When HTFS-I was held in 2006, the use of high throughput technologies in formulation was still in its infancy and terms such as big data was not in common usage. In 2017 high throughput techniques are now a key part of a formulators toolbox, combined with both the classical statistical tools, such as design of experiments, but also with new data mining techniques from the world of big data. During HTFS-III practioneers with a decades of high throughput experience will share key learning from the routine use of high throughput techniques to accelerate and de-risk formulation at all stages from discovery to manufacture. HTFS-III will also give you an insight into the future developments that are changing formulation from a largely empirical science to hybrid of science and engineering which will see new formulations designed based on predictions derived simulation, high throughput measurements and big data mining of existing product performance data.
The meeting will also include the Elizabeth Colbourn Memorial Lecture which will be given by Dr Jim Cawse who has spent his career in industry implementing efficient experimentation based on the use of state of the art statistical methods. So it was not surprising that he was an early adopter of high throughput techniques and has published the definitive book in the area - "Experimental Design for Combinatorial and High Throughput Materials Development." Jim will explain how even when you have high throughput experimental methods you need efficient experiments, which is where proper experimental design is key.
The meeting is being held at the National Formulation Centre in Sedgefield, in order to give you the opportunity to tour the just completed National High-Throughput Laboratory.
The meeting will also include the Elizabeth Colbourn Memorial Lecture which will be given by Dr Jim Cawse who has spent his career in industry implementing efficient experimentation based on the use of state of the art statistical methods. So it was not surprising that he was an early adopter of high throughput techniques and has published the definitive book in the area - "Experimental Design for Combinatorial and High Throughput Materials Development." Jim will explain how even when you have high throughput experimental methods you need efficient experiments, which is where proper experimental design is key.
The meeting is being held at the National Formulation Centre in Sedgefield, in order to give you the opportunity to tour the just completed National High-Throughput Laboratory.