize from the Societé Francaise Division de Chimie Physique. He was also associated with R&D 100 awards in 2010 and the Microscopy Today 2011 Innovation Award for the nanoIRTM. He also teaches nanoscience at the Université Paris-Sud.

2014 EAS Final Program

Tech Tour

For 2014 the EAS Technology Tour Just Got Zippier! Your Technology Tour Passport is included with your Final Program. If you visit 10 of the participating companies and get your Passport marked, you are eligible to redeem it for your choice of a special gift at the EAS Souvenir Booth in the 700 aisle. If you visit all 20 of the participating companies, in addition to the special gift, you will be eligible to enter a daily drawing to win a Fitbit Zip. The drawings take place in the Exhibit Hall daily at 2:30 PM. Be sure to have your Passports validated at the Souvenir Booth prior to that time. Exhibitors participating in the 2014 Technology Tour are:

Mettler Toledo MicroLiter Pace Analytical Services PANalytical Parker Hannifin PerkinElmer SPEware Corporation Thermo Scientific Vortex Sales Group YMC America

Agilent Technologies Anton Paar USA AquaLab by Decagon Cerilliant Cosa Xentaur Gerstel J.G. Finneran Mac-Mod Analytical Markes International Metrohm USA

Added this year to the Tech Tour a daily drawing for a Fitbit Zip.

Success takes care of itself. CONSCI has provided state-of-the-art independent gas analysis services such as trace level impurities speciation in specialty gases and hard to manage samples including metal hydrides, complex mixtures and corrosive gases, as well as fast and affordable routine impurity analyses for almost three decades. We pride ourselves on customer service and finding unique solutions to analytical challenges.

Consolidated Sciences 1416 E Southmore Ave Pasadena, TX 77502 www.consci.com 800-240-3693

35

2014 EAS Final Program

Short Courses

2014 EAS Short Courses Complete descriptions of all EAS Short Courses are available on our website: www.EAS.org

— Two-Day Courses —

Code

~ Two-Day Courses ~ Sunday, Nov. 16 – Monday, Nov. 17 8:30am -­5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

E14-01

Practical Gas Chromatography

Dr. Eugene F. Barry, University of Mass-Lowell Dr. Thomas Brettell, Cedar Crest College

E14-02

Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC I & II (combined course)

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

E14-03

Principles of Trace Level Structure Elucidation: High Sensitivity Mass Spectrometry and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

Dr. Daniel Norwood, Boehringer Ingelheim Dr. Nina Gonnella, Boehringer Ingelheim

E14-04

Troubleshooting Chromatographic Systems

Dr. Merlin K.L. Bicking, ACCT, Inc. Dr. Douglas E. Raynie, South Dakota State University

E14-06

Chemometrics Without Equations I & II (combined course)

Dr. Donald Dahlberg, Lebanon Valley College Dr. Neal Gallagher, Eigenvector Research

Code E14-12

Code E14-16

~ Two-Day Courses ~ Monday, Nov. 17 – Tuesday, Nov. 18 8:30am -­5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s) Dr. Guodong Chen, Bristol-Myers Squibb Dr. Ragu Ramanathan, Pfizer

LC/MS: Theory, Instruments, and Applications

~ Two-Day Courses ~ Tuesday, Nov. 18 – Wednesday, Nov. 19 8:30am -­5:00pm (Holiday Inn) How to Develop Validated HPLC Methods: Rational Design with Practical Statistics and Troubleshooting

Instructor(s) Dr. Brian A. Bidlingmeyer, Agilent Technologies Dr. Stanley N. Deming, Statistical Designs

— One-Day Courses — Code

~ One-Day Courses ~ Sunday, November 16 8:30am -­5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

E14-05

Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC I: Fundamentals and Applications

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

E14-07

Introduction to Chemometrics Without Equations I

Dr. Donald Dahlberg, Lebanon Valley College Dr. Neal Gallagher, Eigenvector Research

E14-08

cGMP and Laboratory Controls for Pharmaceutical Development

Dr. Anthony DeStefano, YourEncore Ms. Kim Huynh-Ba, Pharmalytik

E14-09

LC-MS Method Development for Small Molecule Pharmaceuticals

Dr. Perry Wang, LC-MS Technical Expert

E14-10

Polymers: An Introduction and Characterization Techniques

Dr. Diep Nguyen, Illinois Institute of Technology

E14-11

How to Create a more Effective Lab Safety Program

Dr. James Kaufman, Lab Safety Institute

36

2014 EAS Final Program

Short Courses

— One-Day Courses (continued) — Code

~ One-Day Courses ~ Monday, November 17 8:30am - 5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

E14-13

Getting the most from GC and GC/MS

Dr. Gregory Slack, Clarkson University Dr. Nicholas Snow, Seton Hall University

E14-14

Essentials of Modern HPLC/UHPLC II: Practice, Operation, Troubleshooting and Method Development

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

E14-15

Intermediate Chemometrics Without Equations II

Dr. Donald Dahlberg, Lebanon Valley College Dr. Neil Gallagher, Eigenvector Research

Code

~ One-Day Courses ~ Tuesday, November 18 8:30am - 5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

E14-17

Interpretation of Mass Spectra with Practical Solutions to Problems

Dr. Mike Lee, Milestone Development

E14-18

Therapeutic Peptide and Protein Bioanalysis by LC-MS/MS

Dr. Faye Vazvaei, Roche Dr. Jianing Zeng, Bristol-Myers Squibb Dr. Jun Qu, SUNY-Buffalo Dr. Yan Zhang, Bristol-Myers Squibb

E14-19

Sample Preparation: The Chemistry Behind the Techniques

Dr. Merlin K.L. Bicking, ACCTA, Inc. Dr. Douglas E. Raynie, South Dakota State University

E14-20

Introduction to Vibrational Spectroscopy for Real Time Analysis

Dr. Peter J. Larkin, Bristol-Myers Squibb Dr. John M. Wasylyk, Bristol-Myers Squibb

E14-21

Drug Quality Fundamentals I & II (combined half-day courses)

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

Code

~ One Day Courses ~ Wednesday, November 19 8:30am - 5:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

E14-24

Infrared Microspectroscopy and Chemical Mapping at the Nanoscale Using AFM-IR Spectroscopy and Imaging, produced with New York Microscopical Society and New York Conservation Foundation

Dr. Alexandre Dazzi, University of Paris-Sud Dr. Curtis Marcott, Light Light Solutions

E14-25

Development, Validation, Verification and Transfer of Analytical Methods: A Lifecycle Approach of Analytical Methods

Mr. Gregory Martin, Complectors Consulting

E14-26

The Chemistry of Drug Degradation

Dr. Gregory Sluggett, Pfizer Dr. Todd Zelesky, Pfizer

E14-27

Quality-by-Design (QbD) Fundamentals for Analytical Chemists: A New Paradigm for the Analytical Laboratory

Dr. Zenaida Otero Gephartd

— Half-Day Courses — Code E14-22

Code E14-23

~ Half-Day Course ~ Tuesday, November 18 8:30am - 12:00pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

Drug Quality Fundamentals Part 1: Introduction to Drug Discovery and Development Processes

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

~ Half-Day Course ~ Tuesday, November 18 1:00- 4:30pm (Holiday Inn)

Instructor(s)

Drug Quality Fundamentals Part 2: Quality Control of Small Molecule Drugs and Recombinant Biologics

Dr. Michael W. Dong, Genentech

37

2014 EAS Final Program

Student Awards

2014 EAS Student Awards Sponsored by Merck EAS continues to actively support a Student Awards program to recognize students involved in research in the broad field of analytical chemistry. This year, we have expanded the Student Awards to include both graduate and undergraduate students. In the spring of each year, we encourage professors to identify undergraduate Juniors in college and graduate students who demonstrate special talent in research. Nomination criteria include excellent grades, appraisals of how the students handle their investigations, their approach and how they resolve problems and publicly disseminate their work. In 2014, four undergraduates and four graduate students have been selected based on these criteria to receive EAS Student Awards. The following outstanding students have been chosen from a very worthy field of candidates:

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS Elise Cade Brockport State Nominated by Professor Markus M. Hoffmann

Rachel Harris University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Nominated by Professor Gary L. Glish

Caitlin Masterson University of Rhode Island Nominated by Professor Jason Dwyer

Pyae Phyo Berea College Nominated by Professor Jay H. Baltisberger

GRADUATE STUDENTS Armand G. Ngounou Wetie Clarkson University Nominated by Professor Costel C. Darie

Maral Mousavi University of Minnesota Nominated by Professor Phil Buhlmann

Lauren Marbella University of Pittsburgh Nominated by Professor Jill Millstone

Erik Guetschow University of Michigan Nominated by Professor Robert Kennedy

The Governing Board of the 2014 EAS congratulates these awardees for their outstanding achievements. The Student Awardees’ posters will be presented on Tuesday, November 18, 2014 in the Poster Area in the Exhibit Hall from 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM

38

NEW IN 2015

EAS is pleased to announce that we have partnered with Pharma Webinars to offer new low-cost webinars to all analytical scientists launching in 2015 February

Overview of Protein Analysis: Analytical Testing and Specifications Robert Johnson, Consultant March

ICP and Elemental Impurities Testing in Pharmaceutical Analysis Stay tuned to EAS.org; more details to follow

Follow us for more info:

ANNOUNCING 2015 Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition

ANALYTICAL INNOVATION FROM BENCHTOP TO BUSINESS  Three-day technical program  State-of-the-art exposition featuring analytical equipment and services  Extensive selection of short courses and professional development workshops  Employment bureau, and more

Garden State Exhibit Center | Somerset, NJ EAS.org

November 16–18, 2015

Call for Papers March 1–June 15, 2015 Abstracts received from June 16–Sept 30, 2015 will be reviewed for quality to be included in the poster session. You will be notified via email when/if the abstract is placed.

EAS seeks contributed abstracts in these and other analytical fields:  Bioanalysis

 Microscopy

 Capillary Electrophoresis

 Nanoparticles

 Chemometrics

 Near-Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy

 Conservation Science

 NMR Spectroscopy

 Environmental Analysis

 Pharmaceutical Analysis

 ESR Spectroscopy

 Process Analytical Science

 Food Analysis

 Protein Analysis

 Forensic Analysis

 Quality-by-design

 Gas Chromatography

 Quality/Regulatory/Compliance

 HPLC

 Raman Spectroscopy

 ICP/MS

 Sample Preparation

 Immunochemistry

 Science Education

 Industrial Hygiene

 Sensors

 Ion Chromatography

 Size Exclusion Chromatography

 IR Spectroscopy

 Solid State Analysis

 Laboratory Automation

 Space Analytics

 Laboratory Management

 Supercritical Fluid Chromatography

 Laboratory Miniaturization

 Surface Science

 Ligand Binding Assays

 Very High-Pressure LC/ Ultra High-Pressure LC

 LC/MS, GC/MS  Microchemistry

 Vibrational Spectroscopy

Call for Proposals Please help EAS serve you better. If you have suggestions for a short course offering, or would like to teach a short course, please contact us at [email protected]. If you have suggestions for program, or would like to organize a session, please contact us at [email protected].

foods pharmaceuticals

life sciences

forensics environmental

Technology for Innovators Founded on the basis of “Solutions for Science,” Shimadzu has been a world leader in the analytical instrumentation industry for over 135 years. Delivering precise, reliable results, our system platforms will help advance your research and development in a multitude of markets, including foods, pharmaceuticals, life science, environmental, and forensics. At EAS 2014, we’ll be showcasing our full range of instruments and platforms, including our new i-Series of integrated HPLC systems.

Visit Booth 243 to learn about our wide range of innovative instruments: ■ ■ ■ ■

AA / ICP Balances Biotech / MALDI EDX / XRF / XRD

■ ■ ■ ■

Fluorescence FTIR GC GC / MS / MS

■ ■ ■ ■

HPLC / UHPLC LC / MS / MS Particle Size Software

■ ■ ■ ■

Testing Machines Thermal TOC / TN / TP UV-VIS-NIR

Find out more at Booth #243 www.ssi.shimadzu.com

Advance of Large Molecule Separation and Characterization Monday, November 17, 2014 - Seminar/Dinner:

Double Tree Hotel, Somerset, NJ Mirabelle Room, Advance of Large Molecule Separation and Characterization Advance of Large Molecule Separation and Characterization Monday, November17, 17, 2014 2014 -- Seminar/Dinner: Monday, November Seminar/Dinner:

Mirabelle Room,Particles Double Tree Somerset, NJNJ “Taking Advantage of Sub-2µm for Size-Exclusion UPLC Analysis of Mirabelle Room, Double TreeHotel, Hotel, Somerset, Biomolecules,” LeslieforMann, Waters Corp. “Taking Advantage of Sub-2µm Size-Exclusion Analysis of “Taking Advantage of Sub-2μm ParticlesParticles for Size-Exclusion UPLCUPLC Analysis of Biomolecules,” Biomolecules,” Leslie Mann, Waters Corp.

Leslie Mann, Corp. “System and “System Software Considerations forWaters UPLC Size Exclusion Chromatography of and Software Considerations for UPLC Size Exclusion Chromatography of “System and Software Considerations for UPLC Size Exclusion of Proteins,” Proteins,” Edward Aig, Waters Corp. Proteins,” Edward Aig, Waters Corp. Chromatography Edward Aig, Waters Corp.

“Multi-angle Light Scattering Goes Micro,” Eric Seymour, Wyatte Technology

“Multi-angle Light Scattering Goes Seymour, “Multi-angle Light Scattering GoesMicro,” Micro,” Eric Eric Seymour, WyattWyatte TechnologyTechnology Guest Speaker “Higher Order Structure Characterization Biologic Therapeutics,” Dr. Jason Cheung, Guestof Speaker Guest Speaker Merck.

Structure Characterization of Biologic Therapeutics,” Dr. Jason Cheung, Merck. Cheung, “Higher“Higher OrderOrder Structure Characterization of Biologic Therapeutics,” Dr. Jason Social: 6:30pm Social: 6:30pm Merck. Dinner: 6:45pm Dinner: 6:45pm Seminar: 7:00pm

Sponsored by:Social: Waters Corp. 6:30pm & Wyatt Technology

Seminar: 7:00pm

Sponsored by:Dinner: Waters Corp. 6:45pm & Wyatt Technology

Cost: $5, (Seminar: Free: Full-time students students   & un-employed ) 7:00pm Cost: $5, (Free: Full-time & un-employed) at  w ww.njcg.org   Register TODAY  at Register TODAY www.njcg.org

Sponsored by: Waters Corp. & Wyatt Technology **************************************************************  

Cost: $5, (Free: Full-time students  & un-employed) Register TODAY  at  www.njcg.org   Attention  Coblentz  Members   Please  join  us  at  the  Coblentz  reception   **************************************************************   Monday  evening,  November  17  from  6:00pm  to  8:30  pm   in  Parlor  166  at  the  Doubletree.       We  invite  all  Coblentz  members  to  join  us  in  celebrating  Coblentz’s  60th  Anniversary.  

Attention  Coblentz  Members   Please   join  us  at  the  Coblentz  reception   Please join us at the Coblentz reception Monday  evening,  November  17  from  6:00pm  to  8:30  pm   Monday evening, November 17 from 6:00pm to 8:30 pm in  Parlor  166  at  the  Doubletree.       in Parlor 166 at the Doubletree. We  invite  all  Coblentz  members  to  join  us  in  celebrating  Coblentz’s  th60th  Anniversary.   Attention Coblentz Members

We invite all Coblentz members to join us in celebrating Coblentz’s 60 Anniversary.

43

2014 EAS Final Program

Highlights in the Exposition Area

Highlights in the Exposition Area Take time out to relax and meet with colleagues and exhibitors in our pleasant courtyard area in the center of the Exhibit Hall Free Light Lunch for all Conferees and Exhibitors: Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 12:00 PM and 1:30 PM Have lunch or a snack and see the latest offerings from our exhibitors. Food Carts are sponsored by Agilent Technologies, CAS, Cosa Xentaur, and Shimadzu Be sure to check out the Technology Tour and win a choice of GREAT PRIZES! See details in your Technology Tour Passport and on page 35 in your Final Program.

Added this year to the Tech Tour - a daily drawing for a Fitbit Zip.

44

2014 EAS Final Program

EAS Workshops

EAS 2014 Workshops 2014 2014 WORKSHOPS WORKSHOPS EASEAS is committed to professional development, as well as enhancement of knowledge. Workshops on topics to to is committed to professional development, as well as enhancement of knowledge. Workshops on topics develop professional skillsskills and and otherother toolstools for success are open to EAS attendees. A Full Conferee registration is is develop professional for success are open to EAS attendees. A Full Conferee registration required, and and space is limited so advanced registration for each workshop is requested. Any Any remaining spotsspots will be required, space is limited so advanced registration for each workshop is requested. remaining willon be on a firsta come, first serve basis. first come, first serve basis.

Getting Getting Hired Hired - Secrets - Secrets of aofContingency a Contingency Recruiter Recruiter Monday, November 17, 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM PM Monday, November 17, 10:00 AM to 12:00 Double TreeTree HotelHotel ~ Parlor 166 166 Double ~ Parlor Solidus Service Group, LLC.LLC. Donald Donald Truss, Truss, Solidus Service Group, Borrowing fromfrom leaders in the including Stephen Covey, Michael Gerber, DaleDale Carnegie, and and Zig Zigglar, Borrowing leaders in field the field including Stephen Covey, Michael Gerber, Carnegie, Zig Zigglar, Recruiter Donald Truss will guide us through the mysterious worldworld of the manager’s decision making process. Recruiter Donald Truss will guide us through the mysterious of hiring the hiring manager’s decision making process. Come and and learnlearn the secrets to anto effective resume. Learn best best practices for job and and how how to make the the Come the secrets an effective resume. Learn practices for searching job searching to make interviewer comfortable and and capable of understanding you during the interview. Learn how how the proper use of interviewer comfortable capable of understanding you during the interview. Learn the proper usepatience of patience and and timing will increase youryour interviewing success rate.rate. This This will be interactive session, so bring youryour timing will increase interviewing success will abehighly a highly interactive session, so bring questions. Don’tDon’t missmiss this this opportunity to get viewview of the processes involved between hiringhiring questions. opportunity to an get insider’s an insider’s of subliminal the subliminal processes involved between managers and candidates. During this interactive session, we will managers and candidates. During this interactive session, wediscuss: will discuss: • How the selling process is more thanthan just an of information • How the selling process is more justexchange an exchange of information • How to understand whatwhat the buyer is thinking and feeling during the interview process • How to understand the buyer is thinking and feeling during the interview process • How to present youryour skillsskills and work history in a way that the manager will understand and remember • How to present and work history in a way thathiring the hiring manager will understand and remember Come with with an open mindmind and be to betosurprised! Come an open andprepared be prepared be surprised!

Using Using Social Social Media M edia to Network to Network Your Your W ayWto ay atoJob a Job andand M ore M ore Tuesday, Tuesday, November November 18, 10:00 18, 10:00 AM AM to 12:00 to 12:00 PM PM Double Double TreeTree HotelHotel ~ Parlor ~ Parlor 166 166 DeVito, DeVito, KatieKatie DeVito, KatieKatie DeVito, LLC LLC Social media a powerful enables to make maintain professional contacts. A well-structured profile Social media is a is powerful tool tool that that enables us tousmake and and maintain professional contacts. A well-structured profile is effectively posted can optimize visibility, in new contacts, create interest in postings our postings attract future that that is effectively posted can optimize visibility, resultresult in new contacts, create interest in our and and attract future employers. However, are existing knowledge about to social use social media effectively, especially employers. However, therethere are existing knowledge gapsgaps about how how to use media mostmost effectively, especially in in the search a new In workshop, this workshop, will learn the best practices for using social media: creating the search for afor new job. job. In this you you will learn the best practices for using social media: fromfrom creating an an effective profile, to knowing to appropriately contacts, determining frequently to add postings effective profile, to knowing how how to appropriately makemake new new contacts, determining how how frequently to add postings and and learning to effectively network online. learning how how to effectively network online.

Sharpening Sharpening your your Presentation Presentation Skills Skills – an – an Interactive Interactive Workshop Workshop Wednesday, Wednesday, November November 19, 10:00 19, 10:00 AM to AM 12:00 to 12:00 PM PM Double Double TreeTree HotelHotel ~ Parlor ~ Parlor 166 166 Sue Sue Franz, Franz, Gentex Gentex At any At any scientific scientific conference, conference, therethere are speakers are speakers we remember we remember yearsyears later;later; we remember we remember the science, the science, the topic, the topic, the the stylestyle of presentation of presentation but also but also the energy, the energy, enthusiasm enthusiasm and and personality personality of the of presenter. the presenter. These These speakers speakers not only not only havehave interesting interesting topics topics of interest of interest but they but they are great are great communicators. communicators. HowHow do we dobecome we become moremore memorable memorable at a at conference, a conference, an interview an interview or even or even whenwhen networking? networking? GoodGood presentation presentation skillsskills allowallow us tous effectively to effectively showcase showcase and market and market our ideas, our ideas, research research and and career. career. The The first part first part of this of workshop this workshop will give will give an overview an overview of the of do’s the do’s and and don’ts don’ts of presenting of presenting fromfrom an an experienced experienced senior senior manager. manager. In the In second the second part part of the of workshop, the workshop, we will we give will give examples examples of short of short presentations presentations and and drawdraw on the on audience the audience to critique to critique and and improve improve them. them. This This process process will allow will allow us tousgain to gain perspective perspective of what of what otherother see see whenwhen we present we present and and equipequip us with us with new new skillsskills for the for future. the future. As an Asoptional an optional component component of this of workshop, this workshop, attendees attendees may may bringbring in a pre-prepared in a pre-prepared shortshort (less(less thanthan 5 minutes) 5 minutes) presentation presentation on any on topic any topic or story or story to share. to share.

45

2014 EAS Final Program

Seminars

2014 EAS Seminars Eastern Analytical Symposium has refocused and expanded its Outreach program for undergraduates and high school teachers. Each seminar has outstanding presenters from academia and industry who will demonstrate the advantages of a career in chemistry.

The Best Way to Teach Forensic Science is to Teach Science Sunday, November 16, 2014 Registration Limited to Middle and High School TEACHERS ONLY 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM This seminar will be offered exclusively to middle and high school teachers. The seminar will be conducted by several scientists active in the field of Forensic Science including: Dr. Lawrence Kobilinsky, John Jay College of Criminal Justice and Dr. Richard Saferstein, Forensic Science consultant and author of the forensic science high school text “Forensic Science: An Introduction” (2nd edition). The focus of this educational seminar is to encourage teachers to use present-day police laboratory techniques in their classroom as a vehicle to motivate students to understand and appreciate basic chemical and biological principles.

Chemical Identity via Mass Spectrometry Sponsored by North Jersey ACS Mass Spectrometry Topical Group Monday, November 17, 2014 Registration for Qualified Teachers and Students 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM This seminar, organized by ACS - North Jersey Mass Spectrometry Discussion group and moderated by Drs. Ronald Kong and Carolina Cabral, is designed to familiarize students with the fundamentals and applications of mass spectrometry. Prof. Athula Attygalle from Stevens Institute of Technology will give lectures on the fundamental aspects of mass spectrometry and its application in chemical structure elucidation. The seminar will focus on the basics and history of mass spectrometry, the generation and interpretation of mass spectra, and the application of mass spectrometric tools in daily life, such as crime sense investigation and prevention of sport doping. Students will practice their skills at identifying compounds based on a mass spectrum and interact with the scientists from industry utilizing mass spectrometry.

Analytical Chemistry and Forensic Science Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Registration for Qualified Teachers and Students 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM In this seminar, organized by Dr. Richard Saferstein, several speakers discuss a variety of analytical technologies that are applicable to solving forensic science problems. Students are introduced to the science of forensic toxicology and learn the strategies that forensic toxicologists employ to detect poisons and drugs in the human body. Significant achievements that have been made in utilizing DNA typing for the purposes of linking biological evidence to a single individual are also discussed. A number of actual case discussions are presented and finally an overview of how forensic analysis makes use of minute particles in resolving crimes is given.

What Does an Analytical Chemist do in Industry Wednesday, November 19, 2014 Registration for Qualified Teachers and Students 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM This seminar is intended for students interested in a career in analytical chemistry. Some of the different roles an analytical chemist may fill in industry are examined: scientific consultant, method developer, and problem solver. Significant time is spent on exploring the process of troubleshooting and problem solving. Analytical scientists representing different industries will be present to explain the work they do and the challenges they face.

