Vote for the top new analytical science product in the 2025 Scientists’ Choice Awards
Vote for the product that has made the most difference to your lab for the chance to win a $100 Amazon Gift Card (or equivalent currency)
15 Apr 2025

Vote in the Scientists' Choice Awards 2025 for the Best New Analytical Product
Scientists around the world are casting their votes for the Best New Analytical Science Product in the 2025 Scientists’ Choice Awards®.
The annual Scientists' Choice Awards celebrate the industry’s top technological innovations and give scientists the chance to recognize the instruments, services and consumables which have made the biggest impact in their labs.
We had a fantastic response to our call for nominations, with scientists across the globe getting involved by naming their top new analytical instrument of the past year. Now it is time to cast your vote.
The winning product will be recognized as having significantly advanced laboratory efforts in 2024. As a thank you for your time and insight, all scientists who vote will be entered into a drawing for the chance to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Card (or equivalent currency).
Nominees for the Best New Analytical Science Product of 2024 are:
- 7010D Triple Quadrupole GC/MS by Agilent Technologies
- timsTOF Ultra 2 by Bruker
- EMILIE by Invisible-Light Labs
- Revontium by Malvern Panalytical
- SCIEX 7500+ system by SCIEX
- LCMS-TQ RX Series by Shimadzu Corporation
- Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ Inuvion™ IC System by Thermo Fisher Scientific
- Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer by Waters
Voting closes on May 20, 2025. The winner will be announced at the beginning of June.
About the Scientists’ Choice Awards
SelectScience, the leading independent online resource for the global scientific community, began the Scientists’ Choice Awards in 2007 to enable scientists to voice their opinions on the best laboratory products. Once a year, SelectScience invites members to nominate and vote for their favorite products of the year in each category. Nominations in the other categories remain open, see the Scientists' Choice Awards website for details.