Raman spectrometer is customisable

A Thermo Fisher Scientific (Molecular Spectroscopy) product story
Edited by the Laboratorytalk editorial team Jul 26, 2004

Latest dispersive Raman instrument features non-contact, non-destructive analysis of both microscopic and macroscopic samples in a highly customisable, research-grade instrument

Used to determine the chemical and molecular characterisation of organic and inorganic materials, Thermo Electron's latest dispersive Raman spectrometer, the Nicolet Almega XR, features non-contact, non-destructive analysis of both microscopic and macroscopic samples in a highly customisable, research-grade spectroscopic instrument.

A user-friendly interface provides full control of system components and real-time experiment feedback.

The Nicolet Almega XR software identifies unknown spectra by accessing databases of over 15,000 compounds.

Raman spectra offer highly specific chemical information for a wide range of samples in industries such as pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and microelectronics, forensics, gems and minerals, polymers, and protective coatings.

The Nicolet Almega XR incorporates Thermo's new Omnic Atlus 7 software, which automates the collection of spatially-resolved spectra and allows chemical heterogeneity to be readily visualised and compared to visual features.

In addition, featuring a very small excitation laser spot size, the Nicolet Almega XR is most adept at Raman analysis of very small samples with reduced interfering fluorescence.

An integral confocal aperture yields exception control of fluorescence and high spatial resolution, and enables depth-profiling analysis.

The Nicolet Almega XR is designed to maximise productivity in the laboratory and provide powerful, user-friendly operation.

Automation of critical operations, including calibration, alignment, laser switching, and grating control, removes subjectivity from the analysis and saves valuable laboratory time.

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