46

2014 EAS Final Program

Employment Bureau

2014 EAS EMPLOYMENT BUREAU Applicant Instructions • You must supply the Employment Bureau with one (1) copy of your resume. Your resume should be no longer than TWO (2) pages in length. Your resume will be assigned an Applicant ID#. • Postings of current job openings will be available for your review in the Job Posting Area. Access to these postings will be limited to applicants registered with the Employment Bureau. • If you wish to contact an employer regarding a job posting, you may leave a note for that employer using the Employer ID# that appears on the posting. Notes should be placed in the appropriate envelope on the bulletin board labeled, “MESSAGES FOR EMPLOYERS” in the Employer Message area. • Check for responses or other communications from prospective employers in the Applicant Message area. Messages will be labeled with your Applicant ID# and can be found on the bulletin board labeled, “MESSAGES FOR APPLICANTS.” • If you wish, you may purchase a copy of the 2014 EAS Employment Bureau Job Postings for $20. Please inquire at the Employment Bureau Registration desk. The Job Postings will be mailed after the close of EAS.

• When you arrive, please check-in at the symposium registration area for the exact location of the Employment Bureau. • Advance registration for the 2014 EAS Employment Bureau is NOT permitted. DO NOT send any resume to EAS in advance of the symposium. You MUST bring your resume to the Employment Bureau Applicant Registration desk when you arrive at the symposium. • The Employment Bureau will operate from 9:00 AM until 4:00 PM on Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday, the hours will be 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM Job postings will be available for applicant review beginning at 11:00 AM on Monday morning. Interviews will not be scheduled until 12:00 noon on Monday. Job postings are continually updated during EAS and applicants are expected to visit the Job Posting bulletin boards on a regular basis. • When you arrive at the Employment Bureau, check-in at the Applicant Registration desk. You will receive your Applicant identification number at this time. This number will be used for all communications with prospective employers as well as the Employment Bureau.

2014 EAS EMPLOYMENT BUREAU Employer Instructions • When you arrive, please check-in at the symposium registration area for the exact location of the Employment Bureau.

• Resumes of prospective applicants will be available for your review in the Resume Area. Access to resumes will be restricted to employers with job openings registered with the Employment Bureau.

• The Employment Bureau will operate from 9:00 AM until 4:00 PM on Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday, the hours will be 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM Job postings will be available for applicant review beginning at 11:00 AM on Monday morning. Interviews with prospective applicants cannot be scheduled until 12:00 noon on Monday. Employers wishing to conduct interviews with prospective applicants can schedule these at the Employment Bureau’s Employer Registration desk.

• If you wish to contact an applicant regarding their qualifications, you may leave a note for that applicant using the Applicant ID# that appears on their resume. Notes should be placed in the appropriate area on the bulletin board labeled, “MESSAGES FOR APPLICANTS” in the Applicant Message area. • Check for responses and other communications from prospective applicants in the Employer Message area. Messages will be labeled with the Employer ID# for the specific job opening desired. These messages can be found in the appropriate envelopes on the bulletin board labeled, “MESSAGES FOR EMPLOYERS.”

• When you arrive at the Employment Bureau, check-in at the Employer Registration desk. You will receive your Employer identification number at this time. A number will be assigned for each job opening. These numbers will be used for all communications with prospective applicants, as well as with the Employment Bureau. Job postings may be submitted on your Company stationery or by filling out the EAS Job Opening form. If advance submission of Job openings is not possible, these may be submitted after you register with the Employment Bureau on site.

• If you wish, you may purchase a copy of the 2014 EAS Employment Resume book. The cost for the Resume book will be $200. Please inquire at the Employment Bureau Registration desk.

47

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

2014 Exhibitor Descriptions Updated October 31, 2014 Advion 104 10 Brown Rd., Suite 101 Ithaca, NY 14850 Phone: 607-379-4565 / Internet: www.expressioncms.com With over 20 years of mass spectrometry and chemistry expertise, Advion offers the expression family of compact mass spectrometers designed for the chemist. The affordability, small size and ease-of-use make them ideal for use directly at the chemist’s bench, giving immediate answers and informed decisions instead of waiting in line at a central analytical service laboratory. Quickly and effortlessly analyze samples from Flash chromatography, Prep-LC, SFC, TLC, (U)HPLC, or manual syringe injection. Now every synthetic chemist can have a mass spec that works the same hours that they do.

Agilent Technologies, Inc.

Tech

Tour 

301, 303, 305

2850 Centerville Road Wilmington, DE 19808 Phone: 800-227-9770 / Internet: www.agilent.com/chem Agilent manufactures and distributes a complete line of instrumentation serving the clinical, analytical, biotech, environmental, pharmaceutical, forensic science, food and flavor, academia, and all other laboratory markets that have needs for the best in quality, performance, and serviceability in the instruments they purchase.

Air Liquide America Specialty Gases

711

6141 Easton Road PO Box 310 Plumsteadville, PA 18949 Phone: 215-766-8860 / Internet: www.ALspecialtygases.com Part of the Air Liquide Group, world leader in gases for industry, health and the environment, Air Liquide America Specialty Gases engineers innovative products and services--delivering measurable value in terms of customer satisfaction, efficiency, growth and overall success of our customers in a wide variety of industries. Our Scott(TM) brand specialty gas mixtures have long been acknowledged worldwide as being the definitive standard for instrument calibration accuracy, while ALPHAGAZ(TM) pure gases remain a global benchmark for quality and purity. Other Air Liquide products such as ARCAL(TM), ALIGAL(TM), LASAL Ultra(TM) and FLAMMAL(TM) comprise an extensive portfolio of rare, specialty and industrial gases specifically engineered for applications such as environmental monitoring and compliance, laboratory analysis, process control, food and beverage processing, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology, oil and gas processing, welding, lasing, cutting and many more. Custom products are developed to meet unique application requirements. Scott brand gas handling equipment provides safe, efficient delivery of gases from supply to point of use while ensuring gas purity and integrity. In addition, Air Liquide hosts an extensive Proficiency Testing program that provides subscribers a unique opportunity to evaluate and assess their analytical performance through comparison with other participants in a global community.

Airgas USA LLC

603

490 Stelton Road Piscataway, NJ 08854 Phone: 732-233-6792 / Internet: www.airgas.com Engineering the right solutions for analytical and life science laboratories. From highpurity gases (99.999%) to high-tolerance blends; from regulators and manifolds to complete laboratory design services; from cryogenic gases and freezers to Airgasmanaged off-site repositories, you’ll find it with Airgas. With a network of 11 national labs, 70 regional labs - more than three-quarters ISO 9001 registered; eight also ISO/ IEC 17025 accredited - 26 AcuGrav© automated specialty gas fill stations, and automated FTIR analysis, Airgas provides consistent top quality, local inventory and reliable delivery. Visit us on the web at www.airgasSGcatalog.com.

Alicat Scientific

334

7641 N. Business Park Drive Tucson, AZ 85743 Phone: 888-290-6060 / Internet: www.alicat.com From handheld portable flow calibrators that validate your GC flow rates in real time, to fast-responding mass flow and pressure controllers that keep your analytical processes steady, Alicat Scientific’s mass flow and pressure instruments are designed to save you time. Select from any of 130 on-board gas calibrations, or make your own custom gas mix calibration on the unit itself. All flow and pressure instruments feature laboratory-grade accuracy and repeatability, plus NIST-traceable calibrations and lifetime warranties.

American Chemical Society’s New York Section

618

St. John’s Univ., Chemistry Dept. 8000 Utopia Parkway Jamaica, NY 11439 Phone: 516 883-7510 / Internet: www.newyorkacs.org American Chemical Society’s New York Section member relations. Everyone in Science is invited to stop by to learn more about the NYACS. Current members are en-

couraged to stop by to say hello and/or volunteer to join a committee. Applications will be available for science professionals interested in joining the American Chemical Society.

American Pharmaceutical Review

616

395 Oyster Point Blvd. Suite 321 South San Francisco, CA 94080-1931 Phone: 317-650-7409 / Internet: www.americanpharmaceutical.com American Pharmaceutical Review is the leading review of business and technology for the pharmaceutical industry throughout North America. Each issue offers unbiased editorial on drug delivery, information technology, research & development, analytical development and control, equipment and facility manufacturing and regulatory affairs.

AmericanLab/Labcompare 616 395 Oyster Point Blvd. Suite 321 South San Francisco, CA 94080-1931 Phone: 650-243-5600 / Internet: www.americanlab.com American Laboratory strives to create a more informed buyer through electronic and print media. AL creates and distributes product news and information that reaches over 100k readers each month aligned to the market. We challenge and invigorate our readers with a deeper understanding and appreciation of events, new ideas and new products aligned to science. Labcompare assures that the unique mission to provide information to the science community is not only preserved but grows.

Anasys Instruments

701

325 Chapala Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 Phone: 805-730-3310 / Internet: www.anasysinstruments.com Anasys pioneered the field of AFM based analytical property measurements with our multiple award winning technologies. We offer the only full-featured AFM that offers true nanoscale chemical analysis via nanoscale IR Spectroscopy. We achieve this breakthrough by using the AFM probe as the IR absorbance detector. We also offer AFM probe based nanoscale thermal analysis (via our breakthrough thermal probes) and AFM based wideband mechanical spectroscopy. For those with an AFM, we offer a nanoscale thermal analysis module that interfaces with most commercially available AFMs.

Anton Paar USA

Tech

Tour 

232, 234

10215 Timber Ridge Drive Ashland, VA 23005 Phone: 804-550-1051 / Internet: www.anton-paar.com Anton Paar produces high-quality measuring and analysis instruments for laboratory, research and industrial applications. In the fields of density and concentration measurement we are the established world leader. Our product portfolio also includes viscometers, rheometers, polarimeters, refractometers, microwave synthesis, microwave decomposition, and instruments for X-ray structure analysis. For over ninety years, we have been at the forefront in developing solutions for diverse industries. Our strong emphasis on R&D and global partnerships with external research institutes fuel our innovation. We turn ideas into instruments at the cutting edge of technology.

AquaLab by Decagon

Tech

Tour 

326

2365 NE Hopkins Ct. Pullman, WA 99163 Phone: 509-332-2756 / Internet: www.aqualab.com Decagon designs, manufactures, and markets scientific instruments. The AquaLab division focuses on measuring total moisture (water activity, moisture content, and moisture sorption isotherms) in foods, pharmaceuticals, and other products. Decagon’s instruments are used by more than 80% of the top 100 food companies. They’re also widely used by pharmaceutical companies, pet food manufacturers, universities, government agencies, research and testing labs, and in other industrial applications. Stop by Booth 326 or visit www.aqualab.com to learn more.

Arizona Instrument LLC

224

3375 N. Delaware Street Chandler, AZ 85225 Phone: 602-470-1414 / Internet: www.azic.com Arizona Instrument LLC offers a number of reliable solutions for moisture analysis, mercury and hydrogen sulfide toxic gas analysis in the market today. The Computrac® MAX® 4000XL line offers instrumentation using the RAPID loss-on-drying method for predicting moisture content. The Computrac® Vapor Pro® line offers a GREEN Karl Fischer alternative, determining specific moisture content using relative humidity sensor. The Home of Jerome® toxic gas analyzers offers patented gold film sensor and atomic fluorescence spectroscopy technology to detect for H2S and Hg vapor. Call 800-528-7411, email [email protected] or visit us online at www.azic.com for more information.

48

2014 EAS Final Program Axiom Analytical, Inc.

Exhibitor Descriptions 439

BioTools 105

1451 Edinger Ave., Suite A Tustin, CA 92780 Phone: 949-757-9300 / Internet: www.goaxiom.com Axiom Analytical, Inc. offers a broad line of software and hardware products for industrial and laboratory spectroscopy - Near-IR, Mid-IR, UV-Visible, and Raman. Products include transmission, ATR, and diffuse reflectance probes, flow cells, multiplexers, software, and integrated systems for laboratory and on-line analysis. The Symbion software products provide a standardized interface for analytical instruments, controlling all aspects of data acquisition, analysis, trending, display, and communications for while archiving all data in a standard data base format accessible to enterprise wide data systems.

17546 Beeline Highway Jupiter, FL 33458 Phone: 561-625-0133 / Internet: www.btools.com BioTools is pleased to announce several disruptive new products: 1) the first portable Raman microscope - µ-BioRAMAN - combining the capabilities of a portable Raman microscope with resolution and specifications of a bench-top Raman system. 2) MANTIS - a DualPEM VCD accessory for Thermo FT-IR spectrometers and 3) a RAMAN spectrometer that provides measurements of four forms of ROA, Raman microscopy / imaging and AFM. With these introductions, BioTools continues its tradition developing state-of-the-art innovative and unique vibrational spectroscopy products. BioTools was the first company to introduce spectrometers for the measurement of VCD & ROA - the ChiralIR-2X® and the ChiralRAMAN-2X®. Our PROTA-3S system for measurements and analysis of FT-IR spectra of proteins, viruses, sugars and nucleotides is the number one choice of biopharmaceutical scientists. We also offer software for calculations and modeling, databases and unique sampling cells and accessories for temperature controlled studies.

B&W Tek, Inc.

307

19 Shea Way Newark, DE 19713 Phone: 302-368-7824 / Internet: www.bwtek.com B&W Tek is an advanced instrumentation company that delivers lab quality Raman spectroscopy solutions through user-friendly mobile platforms. B&W Tek provides solutions for the pharmaceutical, biomedical, physical, chemical, and research communities. Our commitment to innovative solutions has made B&W Tek a leader in Raman spectroscopy solutions worldwide.

Baseline Service LLC

437

9 Easy Street Bridgewater, NJ 08805 Phone: 732-563-1200 / Internet: www.baselineservice.com Since March of 1995 Baseline Service has been providing laboratories Asset Management services and support. For over 19 years Baseline has been successful in servicing the FDA regulated, Cosmetic and Consumer Healthcare industries, meeting there laboratory and process instrument requirements. In 2011 Baseline received ISO-17025 Accreditation in order to maintain a high level and standard of quality. We also represent ElectroLabs full line of tablet testing equipment including Dissolution, Disintegration, Hardness testers, Friability and more. In addition, Baseline distributes Citizen and Shimadzu balances.

Biocompare 616 395 Oyster Point Blvd. Suite 321 South San Francisco, CA 94080 Phone: 800-637-1277 / Internet: www.biocompare.com Biocompare (www.biocompare.com) is the most comprehensive, in-depth, and objective website for life science product information. Thousands of scientists use Biocompare daily to quickly find the right product for their experiments rather than looking through multiple print catalogs. Visit Biocompare to find the products you need, stay informed of new technologies, read product reviews, watch product videos, and keep up-to-date on life science news.

BiOptix 107 1775 38th St. Boulder, CO 80301 Phone: 303-545-5550 / Internet: www.bioptix.com BiOptix has developed a new SPR instrument called the BiOptix 404pi. BiOptix allows researchers to study label-free protein-protein and protein-small molecule interaction with high sensitivity and high throughput. Applications include: protein-small molecule interactions, protein-protein kinetics, antibody affinities and epitope mapping, oligosaccharide characterization, nucleic acid hybridization and biomolecule concentration measurements.

BioScreen Testing Services

526

3904 Del Amo Blvd. #801 Torrance, CA 90503 Phone: 732-259-9370 / Internet: www.bioscreen.com BioScreen is a full service contract laboratory organization that offers only the finest state of the art instrumentation and procedures in the human clinical, analytical chemistry, and microbiology FDA regulated industries. Since 1986, we have supported clients in Pharmaceutical, Biotech, Personal Care, Nutraceutical Products and Medical Devices. BioScreen is capable of executing USP, BP, JP, EP and ASTM methods when required as well as designing or researching specialized methods for a unique product or process. BioScreen has also participated in numerous projects for IND, NDA and ANDA submissions to the FDA. BioScreen is also registered with the FDA, DEA and is ISO 9001 certified.

Biotage 207 10430 Harris Oaks Blvd., Suite C Charlotte, NC 28269 Phone: 800-446-4752 / Internet: www.biotage.com Biotage is a leading provider of consumables and instruments for sample preparation, organic purification and synthesis, peptide synthesis and evaporation. Stop by our booth to find out how to speed up your solvent evaporation with a Turbovap or SPEDry instrument. Also talk with one of our technical reps about the ISOLUTE SLE+, a cost-effective and automation-compatible alternative to liquid-liquid extraction. New Applications available include new methods for SPICE, cocaine, Anti-epileptic Drugs, Mycotoxins and Vitamin D.

BrightSpec, Inc.

434, 436

770 Harris St. #104B Charlottesville, VA 22903 Phone: 434-202-2391 Internet: www.brightspec.com BrightSpec provides analytical chemistry solutions using FT-MRR, a new molecular spectroscopy technique for direct, non-destructive analysis of complex gas/volatiles mixtures. FT-MRR spectral fingerprints are highly selective and specific to molecular structure. Isomers, isotopologues (site-specific), and even enantiomers are all distinctly quantified without the need for chromatography. We apply the analytical tools of FT-MRR for both bench-top investigative analysis and targeted process monitoring applications. Ask us about on-site trial instruments and application assessment through BrightSpec Labs.

Bruker Corporation

602, 604, 606

40 Manning Road Billerica, MA 01821 Phone: 978-663-3660 / Internet: www.bruker.com Bruker is a performance leader in life science and analytical systems. For over 50 years, Bruker has been driven by a single idea: to provide the best technological solution for each analytical task. Our trusted solutions encompass a wide number of analytical techniques ranging from Magnetic Resonance to Mass Spectrometry and Gas Chromatography, to Microanalysis, Optical and X-Ray Spectroscopy. These market and technology leading products are driving and facilitating many key application areas such as life science research, pharmaceutical analysis, applied analytical chemistry applications, materials research, and nanotechnology, clinical research, molecular diagnostics and homeland defense.

Carltex Inc.

108

POB 770 Nyack, NY 10960 Phone: 845-535-3406 / Internet: www.carltex.com Carltex Inc. will be exhibiting BestScope Microscopes, a complete and comprehensive line of affordable top quality Microscopy and Imaging products for Education, Science, and Industry. The full line of models includes Laboratory, Biological, Stereo, and LCD Digital Microscopes - all these models are available in both Upright and Inverted Versions. Imaging products include Microscope Cameras and the revolutionary BLC Series of HD LCD Touchscreen Tablet Cameras that can be retrofitted to any microscope and provides sample visualization, high definition photography, and calibrated measurements, as well as networkable capabilities. Also on display will be KZ BD11E/12E Laboratory Flatbed Chart Recorders and the LY Series of XY Recorders.

CAS 617 2540 Olentangy River Rd. Columbus, OH 43202 Phone: 614-447-3600 / Internet: www.cas.org CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, is the world’s authority for chemical information. Our databases are assembled and quality-controlled by a global organization of CAS scientists. Combining these databases with advanced search technologies (SciFinder® and STN®), CAS delivers the most current and complete digital information environment for scientific research.

CEM Corporation

324

PO Box 200 Matthews, NC 28106 Phone: 704-821-7015 / Internet: www.cem.com CEM Corporation is the leading global provider of microwave laboratory instrumentation for a wide range of laboratory needs including sample preparation, chemical synthesis, peptide synthesis, and bioscience applications. As pioneers in the field of microwave chemistry, we have a thorough understanding of the science and can help you solve your difficult applications problems. We design and develop fast, efficient, cost-effective systems that are the method of choice for chemists around the world. Stop by our booth #324 and discover what is new in innovative microwave laboratory systems and applications.

49

2014 EAS Final Program Cerilliant

Exhibitor Descriptions Tech

Tour 

223

811 Paloma Drive,Suite A Round Rock, TX 78665 Phone: 800-848-7837 / Internet: www.cerilliant.com Cerilliant offers Certified Reference Materials including Alcohol Standards, Drugs, Metabolites, Impurities, Environmental Contaminants including EPA method standards & Proficiency Testing Schemes, Nitroglycerin & by-products, Explosives, Chemical Warfare Verification Standards, Certified Reference Microorganisms, and Phytochemicals/ Natural Products as well as many others. Cerilliant also provides custom services including organic synthesis, analytical services, special packaging and certified solution standard preparation. Cerilliant sustains a modern, robust quality system which incorporates cGMP, GLP, and ISO requirements. We are accredited to ISO Guide 34 and ISO/IEC 17025, certified to ISO 13485 and ISO 9001 and compliant to ISO 15194. A comprehensive Certificate of Analysis, containing complete traceability documentation, is provided with every product. Stop by our booth to learn more about Cerilliant’s capabilities and new product offering. Call 800-848-7837/512-238-9974 or visit our website at www.cerilliant.com for more information.

Chata Biosystems

525

5858 Wright Drive Loveland, CO 80538 Phone: 888-246-2428 Internet: www.chatasolutions.com CHATA Biosystems specializes in the manufacture of custom solutions under cGMP and ISO protocols with complete QC documentation and traceability. Manufacturing groups and QC labs face a constant struggle to maximize throughput with minimized resources. Chata bridges this gap by decreasing time dedicated to solution preparation and documentation, while also increasing available work areas through cutting the need for many fixed assets and their time involved in the manufacturing process. Our versatile assortment of packaging types and sizes are convenient for companies ranging from small labs using milliliter quantities to large manufacturing operations using thousands of liters. Many of our packaging also offers closed-system environments that maintain sterility throughout use and can protect the products from contamination in more taxing environments. From solutions for QC release labs (dissolution media, LC and IC mobile phases and buffers) through solutions for manufacturing, let us make your solutions for you.

Chemglass Life Sciences

339

3800 North Mill Road Vineland, NJ 08360 Phone: 800-843-1794 / Internet: www.cglifesciences.com Chemglass Life Sciences offers an extensive line of chromatography vials and accessories with of over 800 products including: Standard Opening Crimp and Threaded Finish, Large Opening Crimp and Threaded Finish, WISP Vials, Head Space Vials, Snap Seal Vials, High Recovery Vials, Septa, Bonded Septa, Closures, Crimpers, DeCappers and Accessories. For the latest product and technical information, please visit our web site: www.cglifesciences.com

Chinese American Chemical Society

T02

Tri-State Chapter P. O. Box 786 Edison, NJ 08818 Phone: 848-391-8939 / Internet: www.tristatecacs.org Chinese American Chemical Society (CACS) is a non-profit professional organization. The original Tri-State Chapter now serves chemists, chemical engineers and related professionals in mid-Atlantic states from industries, academic institutions and government agencies. CACS was founded in 1981 and is recognized officially by ACS and AIChe. CACS’s mission is to encourage the advancement of chemical and chemical engineering-related sciences, and to improve the qualification and career advancement of its members through networking, education, mentoring, etc. The Tri-State Chapter holds its annual symposium in June, which attracts ca. 300 participants each year. Chinese professionals make up a large portion of the chemical and related professionals. It is a great opportunity to showcase your company at the CACS symposium. We welcome new exhibitors to our annual symposium. More information can be found at www.tristatecacs.org or e-mail at [email protected].

Chromatography Forum of Delaware Valley

227

11 Hill Crest Drive Landenberg, PA 19350 Phone: 302-737-2137 / Internet: www.cfdv.org The Chromatography Forum of Delaware Valley (CFDV) is one of the oldest chromatography discussion groups in the United States. It sponsors monthly meetings from September to June featuring noted and topical speakers in chromatography and separation science. CFDV is a sponsoring organization of EAS, and sponsors the Dal Nogare Award at the Pittsburgh Conference, as well as student awards. It presents the one-day Spring Symposium, and provides training courses in GC, HPLC, Advanced HPLC, and micro-fluidics. CFDV membership is open to anyone interested in the fields of cromatography or separation science. For information, visit the website, www.cfdv. org or the CFDV booth at EAS.

Coblentz Society

620

2 Portsmouth Dr. Old Bridge, NJ 08857 Phone: 215-652-5487 / Internet: www.coblentz.org The Coblentz Society is a non-profit organization founded in 1954. Its purpose is to foster the understanding and application of vibrational spectroscopy. The Society presents five awards annually (Lippencott, Williams-Wright, Bomen-Michelson, Coblentz, and the Craver New Investigators Awards) to recognize outstanding scientists whose contributions have made an impact on the field of vibrational spectroscopy. In addition to these awards, the Society offers encouragement to young spectroscopists through its Student Award Program. The society also organizes sessions at conferences (see program for EAS organized sessions) and provides networking opportunities at meeting to talk to some of the leaders in the field of vibrational spectroscopy. We are the technical affiliate for vibrational spectroscopy for the Society of Applied Spectroscopy. We publish a newsletter to our membership. We do market reference texts of various collections of infrared spectra and also have a digital version that is searchable comarketed with NIST. Remember to come to the Coblentz Member’s Reception Monday at 6 PM in the Mirabelle room at the DoubleTree. For more information look us up on the WEB at http://www.coblentz.org.

Compco Analytical, Inc.

