Mnova
Use a common and single interface to work with different techniques
Beauty and power don't often come together
Mnova is a multipage, multivendor, and multiplatform analytical chemistry software suite designed as a container for our NMR & MS plugins.
Mnova is a software suite designed for the handling of Analytical Chemistry data in a multiplatform (Windows, Mac, Linux) environment. Its Graphical User Interface is Powerpoint-like and it currently incorporates plugins for the handling of NMR and LC/GC/MS data, although it has been designed to extend to other analytical techniques.
Mnova can be easily deployed to all chemist's desktop and laptop computers in an organization, independently of Operating System of choice, of equipment manufacturer used for data acquisition and of the level of expertise in handling analytical data. Within a couple of hours, even inexperienced chemists will be obtaining excellent visualization and processing results and generating high quality reports.
Mnova is not protected by a license, and anyone can install it an run it. Its plugins, for the handling of NMR and LC/GC/MS data and for the prediction of NMR data from molecular structure are the products you license, so you have full control and flexibility over which parts of the application you license and pay for.
Features
- Forget about data format All major NMR and MS formats supported automatically
- Minimize the learning curve and maximize adoption Simplicity of use and single common interface maximize adoption with immediate productivity gains
- Enjoy a wealth of powerful but intuitive processing and analysis tools Very extensive processing and analysis capabilities focused on the chemist needs
- Build reports as you work on data, no need for third party applications Mnova becomes the environment for the full chemist workflow whatever the technique: visualize, process, analyze and report
What our clients say
I am impressed by the concept, packaging, and utility of Mnova. Both university and industrial laboratories will find it to be an asset.
Mark Robert Willcott
Rice University
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2009 Link




