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Newsletter
Volume 1, No. 2 Fall 2003 |
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In This
Issue
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Visit us on the Web at:
http://www.rigaku.com
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A
Word From Our President |
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Welcome to the
Rigaku Newsletter
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CCD
Milestone Reached |
A Word From Our
President
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Fall is upon us already.
However, if you lived in Houston you would think it is still
summer!
July and August were busy months for Rigaku and I would like to thank
everyone for visiting our exhibitions at meetings ranging from
Semicon West in San Francisco, the ACA in Covington, Kentucky, the
Denver X-ray Conference in Denver (believe it or not it is not
always in Denver), the ECM in South Africa, AsCA'03/Crystal 23 in Australia and
the ACS in New York. I hope that everyone had an opportunity
to see and discuss the latest instrumentation offerings with our
courteous staff, but if not, it is actually a nice time of year to
visit our Houston facility.
Starting October 1, R/MSC
launches a new business venture with the creation of the
ActiveSight division. ActiveSight will be a CRO (Contract
Research Organization) catering to the biotechnology and
pharmaceutical industry. Headed up by Duncan McRee and
located in San Diego, ActiveSight will expand the scope and depth
of Rigaku's structural biology business. More on this
in future issues.
Paul Swepston,
President
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New:
The Ultimate Small Molecule HomeLab™ |
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Rigaku
at ACA 2003 |
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Rigaku at Denver X-ray Conference |
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Southwest
Macromolecular Symposium |
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Contract
Services |
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New
Rigaku division: ActiveSight |
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Protein
Training Course Milestone |
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Confused about optics? |
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New
addition to the NitroGen™ line of liquid nitrogen generators |
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Confocal
Max-Flux® Optics
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The Ultimate
Small Molecule HomeLab |
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Confused about what Osmic
optic is best for your application and experimental configuration? Visit our
new optics web page,
which features a table and graphs of important performance characteristics
for each optic/generator combination.
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The Ultimate HomeLabSM for small molecule
applications addresses all your experimental problems. The wide range of
analyses performed in today's demanding crystallographic lab require
different types of instruments to handle both the high-throughtput
applications and the more exacting studies.
The Ultimate HomeLab is based around two
MicroMax®-007
generators, the newest in Rigaku's family of high-flux reliable
X-ray sources.
For high-throughput applications,
one generator is configured with a molybdenum rotating anode, VariMax™
Mo optics and a Saturn
70, the most sensitive small molecule CCD detector available
today.
For maximum versatility, the second
generator is configured with a copper rotating anode, VariMax
Cu optics and an R-AXIS
RAPID, the most versatile detector available. With this system
you can perform a wide range of applications, including routine
structure analysis, fast absolute configuration studies, high
pressure investigations, twinned sample analyses and data collection
on small proteins.
An
X-Stream™
2000 allows you to perform select experiments at
cryogenic temperatures.
>>> Click
here for More information
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Contract Services
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CCD Milestone |
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Did you
know that AMIA Laboratories, a Rigaku Company, has
recently been certified to handle and analyze controlled substances
through the Federal DEA and the DPS? We are registered to handle all
substances found in the categories of Schedules II through V. Visit our
web site: www.amialabs.com.
Ph:
281-364-3606
Email:
amia@rigaku.com
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Rigaku is proud to announce shipment of its 100th CCD detector. Adam Courville, CCD Product Manager, and Brett Bienvenue, CCD
Technician, were presented with plaques commemorating this achievement September 9, 2003.
Delivered Rigaku CCDs include Jupiter 210, Jupiter
140, Saturn 92, Saturn 70 and
Mercury
detectors.
Future deliveries include two more Jupiter 210s to SPring-8. We look
forward to hearing of the successful research performed by our
current CCD users and to reaching further milestones. |
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Calendar of
Events
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SouthWest Macromolecular Symposium |
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Click
here for a complete list of conferences Rigaku will be attending
and exhibiting at in 2003.