433

215 Gates Road Unit U Little Ferry, NJ 07643 Phone: 201-641-3936 / Internet: www.compco.net The premier analytical instrumentation service company in the Northeast. Specializing in Agilent GC/MS, GC, LC, LC/MS systems. Quality hardware, data system and software support for your laboratory. Full service contracts and phone support is available for most systems. Service on other manufacturer’s equipment, such as Tekmar, OI, Gerstel, EST and many others are available. Visit our web site at www.compco.net.

COSA Xentaur

Tech

Tour 

329

84F Horseblock Rd. Yaphank, NY 11980 Phone: 631-345-3434 / Internet: www.cosaxentaur.com Cosa Xentaur provides innovative, affordable measurement solutions to the pharmaceutical, chemical, refinery, gas, natural gas, power and fuels industries. NEW for 2014: The SpinPulse 20MHz low resolution TD-NMR, AI-60 cryogen free, high resolution 60MHz NMR, the AQF-2100H Combustion Ion Chromatography, the VG-200 LPG Moisture Vaporizer, the VA-236 Solid KF Autosampler and the NSX-2100V/H Total Sulfur/Nitrogen/Chloride Analyzer. Also exhibiting Mitsubishi`s CAKF-200 Dual Channel Coulometric & Volumetric KF and GT-200 General Titrators.

D-ploy USA

438

4551 Route 42, Suite 7 Turnersville, NJ 08012 Phone: 973-337-3295 / Internet: www.d-ploy.us D-ploy is a leading provider for IT services customized for the laboratory environment. Our success comes from our dedication to customer and end-user satisfaction coupled with our competitive and transparent pricing options. As a result we have long-term working relationships with many pharmaceutical and chemical companies, both large and small. Our services include end to end support for Gxp an non Gxp Laboratory environments including : Analysis of Lab environment (Software and Hardware), Application Support /Operations, IQ/OQ/PQ and documentation, Software and Network monitoring and support, Electronic record and electronic signature support, Periodic reviews, and more ... We provide support and consulting for a large number of different laboratory applications. Please stop by our booth to discuss how D-ploy can help meet your laboratory IT support needs.

Defiant Technologies

106

6814A Academy Parkway West NE Albuquerque, NM 87109 Phone: 505-999-5880 / Internet: www.defiant-tech.com Defiant Technologies is a world leader in portable gas chromatography. Our flagship product, the FROG-4000 is the smallest and fastest portable gas chromatograph available. Whether you want to determine volatile organic compounds in liquids, solids, or air, the FROG-4000 provides lab quality results.

DigiPol Technologies

527

400 Morris Avenue, Suite 120 Denville Technical Park Denville, NJ 07834-1362 Phone: 888-478-3657 / Internet: www.digipoltechnologies.com DigiPol NOVA series of Automatic Polarimeters are fully featured for the demanding applications of the pharmaceutical testing. They offer high accuracy, full USP wavelength coverage including 325 nm, built-in Peltier temperature control, multiple user levels and permissions and support for all method creation as per all the major global pharmacopoeias USP, BP, EP, JP etc. and fully comply with 21CFR11 regulations. DigiPol Technologies, earlier known as Rudolph Instruments, Inc. rededicate itself to the vision of innovative and quality technology of Mr. Hellmuth Rudolph who founded it in 1948.

50

2014 EAS Final Program Dissolution Technologies

Exhibitor Descriptions 615

9 Yorkridge Trail Hockessin, DE 19707 Phone: 302-235-0621 / Internet: www.dissolutiontech.com Dissolution Technologies is a peer-reviewed and indexed quarterly journal reporting current information and scientific articles on dissolution testing and related topics. It provides an international forum for open exchange of information. The Journal is celebrating 20 years of publishing this year. Books related to dissolution topics are available for sale on the website, www.dissolutiontech.com. The website contains all back and current issues and is searchable. All current and back articles are available for free as a PDF download.

Distek, Inc.

502, 504

121 North Center Drive North Brunswick, NJ 08902 Phone: 1-888-234-7835 / Internet: www.distekinc.com Distek, Inc. is a leading manufacturer of pharmaceutical laboratory instruments, specializing in dissolution testing products, as well as an experienced provider of validation and qualification services. In addition, Distek provides solutions for dissolution media degassing, dispensing and disposal, in-situ fiber optic UV, bathless tablet disintegration testing, physical tablet testing, and automated sampling. Founded in 1976, Distek has grown to offer innovation and support to companies worldwide. Our success is dependent upon Distek`s employees, who bring their expertise, experience, and dedication to providing pharmaceutical laboratory instruments and services of the finest quality. The company`s commitment to excellence extends to the community, as Distek actively supports educational and research activities with donations of equipment and assistance. For technological advancements that offer reliable and consistent performance, the pharmaceutical industry trusts Distek.

Doty Scientific

231

700 Clemson Rd. Columbia, SC 29229 Phone: 803-788-6497 / Internet: www.dotynmr.com Doty Scientific supplies state-of-the-art NMR and MRI probes and coils, including: CryoMAS-DNP NMR probes, capable of closed-loop spinning below 40 K, for the ultimate S/N in solid samples with H/X/Y tuning; PFG probes with unrivaled gradient strength for measurement of the smallest diffusion coefficients; High performance MRI RF coils and Small Animal Imaging Platforms; B-Max MAS probes providing maximum sensitivity and RF field strength - options include quad-resonance, double broad-band, H-F, Lock, and XVT.

Electronic Imaging Materials

524

20 Forge St. Keene, NH 03431 Phone: 800-535-6987 / Internet: www.barcode-labels.com Lab Labels That Last. EIM is an industry leader of durable barcode labels for sample identification. Our Label Experts meet challenging lab applications with high-quality chemical and temperature resistant products for test tubes, vials, slides, cassettes and other lab containers. We offer Total Label Solutions - we can print your labels for you, even adding color coding to single or multi-part formats, or you can print your own with our affordable, easy-to-use label printers and printing software.

Elemental Scientific

430

7277 World Communications Drive Omaha, NE 68122 Phone: 402-991-7800 / Internet: www.icpms.com Elemental Scientific develops and produces a full range of advanced automation and sample introduction systems for the determination of trace elemental concentrations by ICPMS, ICP, ICP-OES and FAA. Our extensive product line includes intelligent autosampler systems that fully automate inline/offline dilution, autocalibration and other advanced sample introduction methods. We offer application-specific solutions designed to automate, simplify and improve lab efficiency for atomic spectroscopy instrumentation.

EMD Millipore Corporation

206, 208

290 Concord Road Billerica, MA 01821 Phone: 800-225-3384 / Internet: www.emdmillipore.com EMD Millipore is a division of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, a leading global manufacturer for laboratory research. Our full range of water purification products provides accuracy, high reliability, low maintenance and running costs, and total support. Our TLC plates, unique Chromolith® and ZIC-HILIC® HPLC columns and sorbents, OmniSolv® and DriSolv® high-purity solvents, and the new Samplicity® multisample filtration system have revolutionized chromatography. Offering over 29,000 products worldwide, we support nearly every lab with trusted brands.

Erlab 405 388 Newburyport Turnpike Rowley, MA 01969 Phone: 800-944-4434 / Internet: www.erlab.com Erlab’s CaptairFlex ductless fume hoods offer a configurable filtration column that allows you to customize your hood to your suit your needs. Now you can handle liquids and powders - together or separately. The CaptairFlex is suitable for most labs - even

cleanrooms. All Captair filters are certified in accordance with AFNOR NF X 15-211, the most stringent safety standard in the industry.

ES Industries

202, 204

701 South Route 73 West Berlin, NJ 08091 Phone: 856-753-8400 / Internet: www.esind.com ES Industries supplies the widest variety HPLC, SFC & Convergence Chromatography columns available including unique chiral & super base deactivated/pH stable phases. We have sub-2um columns specifically designed for use with ultra-high pressure chromatography systems for reverse phase, HILIC, LC-MS, SFC & Convergence Chromatography applications. We offer a wide variety of SFC & Convergence Chromatography columns for analytical & preparative applications including ethyl pyridine, pyridyl amide, fluorinated, nitro, Basic DEAP & carbohydrate based chiral columns. We will also introduce the new DynaChrom Green Flash System.

EST Analytical

608

503 Commercial Drive Fairfield, OH 45014 Phone: 513-642-0100 / Internet: www.estanalytical.com EST Analytical is a world leader in laboratory automation, GC and GC/MS sample introduction. The Flex Autosampler series offers a robust and cost effective automation platform for liquid injection, Headspace and SPME analysis. With state-of-the-art software the system is designed to be reliable, easily customized for various applications and programming is simple and intuitive. Since 1990, EST analytical has become the US manufacturer of robotic platforms that labs have relied on for reliability. Now labs can buy direct from the manufacturer and experience best-in-class service and support after the sale.

Exova 337 2395 Speakman Drive Mississauga, ON L5K1B3 Canada Phone: 905-822-4111 / Internet: www.exova.com The world`s local laboratory. Exova’s global network of laboratories offers a broad spectrum of pharmaceutical testing services. Our core pharmaceutical services include analytical development and validation; batch release; raw material and API analysis and characterization; organic and elemental impurity determination; polymer and plastics testing; biological sample testing; analytical testing in the support of pharmacokinetic, pre-clinical, and clinical trials; and stability storage and testing. We recognise that no two challenges are the same, tailor solutions to meet your individual needs, and will ensure that you are part of the process at every stage. We are leaders in our field - we can help you to be leaders in yours.

Flow Sciences, Inc.

237, 239

2025 Mercantile Dr. Leland, NC 28451 Phone: 800-849-3429 / Internet: www.flowsciences.com Flow Sciences, Inc. (FSI) designs and manufactures containment solutions for research and development laboratories, pilot plants, automation equipment and robotics, manufacturing and production facilities where toxic or noxious potent powders, fluids or gases require safe handling while weighing, mixing, processing, or manufacturing. Flow Sciences, Inc. commitment to safety and performance in the engineering, design, testing, and installation of containment enclosures has proven performance throughout the pharmaceutical, biotech and chemical industries, as well as forensics, academia and government research. FSI works with architects, plant managers, industrial hygienists, safety professionals and scientists to engineer customized solutions from the laboratory to production. The Flow Sciences team, world leaders in containment solutions, is dedicated to delivering superior engineering quality and service at each level of controlled airflow containment systems.

Fluid Imaging Technologies

607

200 Enterprise Drive Scarborough, ME 04074 Phone: 207-289-3200 / Internet: www.fluidimaging.com Fluid Imaging Technologies manufactures FlowCAM® continuous-imaging particle analysis systems for examining and measuring microscopic particles in fluids. FlowCAM rapidly and automatically images each particle in a sample, and collects and stores particle size, shape, count, concentration and appearance information. Intuitive VisualSpreadsheet® software facilitates rapid analysis of particle data and sophisticated pattern recognition operations for particle identification, enabling automated characterization of different particle types in a heterogeneous sample.

GenTech Scientific, Inc.

306

23 Mill Street Arcade NY 14009 Phone: 585-492-1068 / Internet: www.GenTechScientific.com Reliability Assured! GenTech Scientific supplies quality refurbished GC, HPLC, MS, SEM/TEM, ICP/MS and LC/MS instrumentation - including Thermo Orbitraps. Skilled technicians rigorously inspect and fully refurbish all our products. Get guaranteed OEM standards at a fraction of the cost of new instruments! Extend your peace of mind with our exclusive GenTech Master Certified Instruments. Beyond simple refurbishment, we certify these products only after they’ve met our stringent criteria. GenTech Master Certified Instruments come with a one year warranty and can be extended two, three, four or five years. We offer customized training, expert service, depot repair and

51

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

professional installation. Rent, lease or purchase from our warehouse of meticulously maintained instruments. We provide the options you need to equip your lab for less.

Gerstel, Inc.

Tech

Tour 

506

701 Digital Drive Suite J Linthicum, MD 21090 Phone: 410-247-5885 / Internet: www.gerstelus.com One half century of Chemical Analysis Solutions: GC/MS, LC/MS sample introduction and stand-alone workstations with the most advanced software control available (MAESTRO). MultiPurpose and PrepStation Autosamplers provide maximum versatility and throughput for liquid injection, SPME, Headspace, ALEX, SPE, dpx®, Dynamic HS, ATEX, weighing, centrifugation, vortexing, solvent evaporation, and more. Twister® (SBSE) performs solventless extraction with ultra-low detection limits. The most versatile Thermal Desorption System available for all sample types. Cooled (PTV) inlet, Olfactory Detection, Multidimensional Heartcutting, Preparative Fraction Collector. Since 1967, GERSTEL analytical instrumentation have enabled analysts to achieve ultra-low detection levels in complex matrices with unequalled preparative capability, while dramatically increasing sample throughput; handle difficult sample preparation challenges; and analyze a wide range of sample types complete with software integration (Agilent, AB SCIEX, LECO, ThermoFisher, Shimadzu). Premier Solution Partner for Agilent Technologies.

Glas-Col, LLC

340

711 Hulman Street Terre Haute, IN 47802 Phone: 812-235-6167 / Internet: www.glascol.com Check out our mixers for the QuEChERS method of analyzing pesticide residue. See the New FlexiVap Evaporation Workstation which is ideal for reducing nitrogen consumption and is proven for quick, efficient removal of solvents. Also see our Volumetric Flask Shaker, one system capable of doing several volumetric flask sizes. The EPA has approved our shakers for various EPA methods and we will have these available for your inspection. Glas-Col still offers one of the largest selections of heating mantles and custom heating jackets in the world plus a complete line of temperature controls and monitors. We now also offer a wide range of safety accessories, Glovebags, safety shields, and lead stability products. Visit us in booth #340.

Global Pharma Analytics, LLC

110

Harrick Scientific

HI Scientific Services Inc.

233

PO Box 1620 Millsboro, DE 19966 Phone: 610-296-2440 / Internet: www.HI-Scientific.com Established in 1983 HI Scientific Services was one of the first independent third-party HPLC service companies. HI Scientific Services provides service and calibrations on all major brands of HPLC instrumentation. Our success has been the direct result of our ability to keep our customers happy through our quick response time, quality professional service, and low prices. We take pride in providing personal and individual attention as part of our service program.

Intelligent Weighing Technology, Inc.

228

4040 Adolfo Road Camarillo, CA 93012 Phone: 866-920-3000 / Internet: www.intelligentwt.com Intelligent Weighing Technology supplies a complete range of high-quality laboratory balances, moisture analyzers, scales and weighing accessories by Precisa®, Vibra®, Sartorius Miras®2, Intelligent-Lab® and UWE®. Built on a cornerstone of quality, precision, and service, Intelligent Weighing Technology provides its customers with the equipment they need, right on time. For more information please visit www.intelligentwt.com or call 866-920-3000.

225 Chimney Corner Lane, Suite 3001 Jupiter, FL 33458 Phone: 561-886-5586 / Internet: www.gpa-cro.com Global Pharma Analytics (GPA) is a CGMP contract analytical chemistry laboratory. GPA provides a wide range of professional services to support pharmaceutical, medical device, compounding pharmacy, and specialty chemical companies. Our range of services includes analytical testing and stability programs to consulting services and method development. GPA has a quality-first focus, which provides comfort to clients who seek to work with a reliable testing laboratory. Plus, with GPA no matter how many clients we serve, we strive to ensure each and every client receives the personalized attention they deserve - at GPA clients are more than a number, clients are partners.

IonSense, Inc.

Greenwood Products Inc.

J. G. Finneran Associates, Inc.

709

T05

141 Tompkins Avenue Pleasantville, NY 10570 Phone: 914-747-7202 / Internet: www.harricksci.com Harrick Scientific produces an extensive array of spectroscopic sampling devices and reaction cells for FTIR, UV-Vis, and Raman. Sampling technologies include ATR, diffuse reflection, specular reflection, and transmission. The new ConcentratIR2 multiplereflection ATR provides capabilities for highly sensitive measurements of microliter volumes of samples such as aqueous protein solutions. Temperature-controlled accessories include heated and cooled chambers for in-situ Operando catalysis and photochemistry research, adaptable to FTIR, UV-Vis, Raman, and X-ray spectroscopic techniques. We work in partnership with researchers to develop effective and novel solutions for challenging research studies. Harrick Scientific---for over 40 years the leading innovator in molecular spectroscopy sampling technologies.

T04

999 Broadway Suite 404 Saugus, MA 01906 Phone: 781-231-1739 / Internet: www.ionsense.com IonSense presents the compact DART-MTE 50 ion trap MS for Direct Analysis in Real Time, enabling ionization of gas, liquids and solid samples at ambient pressure. The “site-ready” detector system permits rapid analysis of chemicals with minimal sample prep and no organic solvents. IonSense produces, sells and markets DART Technology direct to end users with LC/MS instruments from Agilent, Thermo, AB-SCIEX, Bruker, JEOL, Waters and Shimadzu. DART was awarded the Pittcon 2005 Gold. Tech

Tour 

330

262 Old New Brunswick Road, Suite G Piscataway, NJ 08854 Phone: 888-299-9907 / Internet: www.greenwoodprod.com Greenwood Products is a manufacturing distributor serving the Pharmaceutical, Chemical, Food/Beverage, Biological, Environmental, Nutraceutical and Cosmetics industries. We supply containers, consumable items for sample collection, preparation, analysis, shipping & storage. Greenwood prepares sampling containers to our customers’ requirements and inventory sample handling and preparation items for the field and lab. Our selection is limitless with 24 hour shipping available from our four warehouse locations. Assembled Glass and Plastic Containers, Certified, Chromatography Products and Lab Supplies. Serving Laboratories since 1995.

3600 Reilly Court Vineland, NJ 08079 Phone: 856-696-3605 / Internet: www.jgfinneran.com Designer, engineer and manufacturer of glass and plastic distributing worldwide. Specializing in Chromatography, Biotechnology and Environmental products; autosampler threaded, crimp, Snap Ring® and Snap Seal®, headspace vials, closures, Poly Crimp® Seals, Snap Top Caps®, septa, inserts; 96-Well Multi-Tier® Micro Plate System using vials, sealing films and molded liners; VOA/EPA Vials, sampling bottles and jars. US manufacturing operations, custom manufacturing capabilities, product integrity providing the highest quality products in the industry.

Hamilton Robotics

39103 Warren Road Westland, MI 48185 Phone: 734-405-6620 / Internet: www.jadesci.com Jade Scientific is a Laboratory Supplier that serves the Industrial, Biotech, Pharmaceutical, and other Scientific markets by supplying over 70,000 top quality Chemicals, laboratory supplies, furniture and equipment. Jade Scientific is truly different than the rest because we provide you with flexibility, speed and resourcefulness that is unprecedented in our industry.

112

4970 Energy Way Reno, NV 89502 Phone: 800-648-5950 / Internet: www.hamiltonrobotics.com Hamilton Robotics is dedicated to the design and manufacture of automated liquid handling workstations. Key to our products is our air displacement pipetting and monitoring technology and software controlling our systems. We believe every laboratory automation project is unique. Our workstations and software serve as a common high precision and flexible base upon which to provide automated solutions. We employ teams of highly skilled and experienced application and hardware customization specialists to provide our customers unique solutions to automate their assays.

Hanna Instruments

225

584 Park East Drive Woonsocket, MA 02895 Phone: 800-426-6287 / Internet: www.hannainst.com Hanna Instruments is a 30-year old instrumentation manufacturer that the latest benchtop and portable pH meters, conductivity meters, ISE electrodes, dissolved oxygen meters, turbidity meters, thermometers, photometers and titrators for all size laboratories.

Jade Scientific, Inc.

JEOL USA, Inc.

235

311

11 Dearborn Road Peabody, MA 01960 Phone: 978-535-5900 / Internet: www.jeolusa.com JEOL is a global leader of NMR, GC/MS, MALDI/MS and electron optical instrumentation used for scientific research and industrial applications. JEOL provides innovative technologies and products. Our AccuTOF-DART mass spectrometer allows analysis in open air with no solvent or sample preparation required and our AccuTOF GCv 4G is the only high-resolution mass spectrometer that combines GCxGC with highresolution mass spectrometry and a choice of EI, CI and FI ion sources. The JEOL combination EI/FI source offers a powerful and routine alternative to chemical ionization for a wide range of applications. We will have information on these products along with information on our compact automated ECS 400 MHz NMR.

52

2014 EAS Final Program Joule Scientific Staffing Solutions

Exhibitor Descriptions 508

1235 Route 1 South Edison, NJ 08837 Phone: 800-382-0382 / Internet: www.joulescientific.com For more than 25 years, Joulé Scientific has connected biotechnology, pharmaceutical, scientific, chemical and food, flavor and fragrance clients to top professionals and have become specialists at anticipating your recruitment and career needs. With deep experience in providing clinical and scientific talent on a contract, contract-to-direct and direct-hire basis, Joulé is committed to customizing solutions to meet and exceed expectations. Recognized for providing superior service, our broad geographic reach and unmatched industry network enables us to provide specialized talent and the best career opportunities. Speak with us today. The Right Match is in Our DNA.

Kimble Chase

331

234 Cardiff Valley Rd. Rockwood, TN 37854 Phone: 800-451-4351 / Internet: www.kimble-chase.com Kimble Chase (KIMAX, Kontes, Chase brands) is the leading producer of the most comprehensive range of laboratory and scientific glassware. Specializing in a broad range of reusable, disposable and specialty glassware for the following markets: pharmaceutical, environmental, petrochemical, life sciences, education and chromatography. These products consist of beakers, flasks, cylinders, vials, media bottles, culture tubes, funnels and pipets to support our customers needs in sample generation, collection, storage, preparation, analysis, disposition and lab safety.

Kinesis Inc.

236, 238

PO Box 2230 Malta, NY 12020-8230 Phone: 866-934-6353 / Internet: www.kinesis-usa.com Kinesis are specialists in the supply and support of Chromatography Consumables, Instrumentation, Method Development Software, Instrument Spares and Solvent Safety Products. ChromSword, Diba Industries, Knauer, Rheodyne, and Upchurch Scientific are some of the product Kinesis distributes. Additionally, Kinesis own brands include KX VaporSafe for HPLC Solvent Safety, KX+ Autosampler Vials & Caps, KX Syringe & Membrane Filters and TELOS SPE, Flash Chromatography & HPLC Products. We are pleased to be introducing some exciting new additions to our distribution range; the CambTEK RES Platform for fully automated dosage form extraction, which is revolutionizing the sample preparation process, and the Microsaic miniaturized mass spectrometer, which delivers innovative, compact analysis with quality and reliability. Product experts will be on hand to discuss their features and how these instruments will benefit your business.

Lab Manager

505

478 Bay Street, PO Box 216 Midland, ON L4R 1K9 Canada Phone: 705-528-6888 / Internet: www.labmanager.com Lab Manager analyzes the strong link between business strategy, technological innovation and implementation. It is focused on the lab professional in a leadership role who is responsible for setting the lab`s direction and identifying, recommending and purchasing technology. It also offers a wide breadth of knowledge to the researchers in the field using lab equipment and seeking to learn about the latest in new technologies for their labs. Stop by the booth for your FREE Subscription to Lab Manager.

Lab Support

309

26745 Malibu Hills Road Calabasas, CA 91301 Phone: 800-536-3293 / Internet: www.labsupport.com Lab Support, a division of On Assignment, is an international leader in placing scientific and engineering professionals in contract, contract-to-hire, and direct hire opportunities. Having pioneered a specialized staffing approach, most Lab Support Staffing Consultants possess a degree in science or engineering and a passion for the industry they represent. With nearly three decades of experience, we successfully place professionals in industries such as biotechnology, medical device, pharmaceutical, food and beverage, environmental, chemical, and consumer care as well as government and academia.

Labman Automation Ltd.

703

Seamer Hill Stokesley TS9 5NQ United Kingdom Phone: 44 (01)642 710580 / Internet: www.labman.co.uk We specialize in the design and build of custom robotics. Laboratory systems, built to precise requirements, to increase throughput and  improve accuracy. Robots which can eliminate hazard risks and take the mundane and repetitive procedures away from your operators, liberating them to work more productively. Turnkey solutions delivered to your door, which are capable of producing 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Please come and talk to us about your project, we welcome the opportunity to share ideas and lend our experience.

