Understanding REACH SVHCs: Tips for Non-EU Businesses

If your products contain substances of very high concern (SVHCs) above thresholds set out by the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation, and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) Regulation, you risk losing access to European Union (EU) markets. Join Raj Takhar, Assent’s Subject Matter Expert, Materials Management and Chemical Reporting, and Roberto Crespi, Associate at Fieldfisher, as they explain what non-EU businesses need to know if they want to sell their products in the EU.
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OTHER ON-DEMAND WEBINARS

Resolving absolute stereochemistry in early drug discovery with VCD

Determining the absolute configuration of small molecules is important early in the drug discovery process. The traditional methodology, X-ray analysis, requires a single crystal. Unfortunately, crystallisation of early-stage molecules can be problematic and time consuming.
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Chemical Interaction between Leachables and Insulin / Therapeutic Proteins

Nelson Labs

Leachable compounds are currently only evaluated on the toxicological risk they pose to the patient. The effects that leachable compounds have on the quality and safety of pharmaceutical drug products, especially protein drug products, is often overlooked. Interactions of reactive leachable compounds with protein drug products can lead to a loss of efficiency, decrease of stability and increased immunogenicity in the patient population at risk. This webinar describes reactive leachable compounds, the scientific basis to predict leachable-protein interactions and a proof of concept.
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INVENTORY OPTIMIZATION IN THE CHEMICALS INDUSTRY

Net at Work

Take back control of your inventory. Replacing manual systems and processes with automated alternatives is key to taking the first step towards inventory optimization. In this web session, we highlight the Sage Enterprise Management (X3) Inventory Advisor function & its real-time insight which recommends how to correct inventory problems, accurately forecast demand, & when to order the right balance of inventory.
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Breakthrough Technology in Plastics Recycling

ZEUS PLA

A novel method for recycling PLA using low-temperature, low-pressure reactions with alcohol or water has recently been developed. PLA is used today in many applications ranging from food packaging to implantable medical devices. Because of its sensitivity to thermal degradation, PLA is difficult to recycle and actually becomes a contaminant in the plastics stream of municipal solid waste. Using the newly discovered process, different grades of PLA can be removed from a stream of commingled plastics and broken down to give high value chemicals. Some of these chemicals, called monomers, can be purified and used as feedstock to synthesize virgin PLA resin, thereby “closing the loop” on the PLA life cycle. This result is achieved by carrying out depolymerization reactions while the PLA is in solution.
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