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Scientists and researchers continuously face challenges with material defects and contaminants which can compromise product quality. Thorough inspection and testing is crucial to prevent defects and maintain high-quality standards. With single point microscopy, small surface defects can be investigated on almost any material including pharmaceutical products, polymers, and semiconductor devices, among many others.
In this on-demand webinar, you’ll learn how to use Raman microscopy on the Thermo Scientific™ DXR3 Raman Microscope to investigate material defects and contaminants.
· Researchers and scientists interested in identifying small-scale contaminants.
· Researchers and scientists in pharmaceutical, semiconductor, and polymer/packaging industries.
· Researchers in failure analysis roles.
· Scientists in QA/QC roles.
Dr. Matt Gabel is a Raman Application Scientist at Thermo Fisher Scientific. He graduated from Washington State University with a Ph.D. in physics, studying the ferroelectric properties of semiconductors. He became deeply involved in vibrational spectroscopy while working as a visiting researcher at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory studying semiconductors with tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy.
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