Laboratory Equipment

336

100 Enterprise Drive, Suite 600, Box 912 Rockaway, NJ 07866 Phone: 973-920-7000 Internet: www.laboratoryequipment.com/www.chromatographytechniques.com Laboratory Equipment, an Advantage Business Media property, provides laboratory managers, researchers and other scientific professionals news of the latest developments in equipment, systems, software, consumables and services for the lab with a monthly publication, web site and enewsletter series. Laboratory Equipment delivers critical editorial coverage of essential technology that will have a positive impact on laboratory research and development activities. Chromatography Techniques, a supplement to Laboratory Equipment, delivers information on products, applications and technologies in chromatography with a quarterly print product, web site and enewsletters. Free subscriptions are available at our booth

LCGC North America

407

485F US Highway 1 South Suite 210 Iselin, NJ 08830 Phone: 732-596-0276 / Internet: www.chromatographyonline.com LCGC is the largest dedicated publication in North America serving the chromatography market. With commitment to editorial excellence, LCGC covers all key growth segments in the industry by providing peer-reviewed, technical, applications oriented information to influential chromatographers so they can improve productivity in their laboratory.

LEAP Technologies

429

PO Box 969 Carrboro, NC 27510 Phone: 919-929-8814 / Internet: www.leaptec.com LEAP is on the cutting edge of benchtop NMR technology, combining our renowned automation technologies with the fastest, most sensitive compact NMR on the market, Magritek’s Spinsolve NMR Spectrometer. Gazelle18 UHPLC Pump plus PAL-Bundle optimizes LC-MS productivity. PAL3 for LC and GC has 2D barcode reader, unattended method and syringe change, multi-valve capability, low-to-no carryover.

LECO Corporation

601

3000 Lakeview Ave. St. Joseph, MI 49085 Phone: 269-985-5496 / Internet: www.leco.com For more than 75 years, industries around the world have trusted LECO to deliver technologically advanced products and solutions for analytical science. Today’s technologies for separation science resolve complex samples and pioneer high-sample throughput using GCxGC, GCxGC-TOFMS, and GC-TOFMS. New High Resolution TOFMS systems offer an unprecedented combination of speed, resolution, mass accuracy, and sensitivity. A unique combination of easy-to-use software and advanced instrumentation provide an innovative solution for today’s most demanding applications, including flavor/fragrance, environmental, and life sciences.

LGC Standards

509

276 Abby Road Manchester NH 03103 Phone: 1-855-LGC-USA1 / Internet: www.lgcstandards.com LGC Standards provides a range of products and services to support laboratory quality. We offer a comprehensive source of certified reference materials for a wide range of sectors including food, environmental, pharmaceutical, clinical and industrial. We produce an extensive line of pharmaceutical impurities and custom synthesis. We provide proficiency testing schemes and analytical quality training courses. Key brands include LGC pharmaceutical impurities, VHG Labs petroleum/inorganic standards, ARMI metal reference materials, LGC Logical drug standards and Dr. Ehrenstorfer pesticides and metabolites. www.lgcstandards.com

MAC-MOD Analytical, Inc.

Tech

Tour 

501, 503

103 Commons Court Chadds Ford, PA 19317 Phone: 800-441-7508 / Internet: www.mac-mod.com MAC-MOD Analytical will introduce more Smarter Chromatography solutions at EAS 2014. From Advanced Chromatography Technologies, we will be showing the latest high selectivity phases from the ACE® and ACE® Excel line of HPLC and UHPLC columns. ACE SuperC18, ACE C18-Amide and ACE CN-ES bring the performance and reproducibility that ACE columns are known for, combined with unique and complementary selectivities. From Advanced Materials Technology, we are presenting the HALO®-5 and HALO® line of Fused-Core® HPLC and UHPLC columns. New for this year will be the HALO Bioclass line of columns for high speed separation of peptides and proteins. Protect your column investment with our UltraShield, ColumnShield and ColumnSaver pre-column filters. New this year will be the introduction of our Vialogics® line of quality auto-sampler vials.

Macherey-Nagel Inc.

423

2850 Emrick Blvd. Bethlehem, PA 18020 Phone: 888-321-6224 / Internet: www.mn-net.com Please visit us to learn more about our new featured products- NUCLEOSHELL® program of core-shell phases is supplemented by the novel RP 18plus phase, a hydro-

53

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

phobic C18 phase with distinct polar selectivity. NUCLEOSHELL® 5 µm - an ideal tool for optimization of pharmacopeia methods. NUCLEODUR® 300 - wide pore phases, available with C4 and C18 modification for the analysis of biological macromolecules. SILGUR-25-C UV254 - the “Channel-Plate” with 19 channels help to prevent cross contamination by separating several samples. CHROMAFIL® IC - the special filter for filtration in ion chromatography.

Magritek Inc.

103

6440 Lusk Blvd., Suite 108 San Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 855-667-6835 / Internet: www.magritek.com Magritek developes and manufactures Spinsolve, the first benchtop NMR instrument capable of multinuclear (1H, 19F, 31P, 13C) and multidimensional NMR that does not require cryogenics and is maintenance free. Intuitive and beautiful software allows students and researchers to conduct their own experiments, providing easy access to basic and advanced NMR spectroscopy. Magritek is a world-wide leader in developing portable NMR and MRI solutions for education, research, and industrial applications. Tech

Markes International, Inc.

Tour 

609

11126-D Kenwood Road Cincinnati, OH 45242 Phone: 866-483 5684 / Internet: www.markes.com Markes International is a specialist provider of technologies and expertise that enable chemists to meet analytical challenges in the sampling and detection of tracelevel organic compounds. As a long-standing leader in analytical thermal desorption, Markes manufactures a comprehensive range of instrumentation,sampling equipment and consumables that enhance the capability of GC-MS. Markes has also gained recognition for its BenchTOF range of time-of-flight mass spectrometers for GC, groundbreaking Select-eV ion-source technology and associated software.

Metrohm USA

Tech

Tour 

201, 203

6555 Pelican Creek Circle Riverview, FL 33578 Phone: 866-METROHM / Internet: www.metrohmusa.com Metrohm offers a complete line of analytical laboratory and process systems for titration, ion chromatography, electrochemistry and spectroscopy. From routine moisture analysis to sophisticated anion and cation quantification, we are ready to help you develop your method and configure the optimum system. Move your analysis from the lab to the production line with our custom process analyzers. At Metrohm we provide systems that find solutions, stop by our booth and meet Metrohm.

Mettler Toledo

Tech

Tour 

424, 426

1900 Polaris Parkway Columbus, OH 43240 Phone: 800-METTLER / Internet: www.mt.com Mettler Toledo is the world’s largest manufacturer and marketer of weighing instruments. The Company also holds top-three market positions in titration, thermal analysis, density, refractometry and pH analytical instruments markets and is a leading provider of automated chemistry systems used in drug and chemical compound discovery and development. Additional information about Mettler Toledo can be found at www. mt.com/lab.

MicroLiter Analytical Supplies, Inc.

Tech

Tour 

210

1501 N. 10th Street Millville, NJ 08332 Phone: 800-225-1437 / Internet: www.wheaton.com MicroLiter Analytical Supplies (A WHEATON® Company), Inc. utilizes 20 years of expertise to develop important products for the autosampler market. The MicroLiter product line also assists preparation of samples by allowing the prep labs to utilize higher volume methods of sample prep. Samples had always been prepped in multiwell microplates and transferred to autosampler vials for final analysis. Now the final elution could be transferred to the Analytical Lab without costly transfers. MicroLiter has established itself as a leader of microplate technology for chromatography. As a WHEATON® Company, MicroLiter will continue to offer high-performance autosampler vials and accessories. Please visit us at Booth #210.

MicroSolv Technology Corporation

611

1 Industrial Way West, Bldg. E Eatontown, NJ 07724 Phone: 732-380-8900 / Internet: www.mtc-usa.com Autosampler vials that do not adsorb basic compounds, add sodium to the samples or casue pH changes like all other glass vials. Eliminates quantitation errors, spurious & missing peaks and other problems associated with borosilcate glass, a best practice for LCMS. Also, HPLC columns for metabolomics, clinical chemistry, medicianl chemistry, research and bio analytical as well as many advances in separation sciences. 2.o TYPE-C columns are introduced.

Milestone Inc.

332

25 Controls Drive Shelton, CT 06484 Phone: 203-925-4240 / Internet: www.milestonesci.com Milestone, a global leader in the field of microwave sample prep and mercury analysis, offers a complete suite of productivity tools for today’s chemist to obtain the highest

throughput for metals digestions, organic extractions, and mercury analysis. See the UltraWAVE featuring our patented Single Reaction Chamber technology (SRC), revolutionizing microwave digestion through mixed batches and disposable vials. We will also be presenting our industry leading direct mercury analyzer, the DMA-80, which requires no sample preparation.

Molnar Institute

325

Schneegloeckchenstrasse 47 Berlin, 10407 Germany Phone: +49 30 421-559-0 / Internet: www.molnar-institute.com Molnár Institute is the home of DryLab® software, which offers an intuitive and visual solution for the creation of fast, robust and high quality methods within the Qualityby-Design framework. With its comprehensive resolution and robustness mapping abilities, DryLab® enables chromatographers to easily determine their optimal working space and to gain unprecedented insight into the effects of various parameters on the resolution and selectivity of the separation. Using real data, DryLab® creates 3D resolution maps showing the simultaneous interaction of gradient time, temperature, and pH or ternary eluent composition for approximately 1 million chromatograms. Users can further evaluate the influence of flow rate, column dimensions, instrument parameters, and eluent composition in gradient and isocratic work without conducting additional experiments. The flexibility and depth of information offered by DryLab® make this state-of-the-art software the go-to solution for method development, optimization, trouble-shooting, robustness testing, and training.

Nacalai USA, Inc.

302

10225 Barnes Canyon Rd., Suite A103 San Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 858-404-0403 / Internet: www.nacalaiusa.com Nacalai USA provides COSMOSIL brand HPLC columns. The COSMOSIL chromatography product line includes several robust reversed phase, HILIC and IEX columns as well as specialty columns such as the Cholester (cholesteryl group), piNAP (naphtylethyl group), PYE (pyrenylethyl group) and Sugar-D. COSMOSIL Buckyprep (pyrenylpropyl group) and PBB (pentabromobenzyl group) columns are well recognized worldwide for Fullerene separation.

Nanalysis Corp.

408

Bay 4, 4500 - 5 Street NE Calgary, AB T2E 7C3 Canada Phone: 403-769-9499 / Internet: www.nanalysis.com Nanalysis develops and manufactures portable Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectrometers for the laboratory instrumentation market. NMReady® 60P is a revolutionary benchtop NMR spectrometer. It offers spectroscopic resolution at a fraction of the size, cost and maintenance of current NMR instrumentation. The innovative design brings analytical performance and point-of-need utility to the benchtop, fume hood or glovebox. On the Benchtop By providing spectroscopic performance at the bench, NMReady will improve workflow, reduce costs of outsourcing and allow large organizations to optimize all of their spectroscopic resources. As a Training Tool The NMReady is an ideal training tool, whether it is securing accreditation for an institution or allowing students to get hands-on experience with NMR. Low Maintenance NMReady does not require cryogens and does not require weekly servicing by trained technical staff.

Neopharm Labs Inc.

240

865, Michele-Bohec Blvd. Blainville, PQ J7C 5J6 Canada Phone: 450-435-8864 / Internet: www.neopharm.ca Leading Analytical Testing Laboratory serving the global Pharmaceutical industry. Best-In-Class & Just-In-Time full service provider. Wide variety of analytical services, including traditional Chemistry & Chromatography, Microbiology, Sterility, Method development, Validation, Tech. transfers, Stability studies, Regulatory & Consulting services. FDA inspected and certified by Health Canada, Narcotics & Controlled substances permit. Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA) compliant for export to EU. Certified & globally recognized.

New Era Enterprises, Inc.

212

P.O. Box 747 Vineland, NJ 08362-0747 Phone: 800-821-4667 / Internet: www.newera-spectro.com NMR Sample Tubes from micro to large diameter MRI cells, screw thread, tip-off, pressure valve and non-glass sample cells; capillary systems for very limited sample; RDC sample preparation and measurement supplies for both stretch and compression methods; 5mm NMR Sample Reaction System; NMR sampling accessories;EPR/ ESR quartz sample tubes. TD NMR Sample Tubes for bench-top instruments and Food Science sampling glassware. Stable Isotope Compounds of Carbon, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Deuterium.

54

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

New York Microscopical Society

705

1 Prospect Village Plaza Clifton, NJ 07013 Phone: 201-791-9826 / Internet: www.nyms.org The New York Microscopical Society is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of theoretical and applied microscopy and the promotion of education and interest in all phases of microscopy.

North Jersey Section American Chemical Society

435

49 Pippins Way Morris Township, NJ 07960 Phone: 973-822-2575 / Internet: www.njacs.org The North Jersey Section is the second largest section of the American Chemical Society in the country. Our section represents a dynamic and diverse group of scientists as reflected in the many topical groups and committees. These groups offer programs throughout the year and we encourage each of you to regularly check the web pages of the groups of interest to you on our website and attend their meetings.

Oxford Instruments

619

300 Baker Avenue Suite # 150 Concord, MA 01742 Phone: 978-369-9933 / Internet: www.oxford-instruments.com/pulsar Oxford Instruments is a leading provider of high technology tools and systems for research and industry. Pulsar, our high resolution, cryogen-free benchtop NMR spectrometer, offers convenience without the special requirements and cost associated with superconducting magnets. 19F or 1H measurements can be made on a single probe. With a small footprint, it is suitable for most labs and industrial production areas. Pulsar offers performance without expensive liquid helium, making it suitable for virtually any chemistry laboratory. Tech

Pace Analytical Services, Inc.

Tour 

338

1800 Elm Street SE Minneapolis, MN 55414 Phone: 612-656-1118 / Internet: www.pacelabs.com/equip Pace Analytical’s LabOps Division is ISO 9001:2008 certified and supports laboratory operations in all industries with high quality, cost-effective solutions to in-sourcing & out-sourcing challenges. LabOps’ Instrument Support Group (ISG) provides refurbished and pre-qualified instrumentation through our new Pacelabs eQuip website. ISG also offers instrumentation services (PMs, Repairs, Qualifications & Training) focusing on GC, GC/MS, LC, LC/MS, ICP-MS and Dissolution. LabOps’ Professional Staffing Services is an innovative alternative to a temp agency; we work with you to provide a stable, contingent scientific workforce solution. LabOps’ Product Regulatory Services offers expertise in SDS Authoring, product stewardship and supply chain regulatory data management. Stop by our booth for more information.

Pall Life Sciences

230

Pall Life Sciences 20 Walkup Drive Westborough, MA 01581 Phone: 508-871-5400 / Internet: www.pall.com Tech

PANalytical Inc.

Tour 

507

117 Flanders Rd. Westborough, MA 01581 Phone: 508-647-1100 / Internet: www.panalytical.com PANalytical is the innovation leader for X-ray Diffraction (XRD) and X-ray Flourescence (XRF). PANalytical’s R&D100 award-winning Empyrean is the only XRPD offering micro-CT, microdiffraction, polymorph screening, environmental testing, etc. with a single detector. X’Pert3 Powder is the economical XRPD choice. Elemental analysis solutions include USP232-compliant heavy metal and residual catalyst detection, benefits include 100% sample recovery, easy sample prep- no chemicals, GMP/21CFR p11, and 20-minute measurements. Systems include AxiosmAX and Epsilon 5, and benchtop Epsilon3XL. Tech

Parker Hannifin

Tour 

323

242 Neck Road, P.O. Box 8223 Haverhill, MA 01835 Phone: 800-343-4048 / Internet: www.parker.com/balston We manufacture gas generators to eliminate high purity gas cylinders from the laboratory. There is no longer need to buy and store cylinder reserves and use laboratory space as protection from late deliveries, transportation interruptions, or periods of tight supply. With gas generators, you control supply. These state-of-the-art gas generators can continuously generate ultra-high purity gases for LC/MS/MS, GC, FT-IR, TOC, ICP, Thermal and AA instrumentation. All products are backed by certified field sales and service organizations and a one-year warranty.

PerkinElmer Inc.

Tech

Tour 

410, 412

and services to meet our society’s ever-changing needs. We are committed to transforming risk into safety, mystery into knowledge and ideas into action for a healthier today and a better tomorrow. The need and demand for air and water quality monitoring and remediation continues to rise. Food safety and quality for a growing global population are critical issues that require solutions that deliver accuracy, precision, and rapid turnaround speeds. The measurement of volatile, semi-volatile and metal components in petrochemicals is important in laboratory, quality control and process monitoring. Instrument configurations meeting the needs of ASTM and other specialized methods are required. Scientists in today’s pharmaceutical and biotech laboratory environments require speed, flexibility, and compliance in the discovery, development and manufacturing of pharmaceuticals. PerkinElmer is uniquely able to meet these needs through a diverse portfolio of products such as Thermal Analysis, FTIR, UV-Vis, Raman, GC, GC/MS, LC, LC/MS, AA, ICP-OES and ICP-MS as well as an array of laboratory services, software, and consumables. Please join PerkinElmer on Monday, November 17, 2014 from noon to 4 p.m. in the McDivitt Room at the Garden State Exhibit Center lobby for an educational seminar event. PerkinElmer product specialists will be presenting 40-45 min. talks focusing on Gas Chromatography, Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry, and Validation Services. For more information visit Booth 410, 412 or visit http://perkinelmerEAS2014.eventbrite.com to register.

Pion Inc.

511

10 Cook St. Billerica, MA 01821 Phone: 978-528-2020 / Internet: www.pion-inc.com Pion Inc. offers ADME-related products and contract services, instruments, supplies, reagents and software. In addition we conduct CRO excipient/solubilzing vehicles screening, super-saturation solubility effects, BCS screening, solubility/permeability with µSOL/PAMPA Evolution(TM) platforms. In situ fiber optic UV-based dissolution systems: µDISS ProfilerPLUS(TM) for API-sparing (up to 10,000 fold) preformulation/ delivery research & Rainbow and Spectra detection system for time-savings in R&D/ QC solid dosage forms testing.

Polytec Inc.

327

25 South Street, Suite A Business Unit Analytics Hopkinton, MA 01748 Phone: 508-417-1035 / Internet: www.analytics-online.com Polytec is an established global leader providing optically based non-contact measurement solutions to researchers and engineers for 50 years. Our portfolio includes modular Near Infrared and Raman process analytical spectroscopic systems for online industrial and laboratory applications. We offer sophisticated technology combined with decades of experience to guarantee an optimal solution.

Quantum Analytics

510

3400 East Third Avenue Foster City, CA 94404 Phone: 800-992-4199 / Internet: www.LQA.com Rent, lease or purchase from our inventory of new and reconditioned instruments. Instruments include: GC, GC/MS, HPLC, LC/MS, Molecular and Atomic Spectroscopy, Pyrolysis Systems, Thermal Desorption Systems, P&T, GC/MS-FTIR (IRD), AED, MSD Direct Inlet Probe, GCxGC/TOF-MS, SimDis Software, Gas Generators, Sample Preparation and Handling, Data Systems and Software, ICP/MS and UV/Vis; manufacturers include: Agilent Technologies, ASAP, Diablo, Frontier Laboratories, JAS, LEAP Technologies, Markes, Matheson Tri-Gas, Scientific Instruments Manufacturer, Teledyne Tekmar and more.

rap.ID Inc.

425

Princeton Corporate Plaza 11 Deer Park Drive, Suite 201 Monmouth Junction NJ 08852 Phone: 732-823-1567 / Internet: www.rap-ID.com Identification of foreign particulate matter in parenterals rap.ID Inc. provides dedicated contract testing and instrumentation for the reliable isolation, enumeration, and identification of foreign particulate matter in pharmaceuticals and other high quality products. rap.ID with years of invaluable experience and knowledge in regards to customized application development, and analysis services.

Reaction Analytics Inc.

229

2711 Centerville Road Wilmington, DE 19808 Phone: 858-472-2393 / Internet: www.ichemexplorer.com The iChemExplorer from Reaction Analytics Inc. turns your Agilent HPLC into a chemistry screening tool. The iChemExplorer adds heating and stirring to the autosampler so you can do your chemistry in the sample vial. Applications include studies in process optimization, catalyst screening, forced degradation and solubility. The iChemExplorer software automatically graphs the area for each peak from sample to sample as profiles that show the course of your chemistry. And all the data is exported to Microsoft Excel for presentation and storage in your e-notebook. See the iChemExplorer in action.

710 Bridgeport Ave. Shelton, CT 06484 Phone: 203-925-4600 / Internet: www.perkinelmer.com At PerkinElmer, we are taking action to improve the health and safety of people and their environment. PerkinElmer conceives and delivers scientific solutions, software

55

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

Renishaw 335 5277 Trillium Blvd. Hoffman Estates, IL 60192 Phone: 847-286-9953 / Internet: www.renishaw.com Renishaw’s inVia; the world’s best selling research Raman microscope. Fully configurable, including excitations from UV through NIR, 2D/3D fast imaging, and nearexcitation analysis, with accessories and microscope configurations to suit all application areas from nano-materials to biology. inVia provides a non-destructive means of obtaining chemical/molecular information, with sub-micrometre spatial resolution. Combine inVia with other techniques to perform co-localised sample analysis, including SPM/AFM/TERS, SEM and CLSM.

Restek Corporation

512

110 Benner Circle Bellefonte, PA 16823 Phone: 800-356-1688 / Internet: www.restek.com Restek develops and manufactures innovative columns, tools and accessories, and reference chemicals for gas chromatography and HPLC. Our products are used by a broad spectrum of analysts in research and development, production, quality assurance, and teaching laboratories. Work areas include clinical and biomedical investigations; environmental monitoring; food, flavor, and fragrance quality assurance; forensics; petroleum and petrochemicals production, pharmaceuticals research and production; and others. Our general catalog describes more than 10,000 products for sample preparation and chromatography: capillary GC columns, packed GC columns, HPLC.

Rigaku Americas Corporation

440

9009 New Trails Dr. The Woodlands, TX 77381 Phone: 281-362-2300 / Internet: www.rigaku.com Rigaku provides the world’s most complete line of X-ray diffraction and X-ray fluorescence instruments and components. Systems include the MiniFlex benchtop XRD and Supermini benchtop WDXRF systems, the Ultima IV and SmartLab® multi-purpose diffractometers with SAXS and in-plane capabilities, DMAX Rapid II micro-diffraction systems, SMAX3000 small angle scattering systems, and the ZSX Primus series of high-powered WDXRF spectrometers with mapping capabilities, in either tube-above or tube-below configurations.

Rigaku Raman Technologies

431

14 New England Executive Park, Suite 102 Burlington, MA 01803 Phone: 408-705-6560 / Internet: www.rigakuraman.com Rigaku Raman Technologies, Inc. is a leading pioneer in portable and handheld Raman spectroscopy. We provide advanced analytical solutions that enable customers to achieve rapid, accurate results - at any time and in any place. Our instruments serve the changing application needs of pharmaceutical and nutraceutical manufacturers, first responders, forensic investigators, life science and academic laboratories, and other professionals benefiting from an easy-to-use and cost effective analytical device that can be taken to the sample.

Rudolph Research Analytical

211

55 Newburgh Road Hackettstown, NJ 07840 Phone: 973-584-1558 / Internet: www.rudolphresearch.com Polarimeters, Refractometers, Density Meters/Specific Gravity Meters: Sample Handling Automation available for all instrumentation. Automatic Polarimeter line includes 12 different models with features including 21 CFR Part 11 compliance, multiple wavelengths, electronic cooling and heating. Automatic Refractometer line includes 6 different models with electronic cooling and heating, wide Refractive Index range (1.3 - 1.7 RI). Automatic Density Meters/Specific Gravity Meters with many innovative features designed to meet the most demanding applications. Models to satisfy needs of the pharmaceutical, sugar, food, flavor and fragrance, chemical, beverage, and petrochemical industries, as well as education and research.

Scientech Laboratories

428

107G Corporate Blvd. South Plainfield, NJ 07080 Phone: 908-561-6330 / Internet: WWW.SCIENTECHLAB.US Scientech Laboratories, Inc., is an analytical, research, testing, and consulting laboratory, providing comprehensive laboratory services to the pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and chemical industries. Founded in 1981, Scientech is staffed with a team of highly experienced and dedicated professionals and quipped with a state-of-the-art laboratory. We are client-oriented, pride ourselves on devising innovative approaches to problem-solving, and provide the complete solution for all of your analytical laboratory needs.

SCP Science

328

21800 Clark Graham Baie D’Urfé PQ H9X 4B6 Canada Phone: 514-457-0701 / Internet: www.scpscience.com Founded in 1980, SCP Science is a successful, privately owned manufacturer and distributor of analytical equipment, supplies, reagents, and certified reference materials for the inorganic analytical laboratories market. The company manufactures supply

items including digestion systems, certified reference materials such as calibration and quality-control standards, and specialized glassware for the atomic spectroscopy market. In distribution, the company supplies analytical instruments for spectroscopists primarily in Canada.

