Carousel 6 improves productivity in chemistry lab
Radleys
The Carousel 6 Reaction Station is helping the Department of Chemistry at Sussex University save space and time.
Dr John Spencer, from the Department of Chemistry has invested in the Carousel 6 system for use by the ‘Spencer Group’, a research group interested in generating organic molecules.
The Spencer Group conducts research on the interface of chemistry and medicinal chemistry, making use of transition metal catalysis and microwave-mediated synthesis where possible, with particular emphasis on palladium and boron chemistry.
Commenting on their existing methods Dr Spencer said, “Before we invested in the Carousel 6, ourprocesses were slow and protracted due to a lack of available chemistry capacity. Laborious “analogue” bashing was creating frustrating bottlenecks in our drug discovery program.“
He went on to say “We chose the Carousel 6 because it does many things at once: It enables you to quicklyand efficiently “tweak” an interesting molecule in order to optimise its properties be it a catalyst or “hit/lead” in the drug discovery process.”
Having such a small footprint means the Carousel can easily fit in a fumehoodand it is well suited for departments with space constraints.
He added: ‘‘Not only is it ideal for parallel synthesis and library generation, but it can also be used for ’parallel teaching’ where three students can share a device and a fumehood, with space for 2 reactions each. The Carousel 6 has helped us greatly in our day-to-day work. In fact, synthetic outputs have probably quadrupled.”
More stories
Microwave chemistry benefits explained videodownloadweblink
CEM outlines the advantages of using microwave technology in the laboratory.
Heating stage aids crystal research
The THMS600 heating stage is being used for liquid crystal research at the University of the Free State in South Africa.
Thermal and magnetic transfer efficiency systems
Asynt has unveiled the latest version of its DrySyn Maxi and Super Maxi heat blocking system.
Imperial's search for better catalysts
Imperial College has selected the DrySyn MULTI and parallel synthesis kits to produce novel organometallic compounds.
Denator validates compatibility with MALDI
Denator AB’s heat-stabilisation system has been shown to be compatible with MALDI imaging analysis.






