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Product category: Chromatography accessories
News Release from: Anton Paar | Subject: Multiwave 3000
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial Team on 07 March 2005

Using microwaves to induce combustion

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System decomposes all kinds of combustible solids such as wood, paper, coal, food, polymers, organic compounds and even solid waste faster than any traditional method

The microwave-induced oxygen combustion system is said to deliver comparable results in less time than standard techniques in sample preparation for ion chromatography The system decomposes all kinds of combustible solids such as wood, paper, coal, food, polymers, organic compounds and even solid waste faster than any traditional method

UV-digestion of liquid samples in microwave reactors.

With this new Multiwave 3000 accessory, Anton Paar says it opens the door to a powerful sample preparation for the determination of metals, nitrogen or phosphorus in liquid samples.

Proven applications include drinking water, seawater, effluents, sewage, body fluids, beverages.

Significant cost reduction for solvent extraction.

New technologies applied in the microwave-assisted solvent extraction rotor reduce extraction times and solvent amounts.

This facilitates sample preparation at lower costs.

The Multiwave 3000 caries GS and ETL marks, certifying compliance with international safety standards.

Use it for the extraction of PCB, PAH and total petroleum hydrocarbons from environmental or food samples, standardized EPA methods, determination of fatty acids or dissolutions and extraction of polymers.

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