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Is there life after LIMS?

Learn about the benefits of using LIMS (Laboratory Information Management System) for processing, measuring, and managing light stable isotopes. Find out if LIMS is the right solution for your lab and discover how to import projects, submit samples, track lab procedures, create run sequences, and export data easily.

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Is there life after LIMS?

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  1. Is there life after LIMS? No, but thankfully there is beer. LIMS for Light Stable Isotopes Created by T.B. Coplen, USGS Reston Benjamin Harlow, Stable Isotope Core Facility at Washington State University

  2. Is LIMS for you? • Do you process >100 samples per year? • Do you process samples for multiple clients? • Do you measure multiple isotopes? • Do you use more than one instrument?

  3. Is LIMS for you… • Do you already have a database or spreadsheets that work for you? • LIMS by the USGS is not the only way to go • LIMS by the USGS is the most readily available, supported, and FREE software for Light Stable Isotopes • If yes, start sooner rather than later!

  4. Thankfully there is beer.

  5. Benefits to using LIMS • All your information in one place • Rapid and consistent treatment of data • Hourly drift corrections from multiple standards • Linearity correction • Data revision and safeguards • Powerful search, average and export functions • Report and Invoice generation

  6. Limitations • Can only have as many mass spectrometers or lasers as letters in the English alphabet • Normalization by linear regression is all that is currently possible • Some data manipulations may still be required via spreadsheet, etc. prior to importing

  7. First things first • MS Access supported versions • MS Office 2007, 2010, 32 bit only • Required Security settings • Add LIMS backend database to “trusted locations” • Enable all macros

  8. Set trusted locations, macros

  9. Setup • 3 folders, 4 files: • Backend DB (LM8DATA.mdb) • Frontend DB (LIMS9 for office 2010.mdb) + Preferences file • Backup • Back up Backend DB often! • Back up Preference files periodically (especially for new Front end versions) • Different users can have their own front end and preferences • Can install on one computer, network, cloud • WSU: dropbox; share DB with 7 computers (2 RAID), multiple smartphones

  10. Import project to LIMS • Manual entry or Excel spreadsheet • Concept of “placeholders” • Adjusting the next “Our Lab ID” • Reference ID’s often set as a low number • Example: References <1000, samples >1000 • Keeps all references in one area of the sample table

  11. Enter new clients manually before creating the first project for that client

  12. Adding a project manually Date, Name, Media is the minimum information needed More information is better; i.e. project title and account are good to reference later Do not enter duplicate ID’s and avoid special characters for sample IDs

  13. Submit to LIMS • Simple excel templates are available for modification • Reduces typographical errors and valuable time of lab members • More information is good • Be unique, but avoid special characters $/\@#$%^&*!

  14. Sample excel submission form • Customize to your lab: Letterhead, graphics, captions • Captions must match exactly to what you defined in “special features” • Use different forms for different types of samples • Protect certain cells to reduce customer “tinkering”

  15. Other features • Track lab extraction procedures • Make notes about sample prep • Created primarily for offline procedures • Create labels for samples • Use templates to create run sequences of samples and references

  16. Selling (to) yourself • Create a “client” entry for your lab tests and reference material • We use “reference” and “test” • All international, commercial, and lab developed reference material is logged here • Reference lab ID’s get defined in reference table: Automatically fit in a normalization • Test lab ID: treat as a blind sample (Quality Control)

  17. IRMS/software setup • Machine must use sequential analysis number, with single letter prefix (ex: A-number) • Isodat: Configurator > Options > Global settings • Enter old analyses or those without prefix: “concatenate” function in excel • Note analysis number if you ever restore IRMS software!

  18. Know your media • KISS IT • More classifications can be useful • Can add more at any time • Tailor specific to your lab

  19. Media • Media originally designed for 2 isotopes only! • It is possible to store, edit and average 4. • How? Stay tuned

  20. Procedure Codes

  21. Low and High procedure Codes

  22. Running samples • LIMS ID# “Our lab ID” is most important identifier to use in sample sequences • Use LIMS template or design your own in excel • Template: LIMS automatically designs sample sequence

  23. Other features: Creating a sample list/template

  24. Another way to make a run sequence • Import excel file and generate LIMS ID’s • Copy/Paste sample information into a blank tab of the submission worksheet • Insert rows for running standards and QC’s • Can customize to instrument service state, sample types, desired timing, etc.

  25. Then you run the samples What Paul said…

  26. Exporting results and importing to LIMS • Must export specific column headings required by LIMS • Line #, Analysis #, time code, gasconfig, area, peak#, identifier 1, delta columns, is ref, comment, Rt • All peaks for reference gas must be marked “Is Ref = 1” or removed • Perform data preprocessing before importing (i.e. your own linearity, drift or mass fraction corrections)

  27. Export tips • Isodat: If a project got created with some special character, don’t export that column • Check chromatographs prior to exporting. Is reprocessing necessary? • Garbage in garbage out

  28. Importing data Option to apply linearity correction at this point

  29. 3 point normalization example

  30. Add elemental and blank corrections

  31. Normalize std gasses and data • Seldom used • Must import and properly code ref gasses • Provides option to salvage data

  32. Applying an hourly drift correction Use drift from any single standard Override: combination of all accepted standards, or custom Apply two drifts: must break up the sequence into two corrections

  33. Evaluating/editing samples in progress Mean, SD and outlier information Note: When samples are “in progress” mean, SD are available Some may choose to report at this point

  34. Rapid tracking of QC/QA

  35. Export full results for samples

  36. Store final results Stores a single value from all accepted reps Marks samples as completed Provides an extra layer of protection to data Necessary to use LIMS report function

  37. Add stored results to in process Unlocks samples for editing Can be done at any time Store function may be unnecesary for some users

  38. Storing an additional isotope or other numeric data • The “comment” field now averages numeric values and allows editing • The high and low comment provide two additional storage points • Include data calculated by a different detector, i.e. CNHOS% • Use with procedures that generate data for more than two isotopes, i.e. thermal conversion of N2O.

  39. Invoice generation and payment tracking

  40. Can I use LIMS for GCC-IRMS? • Yes you can! • Treat each vial as a project and target compounds are samples in the project • Use Rt or component ID feature in LIMS (extraction ID, Comment, Rt) • Internal standards should be in each vial

  41. Can I use LIMS for GCC-IRMS? • Alternative method: Modify file to import • Sort by component (Rt) and time code • Assign the same analysis number • Create unique peak number for every compound in a sample

  42. Can I use LIMS for Lasers? • Yes you can! • See Len Wassenaar’s session on Wednesday

  43. More Advanced • Open the tables and look in there • Cut, copy, paste; but watch for linked tables • Make your own queries

  44. Lab specific queries • Annual reports, audits and cost evaluations • # days runtime/machine/peripheral/Fiscal year • # samples/machine/peripheral/year • Count of customers by country, state, institution, and break down by sample type • # of samples billed by type • Average turnaround by sample type • Long term QC/QA

  45. Lab specific queries • Annual reports, audits and cost evaluations • # days runtime/machine/peripheral/Fiscal year • # samples/machine/peripheral/year • Count of customers by country, state, institution, and break down by sample type • # of samples billed by type • Average turnaround by sample type • Long term QC/QA

  46. Questions?

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