Beverage Labeling

Increasingly, beverage manufacturers need to confirm the intended constituents of thier product at the correct amounts.  The basic information goes on the label on each bottle.  But they must also identify any contaminants that should not be there.  Nuclear magnetic resonance has the bandwidth to see thousands of molecular features at once.  If it has a proton, NMR will see it and provide universal quantitation without the need for calibration curves. Protasis solutions help beverage manufacturers keep up with high throughput and low cost per sample.  Beverage producers who rely on Protasis can more effectively protect consumer health, minimize the risk of product recalls and deliver the hight quality products possible.

Protasis supports PAT solutions fordcs-1109_1z-800H

  • raw materials consistency
  • in-process monitoring
  • composition analysis
  • label claim verification
  • authenticity determination
  • adulteration detection

One-Minute NMR automation is available on picoSpin detectors at 45 MHz and 80 MHz and on CryFree HTS Veritas NMR systems at 200 MHz and 400 MHz.

More Information

Beverage Analysis

New Downloads

Featured Speaker

Dr. John Price

Our Partner

Protasis microcoil licensee:

thermoscientific

The replacement Capillary Cartridge for the Thermo Scientificâ„¢ picoSpinâ„¢ NMR spectrometer includes the fluid sub-panel assembly, the sample capillary, the NMR RF coil and the NMR shim coils.

Cartridge-transparent-300x188

Need More Results?

Now Protasis One-Minute NMR software runs on picoSpin spectrometers!

Beverage Labelling

New-picoSpin451-e1323379467453

Thermo acquires picoSpin LLC, a Protasis licensee

Thermo Fisher Scientific acquired picoSpin at the end of 2012.  The agreement included the transfer of picoSpin LLC’s sub-license of Protasis’ extensive portfolio of microcoil patents, licensed from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC).  Protasis is pleased to support the picoSpin 45 and picoSpin 80 with its microcoil technology.  Protasis has interfaced both spectrometers […]