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The 14th Annual SouthWest Macromolecular Symposium (SWMS) will be moving
to its new conference location in The Woodlands, TX starting with this
year's meeting on October 24-26, 2003. Conveniently located just 35 miles
north of Houston, the SWMS will be expanded to cover 2-1/2 days beginning with
the registration mixer on Friday night. Saturday will host sessions where
biochemists can share their latest research and end the day with a
banquet. New this year will be a series of workshops on Sunday morning.
This year we are pleased to have Professor
Sir Tom L. Blundell from the University of Cambridge, Department of Biochemistry as keynote speaker.
>>> Please visit www.SWMacro.org for details of the upcoming
meeting. |
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Annual Fun Run
Winners
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Rigaku
at ACA 2003 |
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Rigaku
was involved in several scientific presentations at the ACA meeting in
Covington, KY in July. In the session Future Strategies for Successful Crystallographic
Computing Jim Pflugrath gave a well-balanced presentation entitled There is No Such
Thing as Free Software. This presentation on software development was based
on Jim's two decades of experience in both the academic and industrial sector. Boris Verman of Osmic, Inc., gave a detailed presentation entitled
New X-ray Optics for Protein Crystallography. This presentation described
the variable divergence multilayer optics Osmic (VariMaxTM)
has developed for macromolecular crystallography. Felicitas Bidlack of George Washington
University gave a presentation on Maturation Effects on the Chemical and
Crystallographic Changes in Mammalian Teeth Enamel. This presentation was
derived from a collaboration between GWU, The Carnegie Institute of Washington and
Rigaku. Finally, Lee Daniels gave an enlightening presentation on a Straightforward Approach to Indexing and Integrating Reflections from
Modulated Structures using the well-known example of thiourea. This lecture
was well received and several viewers requested copies for use in teaching.
Rigaku would like to congratulate
everyone who participated in our 2003 Fun Run, but we have a little problem. We know that
the women's winner was Janet Newman (left, top) but we somehow neglected
to get the name of our men's winner (left, bottom). Do you know who this is? If so,
e-mail
Sue Duncan!
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Rigaku
News
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Rigaku at Denver X-ray Conference |
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ActiveSight
Starting October 1, 2003 there will be a new division of
Rigaku called ActiveSight. This division will be structured as a CRO
(Contract Research Organization) and will cater to the pharmaceutical and
biotechnology industry. The laboratory will be located in San Diego and will include a
molecular biology lab for cloning, expression, and protein purification, a fully automated crystallization robotic system as well as an automated X-ray lab. ActiveSight will be headed up by Duncan McRee and the
crystallographic activities will be lead by Les Tari.
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The 2003 Denver X-ray
Conference, held at the Tech Center in Denver, Colorado, was an exciting
event for the Rigaku X-ray Fluorescence Department this year. It was at DXC 2003 that Rigaku introduced the latest and greatest
WDXRF instrumentation available on the market today. Met with rave reviews from both industry experts and XRF
scientists, the ZSX
Primus is
the most revolutionary XRF system to date. This powerful 4 kW spectrometer has the thinnest (30 microns)
end-window tube available, guaranteeing superb light-element analysis.
The smaller, more compact He seal of the goniometer chamber
and field upgradeable Mapping and Micro Analysis
Packages makes the ZSX
Primus the #1 answer to ALL your X-ray needs!
Requests for the ZSX Primus
brochure and quotations, show that the industry has been waiting
for a spectrometer capable of easily analyzing even the most complex
sample. The ZSX Primus is
just the spectrometer to give the industry what it wants.
Also presented at
DXC 2003 was a poster titled XRF analysis for refractory samples by
fusion bead method in various dilution ratio with synthetic calibration
standards and dilution ratio's correction, which was highly acclaimed
by all attendees. The preparation method (fusion) allows for numerous
refractory materials to be run with one analytical routine.
Normally each refractory material had to be run separately.
With this method you can analyze four different types of refractory
materials successfully with the same calibrations.
Rigaku XRF Department will continue to refine and include other
refractory materials in the same routine.
>>> Click
here for More information |
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New
addition to the NitroGen line of liquid nitrogen generators
We have now expanded our liquid nitrogen
generators to include a 20 liter per day system. This unit, like our
10 and 40 liter per day units, is available fully self contained with an
internal nitrogen gas separator and liquid nitrogen storage. It only
needs cooling water and electricity to operate.
