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looking for simulated software in environmental study

Posted: Mon Aug 29, 2011 11:35 am
by Newchromatographer
Hi there ,

I wish you all happy and great time .

I heared about SIMULATED software ( SUCH AS drylab ) and I wander if I can find software that can help in predicting my work ( some experiment in environemental chemistry like adsorption of such compounds ).

Do you know any of these software .

Re: looking for simulated software in environmental study

Posted: Mon Aug 29, 2011 1:52 pm
by aceto_81
Drylab is for simulating chromatograms with different conditions than your you did as your input runs.
eg you run 2 gradients, and then you can simulate step gradients, isocratic runs, other column dimensions, ....
or 3 different pH as input, and you can calculate the intermediate chromatograms
or a lot other possibilities

please clarify what you really looking for and we can see if drylab suits your needs, or maybe other simulation programs.

Ace

Re: looking for simulated software in environmental study

Posted: Tue Aug 30, 2011 9:46 pm
by Newchromatographer
Thanks aceto ,

I have no interest on Drylab .What I really want is simualted software in environmental study .So , if you could tell me please the name of all sofware that you know i can explore it by my self and I maybe find something usefull .

I am particulary interested in adsorption study , degradation study .

Thanks for your help

Re: looking for simulated software in environmental study

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 8:50 am
by aceto_81
Hi,

we use Drylabo for al our chromatographic development.
For simulations we use R (www.r-project.org )

Ace

Re: looking for simulated software in environmental study

Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 6:27 pm
by tom jupille
I really doubt that you will find anything commercially available. That is a very specialized application and probably not (financially) worth developing software for it. I've use Excel to run model calculations for some (very simple) distribution isotherms. If you understand the underlying math, the best bet would be to "roll your own" using Excel or R, or . . .