SGS Life Science Services

523

75 Passaic Avenue Fairfield, NJ 07004 Phone: 973-244-2435 / Internet: www.sgs.com/lifescience SGS Life Science Services is a leading contract service organization providing analytical development, biologics characterization, biosafety, utilities qualification and quality control testing. With the largest wholly-owned network of 21 laboratories in 12 countries, services include: analytical chemistry, microbiology, stability studies, bioanalysis, extractables and leachables, virology, and protein analysis. Additionally, SGS provides clinical trial management (Phase I to IV) and services encompassing bioanalytical testing, data management, biostatistics, and regulatory consultancy.

Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, Inc. 243, 341, 342, 343, 441 7102 Riverwood Drive Columbia, MD 21046 Phone: 800-477-1227 / Internet: www.ssi.shimadzu.com Shimadzu Scientific Instruments is a leading provider of analytical measurement and testing instrumentation for a broad range of applications in science and industry, including in such areas as academic research, pharmaceuticals, food & beverages, environmental, chemicals, and forensics. Instruments include chromatographs (HPLC/ UFLC/UHPLC, GC); mass spectrometers (GC/MS, LC/MS, MALDI); spectrophotometers (FT-IR, Fluorescence, UV-VIS-NIR); atomic spectrometers (AA, ICP); X-ray spectrometers (EDX, XRD, XRF); thermal & particle size analyzers; Total Organic Carbon analyzers; data systems/software; balances; and materials testers.

Sino-American Pharmaceutical Professionals Association (SAPA)

T01

P. O. Box 282 Nanuet, NY 10954 Internet: http://www.sapaweb.org Sino-American Pharmaceutical Professional Association (SAPA) is a nonprofit and volunteer-based professional organization of Chinese-heritage with over 4,000 members. Established in 1993 and headquartered in the Greater New York area, SAPA has three regional chapters (New England, Greater Philadelphia, and West Coast), two pre-chapters (Midwest, Connecticut) and a China Club. SAPA’s mission is to promote the advancement of pharmaceutical science and biotechnology; to make contributions benefiting public health education; to promote scientific exchange and business cooperation between US and China; and to foster the career growth of pharmaceutical and biomedical professionals.

Sirius Analytical, Inc.

612

100 Cummings Center,Suite 231C Beverly, MA 01915 Phone: 978-338-5790 / Internet: www.sirius-analytical.com Sirius Analytical offers both instrumentation and CRO services for measurement of pKa, logP/logD, Solubility and Dissolution in aqueous, solvent, biorelevant media and in the presence of formulation additives. Our unique solutions for automated supersaturation measurement reveal new insights about the pH-dependent supersaturation a compound can exhibit and how supersaturation may be enhanced or suppressed via the use of formulation additives and excipients. Our real-time pH control expertise can be used to experiment with co-crystal formation and analysis. With facilities in the US and UK Sirius offers global coverage with detailed and reliable analysis, expert staff and rapid turnaround.

Solvias Inc.

406

2125 Center Avenue, Suite 507 Fort Lee, NJ 07024 Phone: 908-249-7693 / Internet: www.solvias.com With an outstanding reputation Solvias AG supports the research and development of drug substances, drug products, and the optimization of manufacturing processes for pharmaceutical, biotechnology and life sciences companies worldwide. Located in northwest Switzerland, Solvias offers increased capacity and profound know-how for analytical and chemical development. Our experience, proven track record, and a team of more than 300 highly qualified employees ensures the success of all analytical and chemical development projects with our clients.

Sonntek, Inc.

308

125 Pleasant Ave. Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Phone: 201-236-9300 / Internet: www.sonntek.com Sonntek, Inc. has been dedicated for over 30 years to serving the scientific community through sales, service and support. We have a broad inventory of research lamps for all applications and provide solutions for difficult problems. We supply and support old and new instruments for Separation or Purification, HPLC, FPLC and beyond. Stop by and see what is new!

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Exhibitor Descriptions

SOTAX Corporation

109, 111

2400 Computer Drive Westborough, MA 01581 Phone: 508-417-1112 / Internet: www.sotax.com SOTAX is a leading manufacturer of product testing instruments. From dissolution/ drug release to automated sample preparation workstations, to physical testing instruments evaluating tablets and capsules straight from the press, SOTAX has solutions for today’s challenging QbD environments. Come experience the innovative circular design of our new AT dissolution bath for USP 1,2,5,and 6 testing. Review how SOTAX builds compliance into the design and functionality of our products, including autocentered dissolution vessels and a quick-lock fixed shaft height on our new AT dissolution system. New to sample prep automation or apparatus 4 dissolution? Sotax can provide the full method development, validation, and transfer for your automation and/or dissolution methods. If you are looking for ways to boost your lab’s productivity through automation, SOTAX has the experience for successful implementation.SOTAX has integrated and expanded the Dr. Schleuniger® Pharmatron product lines of testing physical parameters (weight, thickness, width, length and hardness) of tablets and capsules, including the newly designed automated SmartTest 50.

Spectroscopy Magazine

407

485F US Highway 1S, Ste. 100 Iselin, NJ 08830 Phone: 732-596-0276 / Internet: www.SpectroscopyOnline.com With a circulation of 24,300, Spectroscopy provides peer-reviewed technical and applications-oriented information to the largest audited circulation of influential spectroscopists in the United States. With our focus on cutting-edge techniques such as Raman, X-Ray, MS, lasers and optics, ICP-MS, FT-IR, and the multitude of other hyphenated techniques that continue to grow in popularity, our unique editorial content enables substantial productivity improvement in the laboratory, while facilitating the exchange and flow of information throughout the scientific community.

Spectrum Chemicals & Laboratory Products

113

769 Jersey Ave. New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Phone: 800-772-8786 / Internet: www.SpectrumChemical.com Spectrum Chemical and Laboratory Products Inc. is a manufacturer and distributor of fine chemicals and lab products (USP, NF, FCC, BP, EP, JP and ACS grade chemical products) plus over 23,500 research organic chemicals. Spectrum is also a full-line distributor of laboratory supplies and equipment items from over 250 manufacturers featuring PerkinElmer`s complete line of consumables for spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and thermal analysis. Spectrum is truly a one-stop shopping site with over 100,000 chemicals and lab items.

SPEware Corporation

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333

TA Instruments

622

159 Lukens Drive New Castle, DE 19720 Phone: 302-427-4000 / Internet: www.tainstruments.com Visit TA Instruments for premier technology for thermal analysis, rheology and microcalorimetry. We provide innovative instrumentation for materials characterization for polymers, pharmaceuticals, proteins, paints and coatings, food science, inorganics, and more. Our Discovery Series DSC and TGA deliver unmatched performance and our ARES-G2 and Discovery Hybrid Rheometers set the standard for rheometry. Our NanoITC and NanoDSC calorimeters are benchmarks for life sciences. We offer a new line of instruments for Dilatometry, thermal diffusivity by the Flash Method, and Thermal Conductivity, including the all new line of LaserComp insulation testing products.

Tecan U.S., Inc.

528

9401 Globe Center Drive, Suite 140 Morrisville, NC 27560 Phone: 919-361-5200 / Internet: www.tecan.com Tecan is a leading global provider of laboratory instruments and solutions in biopharmaceuticals, forensics and clinical diagnostics. The company specializes in the development, production and distribution of automated workflow solutions for laboratories in the life sciences sector. Its clients include pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, university research departments, forensic and diagnostic laboratories. As an original equipment manufacturer (OEM), Tecan is also a leader in developing and manufacturing OEM instruments and components that are then distributed by partner companies.

Texas Scientific Products

T03

10 Andrews Parkway, Suite 225 Devens, MA 01434 Phone: 888-268-6037 / Internet: www.txscientific.com Established in 2004, TSP has become a well-known & respected manufacturer, distributor, and supplier of a whole array of consumables & sample introduction systems including nebulizers, spray chambers, torches, & pump tubing. We provide TSP brands as well as manufacturers brands essential for all major manufacturers of ICP-OES, ICP-MS, AA, XRF, & Viscometers. Other consumables include inorganic & organic standards & sample vials. Our newest nebulizer, the Optimist, is a robust, reliable, forgiving, and affordable nebulizer offering the ability to analyze oils, soils, and the most challenging samples containing undissolved particles and without clogging. We strive to be a partner in your laboratory success by providing quality products, efficient service, excellent customer support, and competitive pricing. TSP also distributes from Questron Technologies various types of sample digestion systems and automated sample preparation technologies to support your elemental analysis more efficiently.

The Specialty Gas Report

427

14180 Live Oak Avenue, Suite I Baldwin Park, CA 91706 Phone: 626-962-0010 / Internet: www.speware.com SPEware Corporation brings advanced, efficient sample preparation to the laboratory using micro-particulate material for solid phase extraction (SPE) and innovative phospholipid removal/protein crash products, all paired with Positive Pressure Processors and Automation. With 20 years designing, manufacturing and perfecting positive pressure for our micro-particulate products SPEware specializes in customized solutions from traditional extractions to those requiring a high degree of purification.

25 Helen Street Warren, NJ 07059 Phone: 908-753-8844 / Internet: www.specgasreport.com The Specialty Gas Report is a quarterly magazine dedicated to the producers, distributors, and users of Specialty and Medical Gases. Topics are critical to all aspects of specialty and medical gas production, analysis, distribution and compliance with various government regulations. It is necessary reading for anyone producing, selling, and using specialty and medical gases.

Students 2 Science, Inc.

81 Wyman Street Waltham, MA 02451 Phone: 408-481-4275 / Internet: www.thermoscientific.com Visit Thermo Scientific in booths 401-404 for integrated laboratory workflow solutions utilizing chromatography, mass spectrometry, and molecular spectroscopy. Come see the very latest solutions in LC, LC/MS, GC/MS, UV-Vis, FT-IR, Raman and NMR technologies to help streamline your processes, deliver more confident results, yield higher throughput, and reduce sample preparation. Join us on Tuesday, November 18, in the Davis Room for a series of product highlights where we will discuss the features and benefits of these instruments: 9:00AM - The ASE 350 and AutoTrace 280 9:30AM - The NEW TSQ 8000 Evo 10:00AM - The NEW Orbitrap Q Exactive HF 10:30AM - High Pressure Ion Chromatography (HPIC) 11:00AM - The NEW Thermo Scientific© Vanquish© UHPLC system 11:30AM - The iCAP Q ICP-MS© 12:00PM - The Thermo Scientific© Virtuoso© Vial Identification System 12:15PM - Descrete Analyzers

621

66 Deforest Avenue East Hanover, NJ 07936 Phone: 908-334-8435 / Internet: www.students2science.org Students 2 Science, Inc, is a 501c3 public charity providing an authentic, state of the art laboratory experience, complete with modern instrumentation and professional scientists, to Middle and High School students. Teams of students, working collaboratively with teams of scientific professionals, solve real life puzzles using inquiry based learning techniques. This experience is effectively increasing the interest in a STEM based education in participating students.

Supelco/Sigma-Aldrich

310, 312

595 North Harrison Road Bellefonte, PA 16823 Phone: 800-247-6628 / Internet: sigma-aldrich.com/analytical Supelco delivers high-quality, innovative chromatography and sample prep products and solutions to all major global market segments (food, pharmaceutical, forensic, bioanalytical, clinical, environmental, etc.). We provide a truly unique and broad-based analytical consumables offering that includes many breakthrough technologies, like Radiello® for diffusive air monitoring, ASSET® EZ4-NCO dry sampler for isocyanate sampling, Titan® columns for UHPLC, Ascentis® Express Fused-Core® columns for HPLC, Ionic Liquid GC columns that provide unique selectivity, HybridSPE® to remove or enrich phospholipids, plus new and novel products for sample preparation to aid with SPE, SPME, and QuEChERS cleanup applications. For the latest product and technical information visit sigma-aldrich.com/supelco

Thermo Scientific

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401, 402, 403, 404

2014 EAS Final Program

Exhibitor Descriptions

Triclinic Labs, Inc.

102

Wilmad-LabGlass 226

1201 Cumberland Ave., Ste. S West Lafayette, IN 47906 Phone: 765-588-6200 / Internet: www.TriclinicLabs.com Triclinic Labs provides leading physical and analytical chemistry development services to support solid-state form selection, routine sample analyses, problem solving, and method development. – Organic Chemistry Services   • Polymorph, Salt, Cocrystal Screening and Selection   • Amorphous Material Characterization and Development – Analytical Chemistry Services   • API, Excipient, Drug Product, and Contaminant Testing   • cGMP and non-GMP method development, validation, testing – Patent Prosecution and Litigation Support   • Testifying and Consulting Experts   • Reproduction of Prior Art   • Infringement Analysis Visit us in Booth 102 at EAS for more information

1172 NW Blvd. Vineland, NJ 08360 Phone: 856-691-3200 / Internet: www.wilmad-labglass.com Wilmad-LabGlass, an ISO 9001:2008 Certified Company, has been manufacturing and distributing laboratory and scientific glassware for over 70 years. Wilmad is a leading manufacturer of high precision engineered glass components. Wilmad is also the market leader in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Sample Tubes (NMR) and Electron-Paramagnetic-Resonance (EPR). LabGlass manufactures and distributes a wide variety of specialty laboratory glassware products and equipment.

U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP)

100, 101

12601 Twinbrook Parkway Rockville, MD 20852 Phone: 301-816-1847 / Internet: www.usp.org The U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP) is a scientific, nonprofit, standards-setting organization that advances global health through public standards and related programs that help ensure the quality, safety and benefit of medicines and foods. USP establishes documentary standards for medicines in the USP-NF and offers more than 3,100 Reference Standards for use in testing to help ensure identity, strength, quality and purity. USP standards are used in more than 140 countries. In addition to encouraging involvement in its public standards-setting process, USP hosts symposia, workshops, User Forums and Global Education and Training courses around the world.

Vortex Sales Group, LLC

Tech

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610

4299 Elevation Road Benson, NC 27504 Phone: 919-894-8093 X7 / Internet: www.vortexsg.com VORTEX Sales Group, LLC is an industry leader in providing cost effective, multivendor maintenance and calibration services for laboratory equipment including dissolution, HPLC, GC, and UV. Vortex is also the U.S. importer/distributor of PharmaTest dissolution baths, physical testing instruments and pilot-scale production equipment, exclusive sales and service outlet for Twosquare Science’s CETUS fully automated dissolution system and East Coast manufacturer’s representative for Pion Inc.’s fiber optic dissolution monitor systems.

VUV Analytics

432

611 Eagle Austin, TX 78734 Phone: 512-333-0860 / Internet: www.vuvanalytics.com VUV Analytics is pioneering the use of very short wavelength optical technologies for widespread use in analytical instrumentation. Despite the recognized importance of the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) spectral region, the associated difficulties have previously prevented its use in laboratory instrumentation. VUV Analytics’ introduction of a GC-VUV detector represents the most important innovation in gas chromatography in decades.

Waters Corporation

409, 411

34 Maple Street Milford, MA 01757-3696 Phone: 508-478-2000 / Internet: www.waters.com Waters Corporation creates business advantages for laboratory-dependent pharmaceutical organizations by delivering scientific innovation to enable customers to make significant advancements. Waters helps customers make profound discoveries, optimize laboratory operations, deliver product performance, and ensure regulatory compliance with a connected portfolio of separations and analytical science, laboratory informatics, mass spectrometry, as well as thermal analysis.

Wiley 209 111 River Street Hoboken, NJ 07030 Phone: 201-748-6000 / Internet: www.wiley.com Visit Booth #209 and discover the full range of products and services we offer to support research, practice and professional development in the analytical science community. Stop by to browse our print books on display or search our iPad to view the latest analytical books electronically, and receive a 30% discount on all titles you purchase. Find out about free access websites spectroscopyNOW.com and separationsNOW.com and view a demo of the Wiley Registry of Mass Spectrometry or one of our other analytic database products. Take away free copies of analytical journals and magazines to read at your leisure!

Wilmington PharmaTech

706

229A Lake Drive Newark, DE 19702 Phone: 302-737-9916 / Internet: www.wilmingtonpharmatech.com Wilmington PharmaTech Company LLC is a leading global service company specializing in the research and development of chemical process and medicinal chemistry for the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Founded in 2003, WPT has a track record of reliable and quality services for pharma and biotech companies worldwide with the state of art facilities and operations in the United States and China. Based on the established expertise and proprietary technologies, WPT has developed a wide range of capabilities for the research and development of today’s medicines, including custom synthesis, process chemistry, medicinal chemistry, API manufacturing, FTE research, polymorph screening and salt selection, and analytical services. Our Specialties: cGMP Synthesis, FTE Contract Research, Polymorph Screening and Salt Selection, Analytical GLP and GMP Services, Genotoxic Impurity Trace Analysis, Stable Isotope Labeling, Drug Reference Standards, Biotransformation, Chiral Resolution, Asymmetric Catalysis

YMC America, Inc.

Tech

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304

941 Marcon Blvd.,Suite 201 Allentown, PA 18109 Phone: 610-266-8650 / Internet: www.ymcamerica.com YMC America is the leading provider of YMC brand HPLC columns and packings in the Americas. The Triart family of hybrid silica based HPLC and UHPLC columns has expanded from the initial Triart C18 phase to include C8, Phenyl, PFP and Diol-HILIC phases in 1.9, 3 and 5 micron particles for analytical UHPLC and HPLC and 10, 15 and 20 micron particles for Prep HPLC. YMC has also introduced Amylose C and Cellulose C silica based columns and packings in 5, 10 and 20 micron particles sizes for separation of enantiomers using analytical and preparative SFC and HPLC. Achiral SFC columns are also available including unique phases like PVA-Sil. Finally, BioPro porous and non-porous SP and Q ion exchange columns based on low non-specific binding, hydrophilic based methacrylate particles are also available in 3 and 5 um for analytical work and 6, 10 and 30 micron particles for preparative separations. BioPro IEX and YMC SEC columns are available for analysis and purification of mAb. Please see us in Booth #304.

Zef Scientific

605

12707 High Bluff Drive, Suite 200 San Diego, CA 92130 Phone: 781-791-5799 / Internet: www.zefsci.com ZefSci is an engineering scientific firm specializing in maintenance, service contracts, repair, and compliance for most Mass Spectrometers, Liquid Chromatographs, Gas Chromatographs (HPLC/UPLC, GC, LC/MS/MS, GC/MS), and other hyphenated analytical techniques used in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, chemical, environmental, and food industries - or anywhere analytical instruments are used.

ZirChrom Separations, Inc.

205

617 Pierce Street Anoka, MN 55303 Phone: 763-421-5264 / Internet: www.zirchrom.com ZirChrom offers zirconia- and titania-based products for chromatographic method development. We provide a wide variety of column chemistries for reversed-phase (including LC-MS), ion exchange, normal phase and chiral chromatography. We also offer sub 2 micron products. ZirChrom HPLC columns are renowned for their unique selectivity, exacting reproducibility, high efficiency and ultra-stability. These columns may be used at both ambient and elevated temperature (to enhance LC-MS sensitivity and to reduce analysis time). Specialty products are available for in-line protein removal, phosphorylated peptide isolation and monoclonal antibody purification.

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Special Events

Special Events in the 2014 EAS Expo Area The following special exhibitor events will take place in the Garden State Exhibit Center during the 2014 Eastern Analytical Symposium. Attendance at these events is limited to EAS attendees only.

Monday, November 17, 2014 Bruker Corporation Davis Room, Garden State Exhibit Center Lobby 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM A Study in the Application of Vibrational Spectroscopy to Pharmaceutical Product Analysis Tom Tague, Ph.D. and Yan Wang, Ph.D. Bruker is pleased to present a two part workshop on applying Infrared and Raman spectroscopy to the analysis of pharmaceutical products. The first part, occurring in the morning, will be focused on analytical applications and the afternoon session will be focused on industrial applications. Dr. Tom Tague and Dr. Yan Wang have more than 40 years’ combined experience in applying Infrared and Raman spectroscopy to the analysis of pharmaceutical products in areas of interest ranging from the discovery phase to in-line production. Participants are encouraged to bring samples to both workshops for these hands-on sessions. Morning Session 9:00 AM to Noon Infrared and Raman Microspectroscopy in the Pharmaceutical World Mid-IR spectroscopy is the best analytical tool for identifying unknown compounds and single point infrared microscopy can be rapidly employed for the identification of unknown contaminants as well as the analysis of competitor products. This is true because each molecule has its own “fingerprint” signature in the middle infrared region of the spectrum. Contaminants as small as a few microns can be readily characterized visually providing the physical characterization of the object of interest followed by infrared microanalysis. For example, a tablet can be readily analyzed by performing a quick map followed by a simple factor analysis. Each resultant factor represents a unique component with its corresponding distribution image. Full field infrared imaging can also be employed to expedite the acquisition, where ~4,000 spectra/s are obtained. This simple process yields the number of excipients and active ingredient(s) as well as the distribution. Infrared microscopy can also be used to monitor the induced effect on tissue after the metabolic process. The metabolized drug can be monitored for location in tissue visually using fluorescence illumination and the induced changes in tissue can then be determined by analysis of the corresponding infrared response of the tissue. Raman microanalysis is ideally suited for polymorphic analysis as well as confocal depth profiling of coatings. Spectral differences between polymorphs, that are chemically identical but differ in physical makeup, can be readily characterized using Raman microscopy. Additionally, confocal depth profiling can be rapidly employed for characterizing multilayered polymer films without needing to cross section the sample. Afternoon Session 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM Latest Instrumentation Development of FT-NIR products and Overview of Typical Applications for QC and PAT Purposes The current presentation is focused on the latest development of FT-Near IR instruments, with updated info on the recent progress on instrument innovation and new products. An overview is presented for various applications for materials identification; conformity test of samples; and quantization of key attributes of samples in different industries: ranging from chemical, pharmaceutical, as well as food, feed, agricultural products. The analysis purpose is for both QC/QA programs and PAT applications. Depending upon the application interest for offline, at-line, on/in line for different sample forms of liquids, semiliquids, and solids, Bruker has recommendation on the selection different FT-Near IR spectrometers, and accessories, software functions, for meet the analytical requirement. Examples will be presented on typical application cases for different industries with the FT-Near IR spectroscopy technology. Data, libraries, and quant calibration models will be presented for typical applications. An interactive discussion with the audience is our focus for this seminar, addressing customized application interest.

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Special Events

Special Events in the 2014 EAS Expo Area (Continued)

PerkinElmer McDivitt Room, Garden State Exhibit Center Lobby Noon to 4:00 PM Join PerkinElmer on Monday, November 17th from Noon to 4 p.m. in the McDivitt Room to see the latest integrated solutions for a safer and sustainable environment. Our talks will cover the FT-IR, iQT, USP 232, AxION 2 TOF MS, LC/MS, and more. For more information, please contact [email protected]

Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Thermo Scientific Davis Room, Garden State Exhibit Center Lobby 9:00 AM to 12:30 PM Join us on Tuesday, November 18, in the Davis Room for a series of product highlights where we will discuss the features and benefits of these instruments: 9:00 AM ASE 350 and AutoTrace 280 Save time, reduce solvent consumption, and boost productivity with the ASE 350 high-throughput automated solvent extraction system. Extract analytes of interest from large volume aqueous samples easily and efficiently with the Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ AutoTrace™ 280 Solid-Phase Extraction (SPE) Instrument. The AutoTrace 280 automates all four steps of SPE (conditioning, loading, rinsing, and eluting), reducng solvent consumption and improving recovery and reproducibility. Boost productivity and reduce cost of analysis by simultaneously processing up to six samples in 2-3 hours with only 15 minutes of operator involvement. 9:30 AM TSQ 8000 Evo The Thermo Scientific TSQ 8000 Evo™ triple quadrupole GC-MS/MS is for labs looking for the next step up in triple quad GC-MS/MS productivity. It is the latest evolution of the highly successful TSQ 8000 GC-MS/MS system and the evolution of unstoppable productivity, MS/MS simplicity, and ultimate performance SRM. An overview of the new technology will be presented. 10:00 AM Orbitrap Q Exactive HF The Thermo Scientific Q Exactive™ Plus instrument was modified to include a compact ultra-high-field Orbitrap for higher scan speeds. Samples containing standard calibration mixtures, small- to medium-size proteins and HeLa protein digests were used for characterization of the Q Exactive HFTM in infusion and nanoLC/MS mode. 10:30 AM HPIC High Pressure Ion Chromatography (HPIC) now brings faster analysis speed and higher component resolution to the technique of IC. Now operate at pressures up to 5000 psi on an RFIC system with smaller particle size columns for shorter retention times and higher efficiency separations. This presentation will show examples from a variety of application areas. 11:00 AM Vanquish UHPLC The Thermo Scientific™ Vanquish™ UHPLC system was built around the column and the user to deliver better separations, more results, and easier interaction. The Vanquish UHPLC is an integrated, fully biocompatible system, addressing the needs of chromatographers performing state-of-the art UHPLC. 11:30 AM iCap Q ICP-MS The iCAP Q ICP-MS™ has been developed with groundbreaking technology to enable advanced highperformance ICP analysis combined with total reliability and ultra-flexibility. It is an ergonomically designed quadrupole ICP-MS with the smallest bench space available.

