|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry presents a concise A-Z
description of inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry,
written in layman's terms, for use in the solution of trace element
analytical chemistry problems. Detailed discussion of sample
introduction and data interpretation is provided.
Practicing analytical chemists will be able to use this text to
familiarize themselves with the principles, approaches, options,
pitfalls, and advantages of ICP-MS technology.
Key Features
* Concise and straightforward descriptions of ICP-MS principles and
instrumentation, ensuring rapid understanding of the technique and
its advantages and limitations
* Examples to clarify the operational characteristics of the
technology
* Drawings and illustrations to clarify principles, techniques, and
methodology
* Discussions of practical approaches to the solution of specific
trace analysis problems with helpful tips on efficiently producing
the most accurate and precise data
* Easy-to-understand terms, so that new users of the technology
will immediately benefit from the information provided
* Comprehensive appendixes containing isotopic and interference
data
* An exhaustive compilation of literature citations for
supplemental information
This "Second Course" continues the development of the theory and
applications of stochastic processes as promised in the preface of
A First Course. We emphasize a careful treatment of basic
structures in stochastic processes in symbiosis with the analysis
of natural classes of stochastic processes arising from the
biological, physical, and social sciences.
The purpose, level, and style of this new edition conform to the
tenets set forth in the original preface. The authors continue with
their tack of developing simultaneously theory and applications,
intertwined so that they refurbish and elucidate each other.
The authors have made three main kinds of changes. First, they have
enlarged on the topics treated in the first edition. Second, they
have added many exercises and problems at the end of each chapter.
Third, and most important, they have supplied, in new chapters,
broad introductory discussions of several classes of stochastic
processes not dealt with in the first edition, notably martingales,
renewal and fluctuation phenomena associated with random sums,
stationary stochastic processes, and diffusion theory.
|
|