Devastating Water Leak Drives Move to Improve Sustainability
Maulide Group, University of Vienna, teamed up with Green Labs Austria after local devastating water leak drives move to improve sustainability.
Maulide Group, University of Vienna, teamed up with Green Labs Austria after local devastating water leak drives move to improve sustainability.
A new white paper, written by scientists at Liverpool ChiroChem (LCC), describes how the Asynt Illumin8 parallel photoreactor is being used to synthesise a range of new 2-Aryl N-Heterocycles.
Researchers from the School of Chemistry at the University of St Andrews (UK) are using a DrySyn Spiral Evaporator to help synthesize novel reactive colloidal nanoparticles that present an exciting tool to create a new generation of ‘smart’ nanomaterials.
Working closely with researchers at the Centrale Lille Institute in Lille, France – Asynt has developed and supplied two custom high-pressure reactors to assist them in their development of new advanced catalysts for biomass transformation.
Asynt has published a case study describing how the FroSyn Cooling Station has enabled John Bower’s Group at the University of Liverpool (UK) to reproducibly conduct low temperature enantioselective catalytic reactions, over an extended period of time.
Asynt announce the DrySyn Illumin8 – a new, beautifully engineered, 8-position parallel photoreactor for research chemists.
Asynt has supplied Polymer Mimetics (Liverpool, UK) with a range of synthetic chemistry equipment to exploit novel chemistries to produce a new generation of high performance polymers.
Asynt reports how Globachem Discovery (Alderley Park, UK) has benefited from the investment in ReactoMate reactor systems for the scale-up of novel agrochemicals.
We introduce the NEW Multicell PLUS: an exciting addition to the Asynt range of pressure reactors, offering scientists an extremely flexible and customisable device for screening chemical reactions under high pressure conditions.
The CondenSyn waterless condenser from Asynt has been widely adopted by the Technicians Sustainability Working Group (TSWG) operating within the Biomolecular Science and Medicinal Chemistry Division at Nottingham University (UK) as part of their drive to make teaching and research greener. The report shared demonstrates the staggering volume of water being saved as a result.