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Special Events

Special Events in the 2014 EAS Expo Area (Continued)

12:00 Noon Virtuoso The Thermo Scientific™ Virtuoso™ Vial Identification System is an error-free option to manual vial labeling that turns a necessary chore into a value-added component within a laboratory workflow. With advanced labeling capabilities, the Virtuoso system ensures accurate vial identification and reliable data, and increases laboratory productivity. Use the system’s touch screen and network capabilities to transfer text, graphics, barcodes, and logos directly onto your vials. 12:15 PM Discrete Analyzers Increase lab efficiency with fully automated, high-capacity, benchtop photometric analyzers specifically developed for food, beverage, water, and soil testing.

Agilent Technologies McDivitt Room, Garden State Exhibit Center Lobby 9:00 AM to Noon Join Agilent Technologies as we present our informative OpenLab Chemstation Edition Master Class. This Registration only event will prepare users to take full advantage of Agilent OpenLab Chemstation Edition Software. Learn from Experts and explore the many new features while being trained how to use this. Seating is Limited and Attendees must have some Previous Chemstation experience. Special Upgrade opportunities will be available. For additional details and to register, please contact John DiMare at [email protected]

Triclinic Labs, Inc.

McDivitt Room, Garden State Exhibit Center Lobby 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM Advanced Methods of Pharmaceutical Solid-State Analysis 1:00-2:00 pm Analysis of Crystalline Phase Content and Micro-Structure by X-ray Powder Diffraction Dr. Pat Stahly COO, Triclinic Labs The calcium present in living bone is mostly in the form of micro-crystalline calcium-hydroxyapatite. X-ray powder diffraction was used to evaluate hydroxyapatite in natural bone supplements and a simple method will be presented that allows characterization of hydroxyapatite micro-structure. This method can similarly be used for analysis of structure in pharmaceutical systems. Data will also be presented comparing the crystalline phase content of natural bone calcium supplements with ‘bone meal’ supplements. Over-the-counter calcium supplements, often advertised as helpful in reducing osteoporosis risk, were used as test materials. Label claims for the supplements will be evaluated. 2:00-2:30 pm Coffee Break 2:30-3:30 pm High Sensitivity Quantitative Analysis of Solid Mixtures Dr. Simon Bates Research Fellow, Triclinic Labs Development of quantitative analytical methods for mixtures of crystalline or non-crystalline solid phases involves unique challenges compared to liquid mixtures. In addition to homogeneity, the effect of particle size, microstructure, and solid-state matrix on the analytical response must be understood. Those are particularly relevant when utilizing multivariate data processing techniques in order to achieve the lowest LODs and LOQs possible. Current regulatory guidelines do not address such issues. Our approach to method development, and dealing with the complications unique to solid mixtures, will be presented.

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Special Events

Special Events in the 2014 EAS Expo Area (Continued)

3:30-4:00 pm Q&A Speaker Bios Pat Stahly, Ph.D. Dr. Stahly has over 30 years of experience in the specialty and pharmaceutical chemical industries. Since obtaining a Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry, he held positions of increasing responsibility at the Ethyl (now Albemarle) Corporation, was Chief Operating Officer of SSCI, Inc., and was Vice President of Scientific Operations of Aptuit. His expertise includes process chemistry, crystallization, solids analysis, x-ray diffraction, pharmaceutical preformulation, and chiral chemistry. He is an inventor of 44 US patents and author of 33 publications, including peer-reviewed papers and book chapters. In addition, Dr. Stahly has lectured extensively throughout the world and has taught numerous courses on solid-state chemistry. G. Patrick Stahly, Ph.D Chief Operating Officer [email protected] Simon Bates, Ph.D. Dr. Simon Bates has nearly 30 years of experience working with X-ray and neutron diffraction characterization of the solid state. For the last 10 years, he has been working on characterization and molecular modeling of pharmaceutical materials including both API and drug product systems. Before moving to Triclinic Labs, Dr. Bates worked at SSCI as a Research Fellow and a Principal at Aptuit Consulting. His work on pharmaceutical systems at SSCI/Aptuit lead to 13 peer reviewed publications 10 patent applications. Dr. Bates’ expertise also includes computational modeling of molecular systems, computational methods for IR Spectroscopy and Thermal Analysis, and Chemometrics. His expertise has allowed Dr. Bates to work as a scientific expert in numerous patent litigation and patent prosecution cases. Dr. Bates has over 40 peer reviewed international publications and has been an invited speaker at many scientific conferences. Simon Bates, Ph.D. Chief Operating Officer [email protected]

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2014 EAS Final Program

EAS Presidents

Eastern Analytical Symposium Presidents Year Conference Number President 1959............................................................. 1................................................................ William S. Levine 1960............................................................. 2................................................................ George H. Morrison 1961............................................................. 3................................................................ Saul Gordon 1962............................................................. 4................................................................ Arnold Mowitz 1963............................................................. 5................................................................ James F. Cosgrove 1964............................................................. 6................................................................ Paul Lublin 1965............................................................. 7................................................................ Charles W. Pifer 1966............................................................. 8................................................................ David W. Robertson 1967............................................................. 9................................................................ Edward G. Brame, Jr. 1968............................................................ 10............................................................... Harold J. Pazdera 1969............................................................ 11............................................................... George E. Heinze 1970............................................................ 12............................................................... David A. Green 1971............................................................ 13............................................................... Ivor L. Simmons 1972............................................................ 14............................................................... Richard J. Knauer 1973............................................................ 15............................................................... Louis M. Brancone 1974............................................................ ––............................................................... Hal Ferrari 1975............................................................ 16............................................................... Alexander N. Prezioso 1976............................................................ ––............................................................... –– 1977............................................................ 17............................................................... Kenneth D. Fleischer 1978............................................................ ––............................................................... –– 1979............................................................ 18............................................................... David L. Nash 1980............................................................ 19............................................................... Melvin Goodman 1981............................................................ 20............................................................... Arnold D. Lewis 1982............................................................ 21............................................................... Hal Ferrari 1983............................................................ 22............................................................... Concetta M. Paralusz 1984............................................................ 23............................................................... J. P. Luongo 1985............................................................ 24............................................................... Hal Ferrari 1986............................................................ 25............................................................... Walton B. Caldwell 1987............................................................ 26............................................................... S. David Klein 1988............................................................ 27............................................................... Harvey S. Gold 1989............................................................ 28............................................................... Richard Saferstein 1990............................................................ 29............................................................... James McDivitt 1991............................................................ 30............................................................... Stephen Scypinski 1992............................................................ 31............................................................... Neil D. Jespersen 1993............................................................ 32............................................................... Vincent Venturella 1994............................................................ 33............................................................... Hercules Felder 1995............................................................ 34............................................................... Karl Bratin 1996............................................................ 35.............................................................. Edward R. Davis 1997............................................................ 36............................................................... Robert Femia 1998............................................................ 37............................................................... Susan Kirby Friedman 1999............................................................ 38............................................................... Julia Vasta-Russell 2000............................................................ 39............................................................... Bruce McPherson 2001............................................................ 40............................................................... Nicholas Snow 2002............................................................ 41............................................................... Mary A. Kaiser 2003............................................................ 42............................................................... Henrik Rasmussen 2004............................................................ 43............................................................... Robert Ianniello 2005............................................................ 44............................................................... Penelope Moore 2006............................................................ 45............................................................... John L. Martin 2007............................................................ 46............................................................... Robert Geise 2008............................................................ 47............................................................... Kate Jackson Fletcher 2009 ........................................................... 48 .............................................................. Donald O’Leary 2010............................................................ 49............................................................... Julie Tinklenberg 2011............................................................ 50............................................................... David A. Russell 2012............................................................ 51............................................................... Cecil Dybowski 2013............................................................ 52............................................................... Kim Huynh-Ba 2014............................................................ 53............................................................... Anne-Françoise Aubry 2015............................................................ 54............................................................... Oscar Liu

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2014 EAS Final Program

Previous Awards Recipients

Previous Award Recipients

The recipients of the Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Fields of Analytical Chemistry are: 1986.................... Dr. George H. Morrison 1987........................... Dr. Velmer A. Fassel 1988........................ Dr. J. Calvin Giddings 1989....................... Dr. David M. Hercules 1990................................. Dr. Allen J. Bard 1991.......................... Dr. Alan G. Marshall 1992............................ Dr. Gary M. Hieftje 1993................................ Dr. Peter W. Carr 1994............................... Dr. Henry Freiser 1995.............................. Dr. Royce Murray 1996...................... Dr. James Winefordner 1997............................ Dr. Richard N. Zare 1998.......................... Dr. Edward S. Yeung 1999....................... Dr. Catherine Fenselau 2000..................................Dr. Isiah Warner 2001.............................. Dr. Milos Novotny 2002........................ Dr. Charles L. Wilkins 2003................... Dr. William R. Heineman 2004..............................Dr. Harold McNair 2005..................................Dr. Bruce Chase 2006......................... Dr. Andrew G. Ewing 2007..............Prof. M. S. Burnaby Munson 2008 ............................ Prof. Milton L. Lee 2009 ....................... Dr. M. Bonner Denton 2010.......................... Dr. Richard D. Smith 2011.................... Dr. Jonathan V. Sweedler 2012................................... Dr. Mary Wirth 2013................................ Dr. Irving Wainer The recipients of the Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Outstanding Achievements in Separation Science are: 1986............................. Dr. Csaba Horvath 1987............................ Dr. Haleem J. Issaq 1988............................. Dr. Milos Novotny 1989....................... Dr. Harold M. McNair 1990........................ Dr. Daniel Armstrong 1991............................. Dr. Robert L. Grob 1992........................ Dr. Daniel E. Martire 1993............................ Dr. J. Jack Kirkland 1994........................... Dr. Lloyd R. Snyder 1995..................... Dr. James W. Jorgenson 1996................................ Dr. Fred Regnier 1997............................ Dr. Barry L. Karger 1998......................... Dr. William H. Pirkle 1999............................... Dr. Milton L. Lee 2000................................. Dr. Peter W. Carr 2001....................Dr. Georges A. Guiochon

2002.......................... Dr. Karel A. Cramers 2003............................... Dr. Edward Yeung 2004............................. Dr. John G. Dorsey 2005...............................Dr. Frantisek Svec 2006........................... Dr. Phyllis R. Brown 2007..................................Prof. Peter Uden 2008............................... Prof. Pat J. Sandra 2009................Prof. Peter J. Schoenmakers 2010..................Dr. Brian A. Bidlingmeyer 2011..................................... Dr. Uwe Neue 2012............................ Dr. Robert Kennedy 2013.............................Dr. Mark R. Schure The recipients of the Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Outstanding Achievements in Near-Infrared Spectroscopy are: 1989.................................. Mr. Karl Norris 1990............................... Dr. Donald Burns 1991.......................... Dr. W. Fred McClure 1992.............................. Dr. Lois G. Weyer 1993.................... Dr. Ernest H. Baughman 1994........................... Dr. Heinz W. Siesler 1995....................... Dr. William G. Fateley 1996............................ Dr. Harvey S. Gold 1997................................. Dr. Svante Wold 1998................... Dr. Franklin E. Barton, II 1999................................ Dr. Phil Williams 2000.............................. Dr. A.M.C. Davies 2001.............................. Dr. Yukihiro Ozaki 2002....................... Dr. Jerome J. Workman 2003................................ Dr. Howard Mark 2004................................ Emil W. Ciurczak 2005............................ Dr. Donald J. Dahm 2006............................Prof. Gabor Patonay 2007........................... Prof. Graeme Batten 2008......................... Dr. David W. Hopkins 2009................................Mr. Edward Stark 2010.......................Dr. James B. Reeves III 2011...........................Dr. Charles E. Miller 2012.......................... Dr. Joseph T. Hodges 2013..................................Ms. Susan Foulk The recipients of the Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Outstanding Achievements in Magnetic Resonance are: 1990.................................. Dr. David Hoult 1991............................ Dr. John D. Roberts 1992.......................... Dr. Richard R. Ernst 1993............................ Dr. James Shoolery 1994.................. Dr. Costantino S. Yannoni 1995......................................... Dr. Ad Bax

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1996.................................. Dr. John Waugh 1997......................... Dr. Paul C. Lauterbur 1998.................... Dr. Michael F. Summers 1999.......................... Dr. Frank A. L. Anet 2000.................. Dr. Hans Wolfgang Spiess 2001........................ Dr. Raymond Freeman 2002......................... Dr. Aksel Bothner-By 2003................................ Dr. Stephen Fesik 2004............................ Dr. Gerhard Wagner 2005............................Dr. Ann McDermott 2006.............. Prof. Angela M. Gronenborn 2007.............................Prof. Robert Griffin 2008.......................Prof. Warren S. Warren 2009.......................... Prof. Lyndon Emsley 2010..........................Prof. Cecil Dybowski 2011..................Prof. Roderick Wasylishen 2012............................Prof. Jeffrey Reimer 2013......................... Dr. Dennis A. Torchia The recipients of the Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Outstanding Achievements in Chemometrics: 1996........................... Dr. Steven D. Brown 1997................................. Dr. Tormod Næs 1998................ Dr. Edmund R. Malinowski 1999............................ Dr. Harald Martens 2000.................................. Dr. Svante Wold 2001.................................... Dr. Barry Wise 2002....................................Dr. Paul Geladi 2003........................ Dr. Paul J. Gemperline 2004...................................Dr. Rasmus Bro 2005...............................David M. Haaland 2006...............................Dr. Age K. Smilde 2007.............................. Prof. Philip Hopke 2008.....................Prof. John F. MacGregor 2009............................... Prof. Roma Tauler 2010................... Prof. Johan A. Westerhuis 2011...............................Dr. Beata Walczak 2012...................... Prof. Lutgarde Buydens 2013.................. Dr. Olav Martin Kvalheim The recipient of the EAS Award for Outstanding Achievements in Mass Spectrometry: 2007........................... Prof. Graham Cooks 2008................................Prof. Jack Henion 2009........................Prof. Alan G. Marshall 2010................... Prof. Richard M. Caprioli 2011........................................ Dr. Ian Blair 2012.......................Dr. Fred W. McLafferty 2013.......................... Dr. Michael L. Gross

2014 EAS Final Program

Previous Awards Recipients

Previous Award Recipients (continued)

The recipient of the Eastern Analytical Symposium New Faculty Award in NMR Spectroscopy is: 2012......................Prof. Scott A. Showalter 2013.................... Prof. Patrick van der Wel The recipients of the New York Section of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy Gold Medal Award are: 1952...................... Dr. William F. Meggers 1953.................... Dr. William W. Coblentz 1954...................... Dr. George R. Harrison 1955............................ Dr. Norman Wright 1956............................. Mr. Frank Twyman 1957......................... Dr. Herbert Friedman 1958.............................. Dr. Wallace Brode 1959........................ Dr. Gerhard Herzberg 1960........................... Dr. George Buc and Dr. Frederick Strong, III 1961.................... Mr. Bourdon F. Scribner 1962................................. Dr. Mary Warga 1963................................ Dr. Earle K. Pyle 1964........................... Dr. Velmer A. Fassel 1965........................ Dr. Melvin G. Mellon 1966.......................... Dr. Ralph A. Sawyer 1967......................... Mr. LaVerne S. Birks 1968......................... Mr. Willis J. Potts, Jr. 1969.............................. Dr. Robert H. Bell 1970............................ Dr. John R. Ferraro 1972............................ Dr. Charles Jedicka 1973......................... Dr. David N. Kendall 1974............................. Dr. Klaus Biemann 1975..................... Dr. George H. Morrison 1976....................... Dr. Marvin Margoshes 1977........................... Dr. Darwin L. Wood 1978......................... Dr. Bernard J. Bulkin 1979................................. Dr. N. J. Harrick 1980......................... Mr. Edwin K. Jaycox 1981.................................. Dr. Ron Jenkins 1982........................ Dr. C. Comar N. Patel 1983........................ Dr. Abraham Savitzky 1984.......................... Dr. Richard F. Jarrell 1985...................... Dr. Linda J. Cline Love 1986......................... Dr. Paul C. Lauterbur 1987....................... Dr. William G. Fateley 1988............................... Dr. Tuan Vo-Dinh 1989.................. Dr. James D. Winefordner 1990........................... Dr. D. Bruce Chase 1991........................... Dr. Isiah M. Warner 1992............................. Dr. Jack L. Koenig 1993........................ Dr. Michael D. Morris 1994........................ Dr. Linda B. McGown

1995.......................... Dr. Peter W. Griffiths 1996............................ Dr. Charles Wilkins 1997.......................... Dr. Koichi Nishikida 1998.......................... Dr. Alan G. Marshall 1999............................... Dr. Chieu D. Tran 2000............................ Dr. James Robinson 2001....................................Dr. Karl Norris 2002............................... Dr. Joel M. Harris 2003..............................Dr. Crana V. Bright 2004.............................Dr. Gary M. Hieftje 2005................................ Dr. Mary J. Wirth 2006...................................Dr. Ira W. Levin 2007..................................... Dr. Paul Wilks 2008.............................Prof. John F. Rabolt 2009...................................... Dr. Isao Noda 2010..........................Prof. Cecil Dybowski 2011.............................Dr. Gary Blanchard 2012.................... Prof. Richard Mendelson 2013...................... Prof. Stephen P. Cramer

The recipients of the American Microchemical Society Benedetti-Pichler Memorial Award are: 1966................................... Dr. J. F. Alicino 1967........................ Dr. Felix L. Schneider 1968..................................... Dr. W. Kirsten 1969........................ Dr. B. B. Cunningham 1970...................... Dr. Walter C. McCrone 1971.................................. Dr. L. T. Skeggs 1972................................... Dr. L. C. Craig 1973................................... no award given 1974.................................... Dr. E. Sawicki 1975................................... Dr. Petr Zuman 1976........................................ Dr. T. S. Ma 1977..................... Dr. George H. Morrison 1978............................... Dr. Joseph Jordan 1979.............................. Dr. A. Steyermark 1980........................................ Dr. H. Alber 1981..................................... Dr. P. Flashka 1982.................................. Dr. Peter F. Lott 1983................................ Dr. Louis Meites 1984................................... Dr. Bennie Zak 1985.............. Dr. Lockhart “Buck” Rogers 1986............................ Dr. Wilhelm Simon 1987....................... Dr. David M. Hercules 1988...................... Dr. Richard F. Browner 1989.................................. Dr. K. L. Cheng 1990................................ Dr. Peter W. Carr 1991...................... Dr. Nicholas Winograd 1992......................... Dr. Robert G. Michel 1993............................... Dr. Peter C. Uden

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1994........................... Dr. Isiah M. Warner 1995...................... Dr. Leslie Colin Ebdon 1996........................ Dr. Daniel Armstrong 1997................................. Dr. John Dorsey 1998................. Dr. Purnendu K. Dasgupta 1999................... Dr. Jonathan V. Sweedler 2000......................... Dr. Andrew G. Ewing 2001........................ Dr. Robert T. Kennedy 2002.......................Dr. Fred M. Hawkridge 2003............................ Dr. Joseph Sneddon 2004................Dr. Jorge Gardea-Torresdey 2005..................................Dr. Frank Bright 2006..........................Prof. Steven A. Soper 2007............................. Prof. Robin Garrell 2008........................Prof. Janusz Pawliszyn 2009................................Prof. Yong-Ill Lee 2010............................ Prof. Joel M. Harris 2011................................. Dr. Sergio Caroli 2012.............................Prof. Luis A. Colon 2013.............................. Dr. Mark A. Hayes The recipient for the Ernst Abbe Memorial Award of the New York Microscopical Society is: 2006................................. Dr. John C. Russ 2007.................................. Prof. Watt Webb 2010...............................Dr. Dale Newbury 2011................................ Dr. E. Neil Lewis 2012................................. Mr. Skip Palenik

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Author Index A Abdel-Hay, Karim M................................................... 107 Abdollahi, Hamid....................................................... 273 Abegaz, Samuel M.................................................... 246 Abou-Shakra, Fadi...................................................... 16 Abraham, Anuji...................................................... 53, 66 Acworth, Ian N......................... 60, 76, 80, 218, 225, 226 Adams, Monica.......................................................... 372 Adar, Fran............................................................ 30, 138 Ahuja, Sut.................................................................. 297 Alcalá, Soraya............................................................. 22 Allen, Thomas............................................................ 207 Alshanqiti, Mohammed ............................................. 214 Altamirano, Christopher............................................. 204 Anand, Nalini............................................................. 360 Anderson, Jared L..................................................... 434 Anderson, Leigh........................................................ 292 Anderson, Philip N....................................................... 65 Andolina, Christopher M............................................ 268 Anthony, Clydewyn M................................................ 130 Antochshuk, Valenthyn ............................................. 229 Apak, Reşat .............................................................. 222 Appelblad, Patrik......................................................... 79 Arcaro, Kathleen F. ................................................... 378 Arnold, Mark E................................... 293, 295, 380, 437 Arrendale, Richard F.................................................. 258 Arsac, Maud.............................................................. 337 Artal-Isbrand, Paula................................................... 133 Asher, Sanford (Sandy)................................................. 9 Ashraf-Khorassani, Mehdi......................................... 153 Aslan, Zeynep........................................................... 122 Aslebagh, Roshanak................................................. 378 Atkins, Patricia L........................................................ 197 Attygalle, Athula B..................................................... 234 Aubry, Anne-Françoise.............................. 294, 380, 437 Aung, Nyan................................................................ 410 Ayers, David................................................................ 61 B Bai, Ling.................................................................... 417 Bailey, Bruce........................................ 80, 218, 225, 226 Bakeev, Katherine............................................. 405, 449 Baker, Gary A............................................................ 375 Balaxi, Maria.............................................................. 160 Baltisberger, Jay H.................................................... 266 Bandara, Y.M. Nuwan D.Y......................................... 265 Baney, Greg............................................................... 416 Bangura, Christina..................................................... 256 Barclay, Michael S..................................... 188, 190, 305 Barkley, Thomas........................................................ 350 Barsotti, Robert......................................................... 100

Bartick, Edward E...................................................... 178 Barton, Franklin E........................................................ 39 Baumgardner, Matt.................................................... 262 Bayro, Marvin............................................................ 325 Beck, Carol................................................................ 286 Beckstead, Jeffrey..................................................... 181 Beglinger, Katherine M.............................................. 377 Behling, Ronald......................................................... 143 Behr, Bradford B.......................................................... 40 Behringer, Fred.......................................................... 244 Bekdeşer, Burcu ....................................................... 222 Belkin, Mikhail A........................................................ 290 Bell, David S.............................................................. 173 Bellei, Sara................................................................ 169 Bello, Rabi................................................................. 201 Bender, Christopher J................................................ 344 Benitez, Kimberly........................................................ 67 Benito, Melanie Pe.................................................... 293 Bennett, Rafael.......................................................... 279 Berden, Giel.............................................................. 420 Beres, Martin............................................................. 279 Berkland, Cory........................................................... 161 Bermel, Wolfgang...................................................... 250 Berry, Julianne............................................................. 71 Beshah, Kebede.......................................................... 50 Betts, Thomas A........................................................ 375 Bhandari, Raj K........................................................... 17 Bhat, Ram................................................................. 374 Bhatia, Sangeeta N. ................................................. 373 Bhawtankar, Vrushali M............................................. 440 Biba, Mirlina....................................................... 281, 429 Birch, Amy F.............................................................. 415 Bishop, Gregory W.................................................... 253 Bismilla, Yusuf............................................................. 40 Blackney, Donna M...................................... 85, 306, 379 Blake, Jolie................................................................ 191 Bluemling, Gregory.................................................... 258 Bodsky, Peter.......................46, 118, 119, 172, 211, 308 Bolgar, Mark S........................................................... 199 Borden, Farrel........................................................... 383 Borland, Megan M..................................... 227, 238, 239 Bors, Kevin A............................................................. 335 Boulton, David........................................................... 293 Bove, John L............................................................... 28 Box, Karl.................................................... 356, 357, 358 Boyes, Barry E...................................................... 91, 92 Bradshaw, John T........................................................ 44 Brady, Elizabeth................................................. 194, 221 Brady, James E........................................................... 68 Brandes, Hillel........................................................... 175 Brannaka, Joseph A.................................................. 188

