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Title:
Practical guide and spectral atlas for interpretive near-infrared spectroscopy
Author:
Workman, Jerry.
ISBN:
9781439875261
Edition:
2nd ed.
Publication Information:
Boca Raton : CRC Press, 2012.
Physical Description:
xvi, 311 p. : ill. (some col.).
Contents:
ch. 1. Introduction to near-infrared spectra -- ch. 2. Alkanes and cycloalkanes -- ch. 3. Alkenes and alkynes -- ch. 4. Aromatic compounds -- ch. 5. Hydroxyl-containing compounds -- ch. 6. Water -- ch. 7. Carbonyls -- ch. 8. Amines and amides -- ch. 9. P-H and S-H -- ch. 10. Carbohydrates -- ch. 11. Amino acids, peptides, and proteins -- ch. 12. Synthetic polymers -- ch. 13. History of near-infrared applications.
Abstract:
"Preface In this second edition of The Practical Guide and Spectral Atlas for Interpretive Near- Infrared Spectroscopy, we have endeavored to expand and update the chapters, and to produce the figures in a more dramatic spectral atlas format, that is, in a four-color, 81/2 x 11 book. The color and larger graphical presentation provides richer, more detailed spectra than the first edition. This revised atlas also includes new research, editorials, supplements, and molecular structural formulas (Appendix H), including updated references and information on near-infrared (NIR) spectra. Qualitative and quantitative NIR spectroscopic methods require the application of multivariate calibration algorithms commonly referred to as chemometric methods to model spectral response to chemical or physical properties of a calibration, teaching, or learning sample set. The identification of unique wavelength regions where changes in the response of the NIR spectrometer are proportional to changes in the concentration of chemical components, or in the physical characteristics of samples under analysis, is required for a scientific understanding of cause (i.e., molecular or physical properties) and effect (i.e., spectroscopic changes), even for routine method development. The first step to developing an analytical method using NIR is to measure a spectrum of the sample using an NIR spectrophotometer. It is helpful to note that the NIR spectrum obtained by using a spectrophotometer is the result of the convolution of the measuring instrument function with the unique optical and chemical characteristics of the sample measured. The sample participates as an optical element in the spectrometer"-- Provided by publisher.
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