Chemical Analysis

Our chemical analysis capabilities reveal exactly what’s in a material and why it behaves the way it does. We detect contaminants, verify composition, and link chemical signatures to real-world performance. From pharmaceuticals to semiconductors, our analyses provide the clarity and confidence needed when material chemistry directly impacts safety, reliability, or outcomes.

What Is Chemical Analysis?

Chemical Analysis is straightforward in principle but complicated in practice – at its heart, it is attempting to identify what elements or compounds are present in a given sample that are causing it to behave (or not behave) in a specific way. In the material testing world, chemical testing can help with analyzing materials for contamination, understanding degradation patterns, informing specific failure analysis, and more.

Chemical analysis is often combined with mechanical analysis to help scientists understand the ‘why’ behind the results of material analysis, not just the ‘what’ – for example, if you find that a material fatigues too quickly as a result of a mechanical analysis, chemical analysis can inform an understanding of why.

Covalent’s chemical testing services allow for analyzing polymers, verifying the composition of thin films and coatings, trace element analysis, and more.

How It Works

Covalent’s chemical testing laboratory is often called on to verify purity of material, detect contaminants that affect the performance of a material, or optimize formulations early in the product development process.

Various types of chemical analysis are suited to specific applications. Spectroscopy techniques provide information on chemical bonding, structure and surface information and can detect trace elements with astounding precision. Chromatography is about separating complex mixtures into their components, to identify concentrations of specific elements.

The field’s breadth is one of its greatest strengths – whether your sample consists of organic or inorganic compounds, volatile or stable, solid, liquid, or gas, Covalent’s scientists can help you identify the appropriate method. Expertise is required to translate the existence (or absence) of a chemical at a given level into operational insight.

Chemical analysis – scientists working in analytical chemistry lab with microscopes, glassware, and instruments to test material composition and contaminants

Techniques Used in Chemical Analysis

Measures Auger electrons for high-resolution surface analysis. Explore

Quantifies elements and isotopes with nanometer depth profiling. Explore

Quantifies elemental composition at the micron scale. Explore

Quick, non-destructive material composition & thickness analysis. Explore

Rapid, non-destructive molecular fingerprinting across materials. Explore

Identifies and quantifies small organic molecules in mixtures. Explore

Separates molecules by size to determine polymer properties. Explore

Sputters surfaces to quantify composition & depth-profile layers. Explore

Quantifies multiple elements at very low concentrations. Explore

Identifies elements in the outermost atomic layer. Explore

Ultra-high-resolution elemental and isotopic imaging. Explore

Quantifies elements via gamma rays from irradiated samples. Explore

Determines molecular structure, composition, and dynamics. Explore

Nanoscale chemical characterization & topography at sub-5nm. Explore

Measures inelastic photon scattering for chemical identification. Explore

Quantifies elemental composition and thin-film thickness. Explore

Ultra-sensitive surface analysis with chemical imaging & depth profiling. Explore

TXRF is a surface sensitive elemental analysis technique used to determine the concentration of trace metal contamination on wafer surfaces. Explore

Determines work function and valence electronic structure of surfaces. Explore

Measures absorbance, reflectance, and transmittance (175–3300 nm). Explore

Non-destructive elemental composition & thin-film analysis. Explore

Measures surface topography with sub-nanometer vertical resolution. Explore

Analyzes electronic structure of atoms and molecules. Explore

Non-destructive analysis of crystal phases, lattice, and strain. Explore

Measures surface elemental composition and chemical states. Explore