Lab equipment

3D print your lab equipment

21 July, 2017

Neuroscientists from the Universities of Tübingen and Sussex have developed 'FlyPi' — a low-cost imaging and microscope system for research, training and teaching.


Precisa analytical, benchtop and specialist application balances

20 July, 2017 | Supplied by: Scientex Pty Ltd

Precisa is a manufacturer of analytical, benchtop and specialist application balances that are suitable for research, QA and teaching labs.


Thermo Scientific Samco Clicktainer leakproof vials

19 July, 2017 | Supplied by: Thermo Fisher Scientific

The lid-lock design of the Thermo Scientific Samco Clicktainer vials makes them suitable for the secure transport of valuable and often hazardous clinical, research and forensic samples.


Fujitsu develops AI technology for CT inspections

03 July, 2017

Fujitsu Laboratories has developed a technology to retrieve similar disease cases from a computed tomography (CT) database of previously taken images.


Q-Sense analysis systems for measurement of surface-molecule interactions

01 July, 2017 | Supplied by: ATA Scientific Pty Ltd

Q-Sense offers a series of analysis systems designed to measure surface-molecule interactions in real time using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) monitoring technology.


Cancer-detecting probe enters clinical trial

29 June, 2017

A fibre-optic cancer-detecting probe that is said to improve clinical outcomes for patients has entered clinical trials thanks to assistance from Flinders biomedical engineers and state government funding.


Sartorius arium mini ultrapure water system

01 June, 2017 | Supplied by: Sartorius Australia Pty Ltd

The arium mini is a compact, ultrapure water system from Sartorius. With a width of only 28 cm and designed for labs needing less than 10 L per day, the product easily integrates into nearly any lab environment and is suitable for users currently buying HPLC- or WFI-grade water for laboratory use.


Omni GLH850 homogeniser

01 June, 2017 | Supplied by: Capella Science

The Omni GLH850 laboratory homogeniser is a high-performance instrument capable of processing virtually any laboratory sample in seconds. Even the toughest samples, such as bone, wood and seeds, can be easily processed.


Mystaire Isola series filtered chemical workstations

22 May, 2017 | Supplied by: AMT Group Australasia

Isola filtered chemical workstations are a series of high-efficiency products that provide protection to the end user and environment from hazardous chemical fumes and vapours.


ACCSI award for GeoPyc 1365

15 May, 2017 | Supplied by: Particle & Surface Sciences Pty Ltd

The Annual Conference of China Scientific Instruments (ACCSI) has recognised the Micromeritics GeoPyc 1365 as one of the leading new instruments introduced in China in 2017.


Chamber vs room monitoring: which temperature sensors are best for your application?

15 May, 2017 by Paul Daniel and Jon Aldous | Supplied by: Vaisala Oyj

Electronic recording of temperatures with data stored in the cloud is pretty standard, but the choice of sensor type is often overlooked.


maxon motor ENX EASY sterilisable encoder

10 May, 2017 | Supplied by: maxon motor Australia Pty Ltd

maxon motor has unveiled the ENX EASY sterilisable encoder for brushless DC motors, creating many opportunities for advances in medical technology.


maxon motor sterilisable motor, gear and encoder drive system

03 May, 2017 | Supplied by: maxon motor Australia Pty Ltd

maxon motor offers the combination of a brushless DC motor (BLDC motor), a planetary gearhead and a choice of incremental and absolute encoder, all assembled to order in a sterilisable form.


Biosan FTA-1 and FTA-2i aspirator systems

02 May, 2017 | Supplied by: Point of Care Diagnostics

Biosan's self-contained aspiration systems, the FTA-1 and FTA-2i, are designed for the removal of supernatants from microtest tubes during DNA/RNA purification and other centrifugation steps, as well as for cell culture aspiration in biological safety cabinets.


Star Wars superlaser steps out of sci-fi

01 May, 2017 | Supplied by: Macquarie University

Macquarie University researchers have proven a method for multiplying laser power using diamond, demonstrating that the superlaser from film franchise Star Wars may not remain in the realm of science fiction for much longer.


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