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2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Brettell, Thomas................................................ 247, 457 Bruckenstein, Stanley........................................ 202, 388 Bryan, Samuel A........................................................ 126 Bu, Xin......................................................................... 42 Buchanan, Michael.................................................... 416 Buckley, Brian.................................................... 326, 354 Buckley, Kyle............................................................. 326 Buenconsejo, Julius Neil............................................. 45 Bueno, Justin............................................................. 179 Bühlmann, Philippe .................................................. 269 Bukowski, Nick.................................................. 348, 414 Bunnell, Richard.......................................................... 59 Buro, Diana............................................................... 205 Butcher, George........................................................ 358 Butts, Craid................................................................ 454 Buyer, Jeffrey S......................................................... 327 Buzescu, Adela.......................................................... 380 C Cabrices, Oscar G..................................................... 112 Cacciari,Ilaria............................................................. 132 Caceres Cortes, Janet............................................... 452 Cade, Elise................................................................ 263 Callahan, Michael P................................................... 328 Camire, Casey........................................................... 241 Campbell, Robert M.................................................. 282 Campbell, Scot.......................................................... 385 Campbell, Scott......................................................... 236 Campbell, William H.................................................. 173 Cañas-Carrell, Jaclyn................................................ 184 Canestrano, Mark...................................................... 210 Capogrosso, Valentina.............................................. 169 Caprioli, Richard........................................................ 333 Carione, Pasquale W................................................. 379 Carlson, Martha......................................................... 221 Carlton Jr., Doug D.................................................... 198 Carroll, Donna............................................................. 56 Carroll, Mary K........................................................... 147 Caruso, Andrea........................................................... 48 Caruso, Joseph......................................................... 127 Castañeda, Carlos..................................................... 150 Castellani, Jared........................................................ 284 Castillo-Michel, Hiram................................................ 183 Castoro, John...................................................... 42, 360 Celen, Gonul............................................................. 122 Çelik, Saliha Esin...................................................... 222 Cenko, Andrew............................................................ 40 Cesaratto, Anna................................................. 169, 170 Chace, Donald........................................................... 276 Chaddha, Monish...................................................... 374 Chakrabarti, Atis........................................................ 212 Chan, Benny.............................................................. 146 Chandra, Preeti......................................................... 224 Channaveerappa, Devika.................................. 228, 378 Chapman, Alexander......................................... 208, 297

Chase, Bruce................................................................. 8 Chatellier, Sonia........................................................ 337 Chaudhry, Charu....................................................... 261 Chen, Erika.................................................................. 25 Chen, Li..................................................................... 232 Chen, Margaret........................................................... 67 Chen, Meixi............................................................... 187 Chen, Wu........................................................... 176, 220 Chen, Yong................................................................ 442 Chen, Yuan................................................................ 262 Cheng, Guanglou...................................................... 389 Chester, Thomas L.................................................... 151 Chetwyn, Nik P.......................................................... 436 Choi, Candice............................................................ 366 Christison, Terri T....................................................... 211 Church, Jonathon...................................................... 302 Chwal, Carley............................................................ 181 Ciurczak, Emil............................................................ 424 Clark, C. Randall....................................................... 107 Clark, Kevin D........................................................... 434 Clay, Bradford G........................................................ 337 Cleeve, Matthew................................................ 259, 260 Coddington, Jim........................................................ 167 Codina, Anna............................................................. 361 Cody, Robert B.............................................................. 3 Colson, Kim....................................................... 361, 451 Columbus, Linda....................................................... 314 Comelli, Daniela........................................................ 169 Comer, John.............................................. 356, 357, 358 Connell, Thomas....................................................... 394 Connolly, Kelly........................................................... 254 Cornelius, Georgia.................................................... 261 Cornwell, Samiyah.................................................... 110 Costello, Philip........................................................... 205 Cravenor, Kelly.................................................. 103, 412 Criss, Alison K........................................................... 314 Crocker, Evan............................................................ 108 Cropp, Ashton............................................................ 150 Crouch, Ronald......................................................... 454 Crull, George............................................................... 66 Cummings, Jennifer.................................................... 14 Cuni, Juan................................................................... 28 Cuni, Pedro................................................................. 28 Curtis, Richard H......................................................... 44 D Dadson, Andrew E..................................................... 230 Dahlberg, Donald...................................................... 167 Dardenne, Pierre....................................................... 320 Darie, Costel C.......................... 227, 239, 267, 377, 378 D’Arienzo, Celia......................................................... 261 Daugherty, Sean................................................ 105, 219 Dayal, Bishambar........................................................ 15 Dazzi, Alexandre............................................... 287, 291 de Haseth, James A.................................................... 39

67

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

de Juan, Anna........................................................... 272 De la Torre-Roche, Roberto....................................... 182 Debelouchina, Galia.................................................... 52 Deeb, Shaza.............................................................. 285 DeForest, Peter......................................................... 339 deGhetaldi, Kristin....................................................... 23 Degonzague, Carolyn.................................................. 37 Deleon, Sabrina......................................................... 184 Deng, Fengyuan.......................................................... 70 Deniset-Besseau, Ariane .......................................... 291 Denniston, Mark.......................................................... 37 Dentinger, Claire.................................................. 33, 365 Deodhar, Bhushan S................................................. 345 DeRuiter, Jack........................................................... 107 Desai, Dharmesh D................................................... 294 Deshpande, Mithilesh................................................ 355 DeSilva, Binodh................................................... 14, 294 Desorcie, Jamie......................................................... 416 DesRoches, Brandon.................................................. 40 Devine, Samantha....................................................... 58 Dharmarajan, Shanmugapriya.................................. 443 Diaczuk, Peter........................................................... 341 Diamond, Francis X................................................... 284 Didier, Marie.............................................................. 168 Dik, Joris.................................................................... 167 Dinh, Phuoc................................................................. 79 Dioumaeva, Irina....................................................... 435 Discenza, Lorell N..................................................... 261 Dobrovolskaia, Marina............................................... 185 Dodge, Robert............................................................. 14 Dolata, Lori.................................................... 47, 48, 196 Donaldson, Robert W............................................ 10, 11 Dong, Michael W............................................... 369, 436 Dorsey, John G.......................................................... 152 Doty, Kyle C......................................................... 26, 179 Duan, Yichen............................................................. 186 Dupree, Emmalyn J................................................... 227 Durig, James R.......................................................... 345 Dwyer, Jason R......................................................... 265 E Eby, Matt............................................................ 121, 362 Echard, Jean-Philippe............................................... 168 Edmonds, Katherine A............................................... 317 Egekenze, Rita N...................................................... 413 Ehrenfeld, Frank........................................................ 350 Eisen, Brielle............................................................... 28 Eksteen, Roy............................................................. 175 El-Gendy, Nashwa..................................................... 161 Elias, Alonzo.............................................................. 256 Elliott, Noelle............................................................. 219 Engelsen, Søren B.................................................... 319 Ennis, Erin J................................................ 85, 209, 306 Epstein, Marsha........................................................ 293 Evangelisti, Luca....................................................... 403

Evers, Taylor J........................................................... 258 Exarchakis, James.................................................... 140 F Fadeev, Alexander....................................................... 90 Fairbrother, Howard................................... 188, 190, 305 Fan, Hui..................................................... 198, 417, 419 Fan, Peter.................................................................. 262 Fandrick, Keith.......................................................... 385 Fang, Jun.................................................................. 108 Fang, Liang............................................................... 108 Faradzhev, Nadir S.................................................... 190 Farina, Dino............................................................... 162 Fawzi, Nicolas L........................................................ 313 Feeley Jr., Lawrence J................................................ 68 Feldman, Leonard..................................................... 303 Feng, Wendy............................................................. 395 Fergenson, David P................................................... 160 Fernandez, Antonio................................................... 242 Fernandez, Natalia.................................................... 106 Figus, Margaret........................................................... 90 Fischer, Christian....................................................... 451 Fischer, Martin........................................................... 135 Fisher, Carl A..................................................... 211, 349 Fletcher, Michael R.............................................. 85, 306 Flinn, Brian................................................................ 450 Foley, Joe P................................. 85, 209, 306, 379, 429 Fontoira, Hèléne ......................................................... 22 Forrest, Laird............................................................. 161 Foster, Fredrick D.............................................. 112, 386 Fountain, Kenneth J.................................................. 153 Frederick, Kimberley................................................. 144 Freel, Keith........................................................ 390, 391 Frydman, Lucio............................................................ 51 Fulton, Larry.............................................................. 143 Fung, Eliza................................................................ 437 Fushman, David........................................................ 150 G Gajjar, Khushbu G..................................................... 233 Gallagher, Neal B...................................................... 346 Gan, Jinping.............................................................. 261 Gandhi, Jay............................................................... 404 Garcia, Dana............................................................. 383 Gardea-Torresdey, Jorge........................................... 183 Garvey, Mark............................................................. 451 Gatley, Emma L. ....................................................... 231 Gaylord, Shonda T..................................................... 373 Gbormittah, Francisca................................................. 11 George, Brittany.......................................................... 88 Gibbs, Eric B............................................................. 316 Gidley, David............................................................. 302 Gilar, Martin............................................................... 309 Gill Jr., Richard L....................................................... 155 Glasser, Benjamin J.................................................... 36

68

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Glish, Gary................................................................ 264 Gmachl, Claire F................................................ 335, 410 Goedde, Kristen........................................................ 350 Goel, Meenakshi....................................................... 436 Gong, Liang................................................................... 8 Gonnella, Nina C............................................... 385, 392 Good, David................................................................ 53 Goodall, David................................................... 207, 208 Goyal, Anish.............................................................. 448 Grandinetti, Philip J................................................... 266 Gray, Jesse................................................................ 254 Gray, Vivian....................................................... 131, 312 Green, Charisse........................................................ 371 Green, Micah............................................................. 184 Green, Mitchell D....................................................... 250 Gregoire, Austin D..................................................... 194 Grinberg, Nelu........................................................... 392 Griswold, Keith S....................................................... 444 Grosshans, Pete........................................ 115, 348, 414 Grossman, Steve....................................................... 254 Gu, Christine............................................................. 369 Gu, Ryan................................................................... 437 Guan, Qian.................................................................. 11 Gubernick, Noah....................................................... 257 Güçlü, Kubilay .......................................................... 222 Guerrera, Gina M........................................................ 25 Guetschow, Erik........................................................ 270 Gultneh, Yilma........................................................... 413 Gundlach, Lars.......................................................... 191 Gunn, David.............................................................. 446 Gunsolus, Ian L......................................................... 269 Gupta, Pranav............................................................. 69 Gupta, Rini.................................................................111 Gupta, Rupal............................................................. 315 H Ha, Khanh......................................................... 329, 360 Hackley, Vincent........................................................ 185 Hager, Michael.......................................................... 258 Hahn, Bill................................................................... 236 Haibach, Fredrick........................................................ 35 Hajian, Arsen R. ......................................................... 40 Hale, Robert D........................................................... 234 Hale, Shelby................................................................ 78 Hall, Gene S.......................................................... 5, 455 Hall, Michael L............................................................. 37 Hargreaves, Michael................................................. 180 Harma, Harri.............................................................. 248 Harmon, Paul A......................................................... 367 Harris, Brent J..................................................... 73, 409 Harris, Kristopher J...................................................... 51 Harris, Rachel............................................................ 264 Harrison, Dale................................... 198, 417, 418, 419 Hashemi, Venus........................................................ 229 Haws, Charles........................................... 115, 348, 414

Hawthorne, Joseph................................................... 182 Hayakawa, Yoshihiro................................................. 216 Haynes, Christy L...................................................... 269 He, Herman............................................................... 396 He, Lili....................................................... 195, 336, 399 He, Yi......................................................................... 102 Hedgepeth, William................... 62, 63, 64, 96, 215, 216 Heineman, William R................................................. 126 Heinisch, Sabine....................................................... 219 Hellriegel, Edward..................................................... 371 Helmy, Roy.......................................................... 56, 250 Henion, Jack.............................................................. 278 Henry, Jessica S........................................................ 194 Henry, Richard A................................................ 171, 173 Henry, Theodore........................................................ 185 Hernandez-Viezcas, Jose.......................................... 183 Hieftje, Gary M.......................................................... 123 Hietpas, Jack............................................................. 341 Higgins, John P............................................................ 38 Higham-Latshaw, Alina.............................................. 245 Hildenbrand, Zacariah L............................................ 417 Hill, Shannon B.......................................................... 190 Hirose, Tsunehisa........................................................ 84 Hiserodt, Richard............................................... 232, 251 Ho, Quynh................................................................. 262 Hoang, Khoa............................................................. 330 Hoefler, Frank............................................................ 172 Hoffmann, Markus..................................................... 263 Højen-Sørensen, Pedro ........................................... 321 Homem, Paula............................................................. 21 Hong, Jing..........................................................113, 117 Hong, Jinsoo............................................................. 299 Hong, Seung Beom................................................... 249 Hop, Cornelius E.C.A................................................ 262 Hou, Guangjin........................................................... 315 Howie, Tucker............................................................ 450 Hu, Qichi.................................................................... 289 Hua, Yimin............................................................. 10, 11 Huang, Jinmo.............................................................. 67 Huang, Xiaohua......................................................... 452 Huang, Yande.............................................................. 61 Huby, Francois........................................................... 282 Hudalla, Christopher J................................................. 41 Huff, Chris.................................................................. 337 Hulmes, Jeffrey.......................................................... 370 Hussain, Samina......................................................... 17 Hussam, Abul............................................................ 299 Huynh-Ba, Kim.......................................................... 129 Hvizd, Michae...................................................... 80, 218 I Iida, Tetsuo................................................................ 216 Ilott, Andrew J.............................................................. 53 Ingólfsson, Oddur ..................................................... 188 Irin, Fahmida............................................................. 184

69

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Isaac, Giorgis............................................................ 153 Isenberg, Samantha.................................................. 264 Ishii, Yoshitaka........................................................... 323 Islam, Syed K............................................................ 408 Iversen, Daniel.......................................................... 394 Iwunze, Maurice O.................................................... 343 Izmitli, Aslin.................................................................. 50 J Jack, Richard............................................................... 48 Janakiraman, Sruthi.................................................. 366 Jaroniec, Christopher P............................................. 324 Jaroszewicz, Michael J................................................ 51 Jenkins, Julie A.......................................................... 406 Jensen, David S........................................................ 230 Jerschow, Alexej ......................................................... 53 Jespersen, Neil.......................................................... 402 Jestel, Nancy L............................................................ 37 Jha, Diwaker................................................................ 24 Ji, Qin................................................................ 277, 293 Jiang, Hao................................................................. 294 Jiang, Kunqiang......................................................... 220 Jin, Mingzhou............................................................ 290 Jobes, Olivia.............................................................. 337 Johnson, Jay S.......................................................... 309 Johnson, Kelly S........................................................ 171 Johnson, Kim............................................................. 452 Johnson, Mary Ann.................................................... 367 Jonsson, Tobias........................................................... 79 Joseph, Maureen....................................................... 176 Joshi, Amit A.............................................................. 252 Joshi, Monica.............................................................. 14 Jurek, Anne............................................................... 412 K Kadiyala, Pathanjali................................................... 293 Kahler, Ty W................................................................ 82 Kakaley, Jeffrey A................................................ 98, 255 Kammrath, Brooke W.................................................. 25 Kang, Pilsoo................................................................ 10 Karawdeniya, Buddini Iroshika ................................. 265 Karney, Michael......................................................... 394 Karry, Krizia................................................................. 32 Kasson, Peter M........................................................ 314 Katkam, Adhitya R..................................................... 258 Kazakevich, Yuri V....................................................... 90 Keefe, Edward........................................................... 141 Keeler, Eric................................................................ 266 Keenan, Fergus......................................................... 352 Kennedy, Raymond................................................... 350 Kennedy, Robert T..................................................... 270 Kettle, Aaron....................................... 116, 117, 118, 119 Khojasteh, S. Cyrus................................................... 262 Kim, Croes................................................................. 382 Kim, Ki Cheol............................................................. 249

Kim, Una.................................................................... 420 Kim, Wook................................................................. 249 Kimata, Kazuhiro......................................................... 84 Kinahan, Cristina....................................................... 397 Kirschling, Teresa...................................................... 185 Kita, Catherine A................................................. 85, 306 Kjoller, Kevin.............................................................. 289 Klausmeyer, Philip..................................................... 133 Klohr, Steve............................................................... 242 Klopp, Daniel............................................................. 418 Klopper, Reynhardt.................................................... 120 Knutsen, Chris........................................................... 242 Kobilinsky, Lawrence..................................................... 2 Kocaoba, Sevgi......................................................... 122 Kochling, Jianmei.................................................. 10, 11 Kohler, David............................................................. 160 Kohling, Rudolf............................................................ 87 Komlosh, Arthur........................................................... 75 Koomer, Ajoy............................................................. 201 Koppenaal, David W.................................................. 125 Kotulak, Nicole A....................................................... 187 Krajewski, James...................................................... 302 Krause, Colleen E..................................................... 253 Krishnamurthy, Girija................................................. 430 Krispin, Revital............................................................ 75 Krotulski, Alex J......................................................... 110 Krueger, Susan.......................................................... 150 Kubic, Thomas A......................................................... 31 Kuehl, Christopher..................................................... 161 Kuiper, Damien.......................................................... 258 Kumar, Brijesh........................................................... 224 Kumar, Challa V......................................................... 252 Kurochka, Iryna..........................................................111 Kurti, Marin................................................................ 102 Kwajewski, David A..................................................... 72 Kwong, Gabriel A....................................................... 373 L LaCroix, Nathan M...................................................... 41 Lagalante, Anthony...................................................... 23 Lamm, Matthew......................................................... 159 Langford, Vaughan s................................................. 438 Lanzarotta, Adam C................................................... 166 Larkin, Selena S........................................................ 292 Latour, Gaël....................................................... 168, 291 Lavach, Mark............................................................. 100 Le, Hoa...................................................................... 262 Leary, Pauline E.................................................. 30, 164 Lednev, Igor K..................................................... 26, 179 Lehmann, Kevin K..................................................... 403 Leidy, Oksana.............................................................. 58 Lentz, David................................................................ 79 Leona, Marco........................................................ 4, 170 Leopold, Craig T........................................................ 256 Lewen, Nancy.............................................................. 18

70

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Lewis, Neil................................................................. 136 Li, Hang..................................................................... 331 Li, Jing............................................................... 251, 405 Li, Jinjiang................................................................. 372 Li, Qun....................................................................... 405 Li, Xuefeng.................................................................. 14 Li, Yejia...................................................................... 100 Li, Zheng (Eric).......................................................... 389 Li, Zhengxin............................................................... 191 Liakat, Sabbir............................................................ 335 Liang, Haida.............................................................. 134 Liang, Xiaorong......................................................... 262 Liao, Xiaolu................................................................ 206 Lieberman, Marya..................................................... 165 Lin, Jia-Ming.............................................................. 368 Lin, Leu-Fen.............................................................. 370 Link, Jason........................................................ 101, 176 Lippincott, Lee........................................................... 354 Liu, Ang..................................................................... 437 Liu, Benjamin K......................................................... 149 Liu, Guowen.............................................................. 293 Liu, Jane.................................................................... 293 Liu, Jia......................................................................... 12 Liu, Lina....................................................................... 56 Liu, Min...................................................................... 326 Liu, Oscar.................................................................... 71 Liu, Xiaohong............................................................ 452 Liu, Yue...................................................................... 189 Llinàs, Antonio .......................................................... 357 Lloyd, David K........................................................... 199 Lo, Lili........................................................................ 363 Lo, Michael................................................................ 289 Lobsiger, Simon......................................................... 403 Lobue, Peter A............................................................. 65 Lockerman, Robert L................................................. 394 Lockwood, Mark........................................................ 258 Logan, Barry K...................................111, 283, 284, 286 Logue, Brian A........................................................... 174 Lohidasan, Sathiyanarayanan .................................. 223 Lok, David................................................................. 254 Lombardi, John R.............................................. 170, 408 Londero, Pablo.......................................................... 170 Long, William J.................................................. 101, 176 Lopez, Linda...............................................118, 211, 311 Lu, Feng.................................................................... 290 Lu, Jun-Xia................................................................ 325 Lu, Michael.................................................................. 13 Lu, Tian........................................................................ 97 Lu, Xiaofei........................................................... 99, 213 Lu, Xujin............................................................ 363, 439 Lucas, Derick............................................................. 435 Lucatorto, Thomas B................................................. 190 Luo, Linlin.................................................................. 294 Lupu, Loredana M..................................................... 238 Lupulescu, Adonis....................................................... 51

Lute, John.................................................................. 437 Lynch, Chris............................................................... 243 Lynch, Jen................................................................. 365 M Ma, Changchu........................................................... 336 Ma, Shengli............................................................... 392 Mabry, Mark......................................................... 33, 365 MacConnell, Cat.......................................................... 38 MacCuspie, Robert.................................................... 185 Machtejevas, Egidijus................................................ 177 Mack, Anne E............................................ 101, 176, 220 Macnaughtan, Megan................................................ 158 Madden, John............................................................ 398 Maeder, Marcel.......................................................... 274 Magitti III, Alex L........................................................ 284 Magni, Paolo............................................................... 47 Mahadik, Kakasaheb R. ........................................... 223 Mahe, Pierre.............................................................. 337 Mallam, Venkataiah................................................... 174 Manheim, Jeremy M.................................................... 26 Mansour, Tarek R...................................................... 331 Mao, Shuli................................................................. 258 Mao, Yun................................................................... 217 Marbella, Lauren....................................................... 268 Marco, Stephanie...................................................... 326 Marcott, Curtis........................................................... 289 Marcus, R. Kenneth................................................... 124 Marcuse, Monica....................................................... 256 Mares, Mollie M..........................................................111 Mariani, Frances-Acevedo........................................ 326 Marigliano, Art....................................................... 81, 82 Marintchev, Assen..................................................... 317 Marintcheva, Boriana................................................ 317 Marmor, Bonnie................................................... 27, 105 Marota, Melanie J...................................................... 367 Marques, Rosemary.................................................. 250 Marquez, Brian L....................................................... 361 Marshall, Jonathan...................................................... 61 Martin, Gary E. ......................................................... 250 Martin, Gregory P....................................................... 312 Martin, Timothy.......................................................... 257 Martins, Ana.............................................................. 167 Martosella, James............................................... 12, 220 Masiuk, Tina................................................................ 71 Masterson, Caitlyn..................................................... 265 Masud, Aisha............................................................. 338 Masuda, Junichi........................................................ 216 Mathe, Michelle........................................................... 58 Mather, Joanne............................................ 27, 105, 219 Mathia, Thomas G....................................................... 24 Matthews, Darren...................................................... 358 Mayo, William E......................................................... 163 Mays, Douglas........................................................... 299 Mazzochette, Zahilis.................................................. 381

71

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

McCandlish, Elizabeth ...................................... 326, 354 McCauley, Edward B................................................... 47 McDaniel, Dave................................................... 73, 409 McDonald, Thomas S................................................ 309 McElwee-White, Lisa......................................... 188, 305 McEwen, Charles N................................................... 330 McGregor, Laura............................................... 348, 414 McKay, Richard A...................................................... 139 McKellop, Keith B...................................................... 235 McLaughlin, Greg................................................ 26, 179 McLoughlin, Mark...................................................... 392 McMullin, Matthew M................................................. 284 McNamara, Daniel....................................................... 53 McNamara, Keri Joy.................................................... 56 McNeff, Clayton......................................................... 171 Meade, Jeffrey T.......................................................... 40 Meang, Joo................................................................ 106 Mehl, John................................................................. 261 Mehlmann, Florence.................................................. 100 Meyer, Robert F........................................................... 38 Michael, Joseph........................................................ 214 Middleberg, Robert.................................................... 286 Mierzwa, Jerzy........................................................... 401 Miles, William L...................................................... 91, 92 Miller, Charles E.......................................................... 38 Miller, Scott.................................................................. 61 Miller, Timothy........................................................... 189 Milligan, Daniel B....................................................... 438 Millstone, Jill E........................................................... 268 Milutinovic, Milena Dumont....................................... 373 Miranda, Michelle...................................................... 340 Mireless, Matthew..................................................... 245 Mitchell, Joseph......................................................... 100 Mitra, Somenath........................................................ 441 Mohr, Mandi........................................................111, 283 Mole, Jon................................................... 356, 357, 358 Molnar, Imre L........................................................... 307 Moncur, John............................................................. 236 Moore, Eric................................................................ 325 Moran, Robert E.................................................... 91, 92 Morgan, Stephen L.................................................... 178 Moroney, Elizabeth C.................................................. 54 Morrical, Bradley D.................................................... 160 Moses, Mike...................................................... 103, 412 Moss, Brenna............................................................ 337 Mousavi, Maral P.S.................................................... 269 Muckle, Matthew T............................................... 73, 409 Mugweru, Amos......................................................... 381 Mulder, Teresa........................................................... 262 Muratore, Katlynn...................................................... 384 Murphy, Denette.................................................. 53, 366 Murphy, James P....................................................... 309 Murphy, Michael........................................................ 205 Murray, Dylan............................................................ 325 Musse, Ahmed........................................................... 410

