9th November 2007
Max Plank Institute celebrate opening of a state-of-the-art Protein Structural Biology Laboratory.
23rd August 2007
Ultimate quality X-ray data from ATLAS – the fastest commercially available CCD detector
11 July 2007
'LIVE' PX SCANNER DEMO AT ACA BOOTH 203
30 March 2007
King’s College London to invest in state-of-the-art equipment for structural biology
18 April 2007
Condolences from Oxford Diffraction to all at Virginia Tech
31 October 2006
Duke of Kent Visits Oxford Diffraction
27 October 2006
Oxford Diffraction announces senior appointments
24 July 2006
Oxford Diffraction announces the launch of the PX Scanner:
the first ever commercial instrument for in-situ X-ray inspection of protein
crystals in multi-well plates.
26 April 2006
Oxford Diffraction announce their innovative Total Care service and support package offering full service and support with a 100% up-time guarantee*.
21 April 2006
Oxford Diffraction wins further acclaim with the award of a 2006 Queen’s award for International Trade
6 March 2006
The University of Western Australia purchases an Xcalibur S CCD diffractometer
for high resolution electron density studies.
26 January 2006
Oxford Diffraction announces a breakthrough in
protein crystallisation with the first ever commercial instrument for combined
optical and in-situ X-ray inspection of crystals in multi-well plates
19 January 2006
Oxford Diffraction release their new CrysAlisPro software
for automated data collection and reduction
25 September 2005
Oxford Diffraction is ranked number 44 in the Sunday Times Microsoft
Tech Track 100 league table of Britain’s 100 fastest growing technology
companies
30 August 2005
One thousand IUCr delegates appear in orange Oxford Diffraction ‘T’ shirts and baseball caps
25 July 2005
The home of CRYSTALS puts Gemini R through its paces at Oxford University, UK
11 July 2005
Oxford Diffraction's ‘Gemini R’ wins R&D100 award as the most significant technology advance for 2005
10 June 2005
Oxford Diffraction launches first combined system for protein and small molecule crystallography
23 May 2005
Oxford Diffraction sells its first protein crystallography system in China
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23rd August 2007
Ultimate quality X-ray data from ATLAS - the fastest commercially available CCD detectorThe all new Atlas CCD detector from Oxford Diffraction is the ideal detector for high speed, high resolution data collections on small molecules. As the fastest commercially available CCD detector the Atlas is up to 3.5 times faster than other CCD detectors. The Atlas is of entirely new electronic design and incorporates Oxford Diffraction's proven patented construction for easy service and support. At 135 mm active area diameter the Atlas is ideally suited for both molybdenum and copper wavelength data collections and incorporates the new 'Super plus' scintillator which provides up to 70% greater sensitivity. A true 18 bit detector the Atlas is the highest dynamic range CCD detector commercially available and uniquely utilises data transfer via a dedicated high speed 1Gb Ethernet connection. At the heart of the Atlas detector is the 2k x 2k Kodak KAF-4320 CCD chip of 4-port read out design which provides readout speeds as low as 0.2 sec. Whilst other CCD manufacturers claim similar speeds, quoting the CCD chip manufacturers' readout times the reality is that their all important 'duty cycle' is significantly longer and can be up to an order of magnitude greater. Oxford Diffraction's Atlas detector actually achieves sub-second 'duty cycle' times resulting in a significant increase in the speed of data collection and thus throughput of crystals studied. Dr Leigh Rees, Marketing Director for Oxford Diffraction explained this significant speed increase. "The Atlas CCD can achieve these extremely fast data collection speeds where all others fail due to the Atlas detector's entirely new design incorporating our proprietary multi-threaded, parallel data pipelining technology (PDPT) which serves to reduce data collection dead time at all stages to a minimum and importantly allows multiple processes to be run in parallel rather than the old fashioned serial, one process at a time approach adopted by other CCD's"
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