Acquisition of a 7900 ICP-MS to IGN, Section of Geology, University of Copenhagen

Information

Award of a contract without prior publication of a contract notice in the Official Journal of the European Union
3/8/2018 9:11 AM (GMT+01:00)

Buyer

University of Copenhagen University of Copenhagen
Caroline Volf Caroline Volf
Nørregade 10
1017 København K
Denmark

Assignment text

University of Copenhagen Nørregade 10 København K 1017 Caroline Volf +45 35333391 caroline.volf@adm.ku.dk www.oko.ku.dk University Acquisition of a 7900 ICP-MS to IGN, Section of Geology, University of Copenhagen 043-0311-18-7000 The Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management is an institute of the University of Copenhagen. The ICP-MS will be installed in the laboratories of the research group Geochemical, Mineralogical and Petrological Earth Science within the geology section. The research group performs both teaching and research within the fields of geochemistry, petrology and mineralogy. The ICP-MS will be installed in a new laboratory that is to be established at IGN. The laboratory will mainly be analyzing geological minerals and rocks using the laser ablation method, but the machine will also be applied to solutions. One of the main tasks for the laboratory is to analyse very low concentrations of elements in various rocks and minerals and therefore we need an instrument with maximum sensitivity and matrix tolerance. 755000.00 Product to be acquired: Refurbished 7900 ICP-MS. The ICP-MS will be installed in a new laboratory that is to be established at IGN. The laboratory will mainly be analyzing geological minerals and rocks using the laser ablation method, but the machine will also be applied to solutions. One of the main tasks for the laboratory is to analyse very low concentrations of elements in various rocks and minerals and therefore we need an instrument with maximum sensitivity and matrix tolerance. According to the European Parliament and Council Directive nº 2014/24/ EC, Article 32. 2, point b, the University of Copenhagen believes that only Agilent Technologies can meet our requirements: The instrument must feature up to 11 orders of dynamic range to enable analysis of both major and trace elements simultaneously.We require maximum sensitivity and minimum background levels for the given price, e.g. for standard no gas mode, a sensitivity of 720 kcps/ppb for 238U, 400 kcps/ppb for 59Co, 600 kcps/ppb for 89Y and 700 kcps/ppb for 115In and background levels of <0.3 cps on mass 9. The detector must be able to provide ultra-fast data acquisition, with 10 000 separate measurements per second for analysis of transient signals during laser ablation of e.g. fluid inclusions. The 7900 ICP-MS can be upgraded with up to 3 cell gas lines to remove interferences which enable more application development on the same system. The 90º ion deflection lens is positioned after the quadrupole mass analyzer to minimize ion energy, space charge and mass bias effects. We require maximum abundance sensitivity down to 10-7 for optimal separation of the measured masses.The software provided with the Agilent 7900 implements an open, folder-based data storage structure, which directly exposes data to custom/in-house third-party data-analysis and storage software. 2018-03-02 Agilent Technologies Denmark Produktionsvej 42, bygning A Glostrup 2600 +45 70130030 customercare_denmark@agilent.com www.agilent.com/chem 755000.00 Klagenævnet for Udbud Dahlerups Pakhus, Langelinie Allé 17 København Ø 2100 +45 35291000 klfu@erst.dk http://www.klfu.dk A complaint against the contracting entity who, in accordance with the European Parliament and Council Directive nº 2014/24/EC, Article 32, has decided to award a contract without prior publication of a contract notice in the Official Journal of the European Union must,in accordance with the Danish act on enforcement of procurement rules, etc. § 7, para. 3, be filed to the Danish Public procurement Appeal Board within 30 calendar days from the day following the day on which a contract notice is published in the Official Journal of the European Union. The Danish act on enforcement of procurement rules, etc. defines in § 2, para. 2, point 1, a standstill period of 10 calendar days from the day after the date on which the voluntary ex ante transparency notice is published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Latest at the same time as a complaint is lodged to the Danish Public procurement Appeal Board, the appellant shall in writing inform the contracting entity about the lodging of a complaint to the Danish Public procurement Appeal Board, and whether the complaint has been submitted in the stand still period. In cases where the complaint is not submitted in the stand still period, the appellant must specify any suspensive effect of the complaint according to The Danish act on enforcement of procurement rules § 12, Para. 1. Kokurrence- og Forbrugerstyrelsen Carl Jacobsens Vej 35 Valby 2500 +45 41715000 kfst@kfst.dk http://www.kfst.dk 2018-03-07

See tender at TED: http://ted.europa.eu/udl?uri=TED:NOTICE:103203-2018:TEXT:EN:HTML

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