Our liquid nitrogen generators are very
convenient, quiet, automatic and are designed to eliminate the need of
handling dewars and running cryo-lines for laboratory applications.
Within their capacity they act as endless dewars, delivering liquid
nitrogen when and where it is needed.
The NitroGen line of liquid nitrogen
generators are comparable in costs to commercially delivered liquid
nitrogen. When the internal costs of the dewar method are
considered, including, uncertain delivery, unexpected run out, handling,
risks to equipment, down time and safety hazards, these systems can become
very cost effective.
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Rigaku's introduction of the Ultima III at the Denver X-ray conference,
once again has shown the responsiveness Rigaku has to the changing world
of materials analysis. The addition of SAXS and in-plane measurement
capabilities as options for a standard q:q
instrument is revolutionary. No longer does a
laboratory need to purchase two instruments or venture to the synchrotron
for these measurements.
SAXS
The SAXS option was added in response to those researchers performing
nanoparticle measurements. In order to better understand the complete
morphology of a nanoparticle system, both the wide and small angle X-ray
portions of the scattering curves need to be measured. The SAXS portion is
used in determining long periods spacing which include particle-particle
interactions and particle size. The wide angle portion is used in
determining the crystallographic phase, crystallite size, percent
crystallinity, etc. Both these measurements as well as other analytical
techniques such as EM, AFM, and laser light scattering help characterize
the physical dimensions of the nanoparticle systems. The SAXS option is
also extended to reflection modes to investigate particle/pore sizes in
thin films on substrates including liquid surfaces.
In-Plane
The in-plane scattering attachment, rotation of the detector parallel to a
sample surface, extends the analysis of thin films as well. While most
laboratory work has been performed by diffractometer geometries working
perpendicular to the surface, measurements at synchrotrons have included
in-plane scattering as a method to obtain information directly from
scattering in the sample plane of a thin film. As films become
thinner, the diffraction information normal to the plane either becomes
weak, broad due to small crystallite size or directionally amorphous. Many
properties are based on in-plane structures more than out-of-plane
structure. With the advent of the Ultima III diffraction system, in-plane
diffraction can now be performed in a laboratory setting. Thus the
researcher can measure the in-plane crystallographic phase as a function
of depth, periodic spacing, preferred orientation, stress, and more.
There is no need to remove the in-plane attachment for conventional
diffraction experiments, this mode is only a slit change away.
Rigaku's Ultima III has
also responded to researchers' needs for parallel to focusing beam
conversion speed. A new CBO, combined optical system, optic was designed
to give both a focusing and a parallel beam in one module. With a quick
flip of a slit, the two optical configurations are switched. No hardware
to exchange.
>>> Click
here for More information |
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Training
Sessions
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Protein
Training Course Milestone
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Rigaku
hosted its largest ever Customer Training Course in September. With 18
trainees from as far away as India and Singapore, this course provided
hands-on training for routine tasks (filament changes, anode rebuild and
optics alignment) as well as troubleshooting and preventative maintenance
instruction. Rigaku applications scientists gave in-depth training in the use of
CrystalClear™,
d*TREK® and HKL2000™.
Trainees pronounced the course a resounding success. Our next training course is
scheduled for
March 24-26, 2004.
>>> Click
here for More information
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Subscriber
Info |
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Tip
of the month
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We have established a
new e-mail address for hardware and software support issues. Please
address e-mail queries to service@rigaku.com
or visit our web page for an on-line support request form. The Service Help Desk
direct line is 1 888 362-2324
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North America:
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Europe: (note new unit and postal code)
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9009 New Trails Drive
The Woodlands
Texas USA
77381-5209
email: info@rigaku.com
Tel: (281) 362-2300
FAX: (281) 364-3628 |
Unit B6, Chaucer Business Park
Watery Lane, Kemsing
Sevenoaks,
Kent
TN15 6QY, England
email: info@rigaku.com
Tel: [44] 1732 763 367
FAX: [44] 1732 763 757 |