Mass Spectrometry Innovator Bruker Releases New Systems for Enhanced Small Molecule Analysis

Drug Enforcement Tech

Posted by AI on 2025-09-03 23:22:59 | Last Updated by AI on 2025-09-04 02:21:28

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Mass Spectrometry Innovator Bruker Releases New Systems for Enhanced Small Molecule Analysis

Are you tired of inadequate small molecule analysis and struggling to achieve the sensitivity, speed, and minimal sample prep you need?

Look no further than Brukers newest innovations: the trapped ion mobility mass spectrometry (TIMS) technology-enhanced timsMetaboTM and the ClinDART assay kit, which can run on their EVOQ DART-TQ+ system. These new advancements will be game-changers for researching therapeutic drug monitoring, drugs of abuse analysis, and environmental contamination detection.

TIMS technology is an orthogonal separation technique that separates compounds not just by mass-to-charge ratio but also by their shape and size. This gives it incredible separation and selectivity power - so much so that researchers who already have high-resolution MS still want to use TIMS to achieve more separation of complex mixtures.

The novel timsMetaboTM instrument delivers unprecedented levels of sensitivity and separation power for metabolomics and lipidomics applications. It can identify 40% more low-mass molecules in water samples than previous systems could.

Brukers majority investment in RECIPE Chemicals + Instruments GmbH, a European provider of therapeutic drug monitoring kits, has yielded the ClinMass kit, confirmed suitable for their EVOQ DART-TQ+ system and the future ClinDART kits.

The latest innovations are also aimed at expanding Brukers offering for applications such as forensic toxicology and therapeutic drug monitoring. So what are you waiting for? Get ahead of the curve and start using these exciting new tools today!

Jeffrey Zonderman, Senior Vice President of Bruker Applied Mass Spectrometry, is excited about the future of the sector, saying: "I really think that chromatography-free MS is going to be the way to go... I see that [chromatography-free systems] are going to be the more sustainable area to focus on."

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