|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This book is intended to provide a course of infrared spectroscopy
for quantitative analysis, covering both bulk matter and
surface/interface analyses. Although the technology of Fourier
transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy was established many years
ago, the full potential of infrared spectroscopy has not been
properly recognized, and its intrinsic potential is still put
aside. FT-IR has outstandingly useful characteristics, however,
represented by the high sensitivity for monolayer analysis, highly
reliable quantitativity, and reproducibility, which are quite
suitable for surface and interface analysis. Because infrared
spectroscopy provides rich chemical information-for example,
hydrogen bonding, molecular conformation, orientation, aggregation,
and crystallinity-FT-IR should be the first choice of chemical
analysis in a laboratory. In this book, various analytical
techniques and basic knowledge of infrared spectroscopy are
described in a uniform manner. In particular, techniques for
quantitative understanding are particularly focused for the
reader's convenience.
This book is intended to provide a course of infrared spectroscopy
for quantitative analysis, covering both bulk matter and
surface/interface analyses. Although the technology of Fourier
transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy was established many years
ago, the full potential of infrared spectroscopy has not been
properly recognized, and its intrinsic potential is still put
aside. FT-IR has outstandingly useful characteristics, however,
represented by the high sensitivity for monolayer analysis, highly
reliable quantitativity, and reproducibility, which are quite
suitable for surface and interface analysis. Because infrared
spectroscopy provides rich chemical information-for example,
hydrogen bonding, molecular conformation, orientation, aggregation,
and crystallinity-FT-IR should be the first choice of chemical
analysis in a laboratory. In this book, various analytical
techniques and basic knowledge of infrared spectroscopy are
described in a uniform manner. In particular, techniques for
quantitative understanding are particularly focused for the
reader's convenience.
|
|