Myers, Emily A........................................................... 247 N Nacham, Omprakash................................................ 434 Nadig, David E.......................................................... 425 Nadkarni, Devika....................................................... 317 Nafie, Laurence A.......................................................... 6 Nag, Nabanita........................................................... 317 Nagarkar, Shailesh P................................................... 29 Naik, Hemantkumar................................................... 374 Namespetra, Andrew M............................................... 51 Narasimhan, Chakravarthy ....................................... 229 Narayanan, Hari................................................ 390, 391 Nashine, Vishal.......................................................... 372 Natchus, Michael G................................................... 258 Neely, Matthew W.................................................. 60, 76 Neill, Justin L....................................................... 73, 409 Neri, Claudia.............................................................. 217 Neverovitch, Mariann............................................ 54, 55 Nevin, Austin............................................................. 169 Ng, Linda................................................................... 128 Ngan, Kevin C........................................................... 373 Ngounou Wetie, Armand G........................ 267, 377, 378 Noda, Isao................................................................. 7, 8 Norbutus, Amanda....................................................... 23 Nørgaard, Lars.......................................................... 321 Norman, Mark............................................................ 448 Norwood, Daniel................................................ 235, 275 Nosowitz, Martin................................................ 100, 347 Novak, Julie M..................................................... 58, 367 Nowlan, Daniel.......................................................... 171 O O’Brien, Ann M.......................................................... 332 O’Connor, Abby R...................................................... 146 Oda, Robert P............................................................ 174 Okafor, Anne E.......................................................... 402 Olah, Timothy............................................................ 261 Olesik, Susan............................................................ 279 Oliveira, Regina......................................................... 278 Olusanmi, Dolapo........................................................ 53 Omari, Emmanuel O.................................................. 231 Ono, Toshi................................................................... 84 Oomens, Jos............................................................. 420 Opila, Robert L.................................................. 187, 302 Otieno, Brunah A....................................................... 253 Özyürek, Mustafa ..................................................... 222 P Packard, Kelsey A..................................................... 194 Pai, Jennifer................................................................ 38 Paine, Emily.............................................................. 244 Pak, Grace................................................................ 257 Palenik, Skip.............................................................. 342 Pallem, Venkateswara............................................... 302 Pan, Duohai............................................................... 366

72

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Pandey, Renu............................................................ 224 Panetta, Terry.............................................................. 59 Panikar, Savitha S....................................................... 36 Panzade, Prasad......................................................... 29 Papsin, Kaitlin............................................................ 420 Papsun, Donna.......................................................... 286 Parella, Teodor.......................................................... 453 Parra, Amanda.......................................................... 184 Parshley, Rachel.......................................................... 44 Pate, Brooks H............................................ 73, 403, 409 Patel, Anisha............................................................. 366 Patel, Jagruti............................................................... 86 Patel, Jayshree.......................................................... 242 Patel, Payal............................................................... 384 Patel, Sanjaykumar..................................................... 69 Pawliszyn, Janusz..................................................... 432 Pearson, Terry W....................................................... 292 Peavy, Kathryn.......................................................... 110 Peczuh, Mark W........................................................ 252 Peddicord, Michael...................................................... 61 Pedersen, Morten With.............................................. 321 Pedjie, Njies.............................................................. 446 Pekol, Teresa............................................................. 374 Pelczer, Istvan........................................................... 149 Penello, Germano..................................................... 410 Penn, Lara D............................................................... 58 Pennington, Justin....................................... 86, 359, 400 Pennino, Scott........................................................... 235 Perati, Pranathi R...............................113, 116, 117, 349 Pereira, Sarah J................................................ 214, 407 Pereira, Tony............................................................. 250 Pérez De Jesús, Carlos E. ....................................... 269 Perez, Cristobal......................................................... 403 Perkins, Christopher R.............................................. 231 Perkins, George........................................................ 236 Peter-Katalinic, Jasna............................................... 239 Petersen, Elijah......................................................... 185 Pfannkoch, Edward A........................................ 112, 386 Pfeuffer, Kevin P........................................................ 123 Phatak, Sumedh P..................................................... 351 Phyo, Pyae................................................................ 266 Pica, Karen................................................................ 367 Pillutla, Renuka........................................................... 14 Pinkston, J. David...................................................... 154 Pitluk, Zachary........................................................... 162 Piwowazrczyk, Thiago Assan ..................................... 22 Plante, Marc............................ 60, 76, 80, 218, 225, 226 Pochiraju, Alekhya....................................................... 11 Pohl, Christopher....................................................... 298 Polenova, Tatyana..................................................... 315 Ponce, Steven........................................................... 439 Pophristic, Milan........................................................ 330 Porter III, George E................................................... 391 Potapov, Alexey......................................................... 325 Potter, Oscar............................................................... 12

Prater, Craig...................................................... 288, 289 Pressler, Michelle...................................................... 334 Prince, Barry J........................................................... 438 Pritchett, Thomas H................................................... 247 Procter, Stuart J......................................................... 404 Proni, Gloria...................................................... 106, 397 Provatas, Anthony A.......................................... 231, 241 Przybyciel, Matthew.................................................... 74 Pu, Elaine.................................................................... 71 Pulliam, Robin L.................................................. 73, 409 Puri, Aastha............................................................... 372 Puxty, Graeme........................................................... 271 Pyron, Lindsey................................................... 103, 412 Q Qi, Frank.................................................................... 425 Qiu, Changling........................................................... 193 Quimby, Lisa.............................................................. 144 Quinn, Shaun.............................................................. 46 R Rabolt, John.................................................................. 8 Ragunath, Smruti...................................................... 441 Rahman, Anis............................................................ 338 Rahman, Aunik.......................................................... 338 Rai, Sanjeev.............................................................. 354 Ramachandran, Rohit................................................. 36 Ramanathan, Dil................................................ 233, 296 Ramasamy, Mano........................................................ 38 Ramsey, Jane............................................................ 394 Rana, Hetal............................................................... 296 Randall, Cynthia S..................................................... 201 Ranieri, Nicola........................................................... 166 Rao, Babar................................................................ 338 Rao, Venkatramana..................................................... 53 Rarig Jr., Randy S....................................................... 18 Rasmussen, Henrik T................................................ 425 Rathore, Atul S.......................................................... 223 Ratsep, Peter........................................................ 64, 96 Ray, Steven J............................................................ 123 Raynie, Douglas........................................ 193, 433, 443 Razavi, Morteza........................................................ 292 Reddy, Prabhakar G.................................................. 258 Reddy, Sharanya......................................................... 27 Redígolo, Marcelo Myada .......................................... 22 Reeves, Jonathan..................................................... 385 Reffner, John A.................................... 30, 137, 164, 458 Regalado, Erik L................................................ 281, 310 Reily, Michael............................................................ 452 Renner, Chuck........................................................... 438 Reuter, Wilhad M......................................................... 77 Reutt-Robey, Janice.................................................. 304 Rey, Maria................................................................. 172 Reynaud, Sara.......................................................... 108 Reynolds, Roger.................................................. 73, 409

73

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Rhodes, Timothy......................................................... 56 Rice, Charles V.......................................................... 157 Rice, Timothy............................................................. 428 Richardson, Daisy..................................................... 229 Richter, Bruce............................................................ 435 Ridge, Douglas.......................................................... 420 Riegel, Susanne.................................................. 43, 192 Rieger, Hans-Jürgen ................................................ 307 Ritchie, Gary.............................................................. 427 Rizzo, Joseph............................................................ 229 Roberts, Kevin........................................................... 178 Roberts, Stephen...................................................... 236 Robinet, Laurianne............................................ 168, 291 Robinson, Ron........................................................... 337 Robotham, Claude...................................................... 33 Robu, Adrian C.......................................................... 239 Roca, Maryuri............................................................ 144 Rock, Barrett N.......................................................... 221 Rodriguez, Shirley A.................................................. 235 Rodriguez-Reyes, Juan Carlos F. ............................. 368 Roman, Gregory........................................................ 309 Rooney, Wonmi K...................................................... 376 Roongta, Vikram........................................................ 452 Root, Denise.............................................................. 391 Rosenberg, Samantha.............................................. 305 Rowe, Garrett............................................................ 204 Rowlett, Roger S....................................................... 145 Roy, Urmi................................................................... 267 Rozario, Joan............................................................ 299 Rubinovitz, Ronald.................................................... 104 Rubinstein, Ellen....................................................... 384 Ruiz, Rebeca............................................. 356, 357, 358 Rusling, James F............................................... 252, 253 Russell, Thomas A..................................................... 295 Rutherford, Marlon.................................................... 360 Rutter, Hanna........................................................ 81, 82 Ryan, Jeanne P. ....................................................... 377 S Saed, Mohammad..................................................... 184 Sahu, Debashish....................................................... 316 Saindane, Manohar................................................... 258 Sander, Elizabeth........................................................ 58 Sanders, Kevin.......................................................... 266 Sandre, Anthony R...................................................... 51 Sank, Michael.............................................................. 14 Santiago, Brandon..................................................... 264 Santoro, Massimo......................................... 47, 48, 196 Santos, Leonel.......................................................... 130 Sarbu, Mirela............................................................. 239 Sauri, Josep.............................................................. 453 Savizky, Ruben M........................................................ 28 Sawicki, Ian............................................................... 198 Scandone, Marie....................................................... 383 Schanne-Klein, Marie-Claire ............................ 168, 291

Scherholz, Megerle................................................... 141 Schiksnis, Robert A................................................... 395 Schilling, Gregory T................................................... 123 Schlam, Roxana F............................................... 66, 366 Schmidt, Michelle L................................................... 445 Schmitt, Paul D............................................................ 70 Schneider, Sallie S.................................................... 378 Schreiber, Nikolas J................................................... 187 Schreyer, Suzanne............................................ 180, 334 Schug, Kevin A.......................................... 198, 417, 419 Schurko, Robert W...................................................... 51 Schuster, Stephanie A........................................... 91, 92 Scott, John.......................................................... 20, 456 Scott, Karen............................................................... 285 Seabrooks, Lauren............................................ 359, 400 Seelenbinder, John.................................................... 447 Seeley, Craig............................................................. 352 Sejwal, Preeti.............................................................. 95 Semian, Zachary M................................................... 375 Semyonov, Alexander N.............................................. 47 Serrano, Gustavo...................................................... 416 Shackman, Holly M................................................... 199 Shah, Samir................................................................. 71 Shameem, Mohammed ............................................ 229 Shanks, Kathy........................................................... 142 Shao, Joe.................................................................... 95 Sharma, Raman.......................................................... 49 Shearrow, Anne......................................................... 404 Shelley, Jacob T......................................................... 123 Shelley, Paul.............................................................. 450 Shen, Jim.................................................................. 293 Shi, Shuai.................................................................. 229 Shirey, Robert............................................................ 442 Shollenberger, Dan.................................................... 416 Shortle, Walter C....................................................... 221 Shortridge, Virginia D................................................ 337 Showalter, Scott A..................................................... 316 Shrestha, Bindesh..................................................... 331 Shu, Yue-Zong........................................................... 452 Siano, Salvatore........................................................ 132 Sidali, Khedidji........................................................... 382 Sidisky, Len....................................................... 416, 442 Simpson, Garth J......................................................... 70 Sims, Jonathan L......................................................... 16 Singh, Ajay P.............................................................. 237 Singh, Sushmeet......................................................... 59 Sinko, Balint................................................................ 72 Slaa, Jared ................................................................. 40 Slingsby, Rosanne..............................................113, 117 Smith, Forrest............................................................ 107 Smith, Kydric............................................................. 245 Smith-Goettler, Brandye............................................ 426 Smuts, Jonathan....................................... 417, 418, 419 Snow, Nicholas H...................................................... 445 Sobkow, Ernest J................................................. 98, 255

74

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Sohel, Mohammad A................................................. 408 Sokolowska, Izabela.......................................... 267, 377 Solandt, Johan.......................................................... 357 Solorzano, Mauro...................................................... 206 Song, Xinjie................................................................. 59 Soni, Ishan V............................................................. 375 Spencer, Julie A................................................. 188, 305 Spraggins, Jeffrey...................................................... 333 Squillario, Stacy......................................................... 175 Srinivasan, Kannan................................................... 116 Stark, Ken D.................................................................. 1 Stephan, Chady......................................................... 353 Steve, Justin.............................................................. 212 Stockton, Brian.......................................................... 358 Stopka, Sylwia A........................................................ 331 Stuart, James D................................................. 231, 241 Stuff, John R.............................................. 112, 240, 386 Sturgeon, Susan R. ................................................. 378 Sturm, Robert............................................................ 278 Stutelberg, Michael W............................................... 174 Sullivan, Leslie.......................................................... 236 Sundararajan, Pavithra.............................................. 367 Susz, Anna................................................................ 160 Swinney, Kelly A........................................................ 425 Szczepanowska, Hanna.............................................. 24 T Talbott, Randy........................................................... 261 Tami, Kristi................................................................. 397 Tanaka, Kenichiro...................... 62, 63, 64, 96, 215, 216 Tarkin-Tas, Eylem........................................................ 37 Tattersall, Peter I....................................................... 360 Taylor, Dymere...........................................................111 Taylor, Jeffrey............................................................ 243 Taylor, Larry T............................................................ 153 Taylor, Lynne S.................................................... 70, 356 Taylor, Robert............................................ 356, 357, 358 Tehler, Ulrika.............................................................. 357 Teplyakov, Andrew..................................... 186, 189, 368 Thaxton, Kurt C......................................................... 386 Thomas, David H........................................... 60, 76, 218 Thompson, William.................................................... 389 Thorman, Rachel....................................................... 188 Thota, Sravan............................................................ 406 Thurber, Kent............................................................. 325 Tian, Fang................................................................. 155 Tian, Xiangdong........................................................ 406 Titsch, Craig A........................................................... 294 Tokarski, Caroline...................................................... 169 Tomellini, Sterling A........................................... 194, 221 Tong, Weidong............................................................. 57 Tracey, Ashley........................................................... 450 Traeger, Sarah........................................................... 452 Trasi, Niraj S................................................................ 70 Trivedi, Gayatri............................................................ 59

Tseng, Ken.................................................................. 84 Tufan, Ayşe Nur ........................................................ 222 Tycko, Robert............................................................ 325 Tyrrel-Pawlowic, Casey A.......................................... 242 U Ubben, Johanna........................................................ 415 Ubhayakar, Savita..................................................... 262 Ullah, Rahamt............................................................ 116 V Vahey, Paul................................................................ 450 Valente, Andreia........................................................ 326 Valentini, Gianluca..................................................... 169 Valet, Oliver............................................................... 200 Valetutti, Michael......................................................... 25 Van Anda, Jennifer.................................................... 280 van Belkum, Alex....................................................... 337 van de Plas, Raf........................................................ 333 van der Snickt, Geert................................................. 167 van Driel, Birgit.......................................................... 167 van Dyk, Antony.......................................................... 50 Varnell, Deborah M.................................................... 410 Vasoya, Nikunj........................................................... 242 Velleco, Brian D......................................................... 265 Verma, Shyam............................................................. 87 Verman, Monika........................................................ 211 Vertes, Akos.............................................................. 331 Vezin, Hervé.............................................................. 169 Victor, Tiffany............................................................. 411 Villafana, Tana........................................................... 135 Vlaicu, Aurel.............................................................. 239 von Lampe, Klaus...................................................... 102 Vorsa, Nicholi............................................................ 237 W Waldron, Michael....................................................... 293 Walker, Gregory........................................................... 49 Walsh, Phillip..................................... 198, 417, 418, 419 Walt, David R............................................................. 373 Wang, Enju................................................................ 402 Wang, George........................................................... 199 Wang, Jian................................................................. 437 Wang, Sean............................................................... 405 Wang, Shuai................................................................ 49 Wang, Xiaoli.............................................................. 176 Wang, Xu................................................................... 156 Wang, Yifei................................................................ 237 Wang, Zhenyu............................................................. 71 Warren, Andrew D..................................................... 373 Warren, Warren......................................................... 135 Watabe, Yoshiyuki..................................................... 216 Watson, Nicola.......................................... 115, 348, 414 Watts, Kristen.............................................................. 23 Weiland, Conan......................................................... 302 Weisbecker, Carl S.................................................... 234

75

2014 EAS Final Program

Author Index

Welch, Christopher J................................. 281, 310, 429 Weliky, David............................................................. 322 Westerbuhr, Sarah G................................................... 65 Westerhaus, Mark..................................................... 318 Whelan, Julie C......................................................... 265 White, Alex................................................................ 364 White, Jason C.................................................. 182, 185 Whitecavage, Jacqueline.................................. 112, 240 Wietecha-Reiman, Ian............................................... 110 Wikfors, Rick.............................................................. 280 Willard, Peter............................................................... 89 Williams, Mackenzie G.............................................. 189 Williams, Molly B....................................................... 231 Williamsen, Eric..................................................... 88, 89 Williamson, Robert T.................................................. 250 Wishnies, Steve......................................................... 215 Wolf, Sarah E............................................................ 257 Wong, Kenneth............................................................ 59 Wood, Laura.............................................................. 102 Woods, Alisa G.......................................... 227, 267, 377 Woods, Callie M........................................................ 335 Wormwood, Kelly L.................................................... 227 Wormwood, Kelly L.................................................... 377 Wright, Nathan........................................................... 148 Wu, Chi-San.............................................................. 389 Wu, Fan....................................................................... 97 Wu, Jiaqi.................................................................... 431 Wu, Naijun......................................................... 281, 296 Wu, Suyang................................................................. 36 Wu, Zhen................................................................... 199 Wylie, Jennifer........................................................... 359 X Xiao, Hang................................................................. 336 Xiao, Shan................................................................. 360 Xie, Jingjing............................................................... 114 Xing, Baoshan........................................................... 185 Xu, Wei...................................................................... 367 Xu, Weifeng................................................................. 14 Xu, Xiaohui................................................................ 293 Y Yamabe, Keiko............................................................ 63 Yang, Dan.................................................................. 302 Yang, Dawn......................................................... 34, 449 Yang, Hua...................................................211, 311, 349 Yang, Ill...................................................................... 326 Yang, Ying................................................................. 251 Yao, Hua.................................................................... 300 Yau, Wai-Ming........................................................... 325 Yeakel, Jillian K......................................................... 283 Yeh, Peter.................................................................... 78 Yeudakimau, Aliaksandr V. ....................................... 231 Yin, Shawn................................................................ 366 Yoo, Ho Yeon..................................................... 202, 388

Young, Ian................................................................... 66 Young, Joel.......................................................... 42, 143 Yu, Honglian.............................................................. 434 Yu, Jielin.................................................................... 317 Yu, Shenjiang............................................................ 229 Yu, Songling.............................................................. 206 Yuk, Jimmy................................................................ 451 Z Zaidi, Kahkashan......................................................... 19 Zamfir, Alina D........................................................... 239 Zavich, David..................................................... 121, 362 Zeng, Jianing..................................................... 294, 380 Zhang, Chenghong.................................................... 262 Zhang, Haiying.......................................................... 452 Zhang, Hua................................................................ 195 Zhang, Ji.................................................................... 254 Zhang, Jing................................................................ 217 Zhang, Kelly.............................................................. 436 Zhang, Lin................................................................. 180 Zhang, Qi............................................. 76, 218, 225, 226 Zhang, Shijie............................................................... 70 Zhang, Yingru.............................................................. 95 Zhang, Zhiyun........................................................... 399 Zhang-Plasket, Fran.................................................... 38 Zhao, Jian.................................................................. 185 Zhao, Jing.......................................................... 368, 406 Zhao, Linjuan............................................................. 109 Zhao, Xiaowen.......................................................... 406 Zhao, Zheng.............................................................. 217 Zheng, Mei................................................................ 410 Zheng, Naiyu............................................................. 380 Zheng, Songyan........................................................ 372 Zhong, Wendy........................................................... 217 Zhou, Kaimeng.......................................................... 217 Zhou, Philip....................................................... 387, 449 Zhou, Si............................................................. 114, 213 Zhou, Yadong............................................................ 406 Zhu, Zhuo.......................................................... 213, 214 Zordan, Christopher.................................................. 439 Zou, Shengli.............................................................. 406 Zukowski, Janusz...................................................... 230 Zuo, Ruiting............................................................... 213 Zuo, Yuegang........................ 93, 94, 114, 213, 214, 407 Zweigenbaum, Jerry.................................................. 435

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FLOOR PLAN OF THE HOLIDAY INN SOMERSET HOTEL

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FLOOR PLAN OF THE DoubleTree SOMERSET HOTEL

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79 EXPOSITION HOURS: 9 am - 4 pm Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

November 17 - 19, 2014 Monday-Wednesday

Garden State Convention Center, Somerset, NJ

[An IRS 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Educational Organization Managed by Volunteer Scientists]

2014 EASTERN ANALYTICAL SYMPOSIUM & EXPOSITION

Garden State Convention Center

2014 EAS Final Program Floor Plans

2014 Eastern Analytical Symposium & Exposition Floor Plan

Visit These Exhibitors at the 2014 EAS Last updated October 31, 2014 Advion Agilent Technologies Inc. Airgas USA LLC Alicat Scientific American Chemical Society’s   New York Section AmericanLab/Labcompare American Pharmaceutical Review Anasys Instruments Anton Paar USA AquaLab by Decagon Arizona Instrument LLC Axiom Analytical B&W Tek Baseline Service LLC Biocompare BiOptix BioScreen Testing Services Biotage BioTools BrightSpec Bruker Carltex, Inc. CAS CEM Corporation Cerilliant Corporation Chata Biosystems Chemglass Life Sciences Chromatography Forum of the Delaware  Valley Coblentz Society Compco Analytical Cosa Xentaur Corporation Defiant Technologies DigiPol Technologies Dissolution Technologies Distek, Inc. Doty Scientific D-ploy USA Electronic Imaging Materials Elemental Scientific EMD Millipore Erlab ES Industries EST Analytical Exova Americas Flow Sciences, Inc.

Fluid Imaging Technologies GenTech Scientific Gerstel, Inc. Glas-Col Global Pharma Analytics Greenwood Products Hamilton Robotics Hanna Instruments Harrick Scientific HI Scientific Services Intelligent Weighing Technology IonSense, Inc. Jade Scientific JEOL USA, Inc. J.G. Finneran Associates Joule Scientific Kimble Chase Kinesis LabCompare/PharmaCompare Lab Manager Magazine Labman Automation, Ltd. Laboratory Equipment Lab Support LabX LCGC America LC*GC/Spectroscopy LEAP Technologies Leco Corporation LGC Standards Mac-Mod Analytical Macherey-Nagel, Inc. Magritek Markes International Metrohm USA Mettler Toledo MicroLiter Analytical Supplies, Inc. MicroSolv Technology Milestone Molnar Institute Nacalai USA Nanalysis Neopharm Labs New Era Enterprises, Inc New York Microscopical Society North Jersey Section of ACS Oxford Instruments Pace Analytical

Pall Life Sciences PANalytical Parker Hannifin PerkinElmer pION, Inc. Polytec, Inc. Quantum Analytics Rap. ID Inc. Reaction Analytics Renishaw Restek Rigaku Americas Rigaku Raman Technologies Rudolph Research Analytical Scientech Laboratories SCP SCIENCE SGS Life Sciences Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, Inc. Sino-American Pharmaceutical   Professionals Association Sirius Analytical Solvias AG Sonntek, Inc. Sotax Corporation Specialty Gas Report Spectroscopy Magazine Spectrum Chemicals SPEware Corporation Students 2 Science Supelco/Sigma-Aldrich TA Instruments Tecan U.S., Inc. Texas Scientific Products Thermo Scientific Triclinic Labs Tri-State Chinese American   Chemical Society USP (U.S. Pharmacopeia) Vortex Sales Group VUV Analytics Waters Corporation Wiley Wilmad-LabGlass Wilmington PharmaTech YMC Co., Ltd. Zef Scientific ZirChrom Separations, Inc.

Join us at the 2015 Eastern Analytical Symposium November 16-18, 2015 Somerset, NJ For more details contact Sheree Gold, Exposition Director at [email protected] or 610-742-4981

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