Literature DB >> 20828436

Comparison of the use of volume fractions with other measures of concentration for quantitative spectroscopic calibration using the classical least squares method.

Howard Mark1, Ronald Rubinovitz, David Heaps, Paul Gemperline, Donald Dahm, Kevin Dahm.   

Abstract

Since the commercial development of modern near-infrared spectroscopy in the 1970s, analysts have almost invariably used units of weight percent as the measure of analyte concentration, due largely to the historical precedent from other analytical methods, including other spectroscopic techniques. The application of the CLS algorithm to a set of binary and ternary liquid mixtures reveals that the spectroscopic measurement sees the sample differently; that the measured absorbance spectrum is in fact sensitive to the volume fraction of the various components of the mixture. Because there is not a one-to-one relationship between volume fraction and other measures of analyte concentration, nor is the relationship linear, this has important implications for the application of both the CLS algorithm and the various other, more conventional, calibration algorithms that are commonly used.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20828436     DOI: 10.1366/000370210792434314

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Spectrosc        ISSN: 0003-7028            Impact factor:   2.388


  1 in total

1.  Quantitative Analysis of Organic Liquid Three-Component Systems: Near-Infrared Transmission versus Raman Spectroscopy, Partial Least Squares versus Classical Least Squares Regression Evaluation and Volume versus Weight Percent Concentration Units.

Authors:  Hui Yan; Yue Ma; Zhixin Xiong; Heinz W Siesler; Liang Qi; Guozheng Zhang
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2019-10-01       Impact factor: 4.411

  1 in total

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