PARADISE: bringing analytical science to the next level

The PARADISE project focuses on four fields of application that involve complex
The PARADISE project focuses on four fields of application that involve complex molecular systems. Image: HIMS.
The PARADISE project focuses on four fields of application that involve complex molecular systems. Image: HIMS. Ambitious research project in partnership between academia, companies and the Netherlands Forensic Institute Analytical chemists from the University of Amsterdam and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam are taking the next step in unravelling the molecular composition of complex samples such as drug delivery systems, explosives, energy carriers and copolymers. Together with the Netherlands Forensic Institute and the companies Genentech, Shell and DSM, they have started the PARADISE project to develop robust, automated methodologies that allow multidimensional characterization of the most challenging man-made and natural products. The project has been awarded funding of almost a million euros from the Science PPP Fund of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO. Analytical instruments are indispensable tools in many fields of modern society such as health, food, energy, materials, and the environment. In research and innovation as well as industry and trade, the samples subjected to analysis are increasingly complex.
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