Chemical Instrumentation: A Systematic ApproachWiley, 22 feb 1989 - 1248 pagine The Third Edition of this established work on chemical instrumentation has been completely rewritten and updated to account for the advances made since the Second Edition came out in 1973. More main methods of measurement are presented, and there is extended coverage of chromatography and electrochemistry. Most of the material is new--including coverage of microprocessors and microcomputers, statistical control of measurement quality, quantification and extraction of information, x-ray fluorescence spectrometry, surface spectrometric techniques, and chromatography and HPLC. The quality and range of the worked examples have been improved, and there are end-of-chapter exercises. |
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Pagina 250
... light traveling in Plexiglas ( n = 1.50 ) is found to be plane- polarized when reflected from a rare - earth glass at an angle of 50 ° . What is the refractive index of the glass ? 7.17 What is the polarizing angle for silver chloride ...
... light traveling in Plexiglas ( n = 1.50 ) is found to be plane- polarized when reflected from a rare - earth glass at an angle of 50 ° . What is the refractive index of the glass ? 7.17 What is the polarizing angle for silver chloride ...
Pagina 329
... light will be absorbed or blocked from reaching the exit slit . The portion that emerges as stray light intensity S adds to the intensity T that has followed the optical path and the sum S + T will be registered by the detector . Error ...
... light will be absorbed or blocked from reaching the exit slit . The portion that emerges as stray light intensity S adds to the intensity T that has followed the optical path and the sum S + T will be registered by the detector . Error ...
Pagina 596
... light that enter the monochromator . The sample cell will always absorb and scatter some of the radiation falling on it . If that cell is first , the monochromator will receive much less light and thus generate less stray light . If ...
... light that enter the monochromator . The sample cell will always absorb and scatter some of the radiation falling on it . If that cell is first , the monochromator will receive much less light and thus generate less stray light . If ...
Sommario
Measurement and Instrumentation | 1 |
BASIC ELECTRONICS | 21 |
Analog Electrical and Electronic Modules | 57 |
Copyright | |
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Chemical Instrumentation: A Systematic Approach Howard A. Strobel,William R. Heineman Visualizzazione estratti - 1989 |
Parole e frasi comuni
absorbance absorption addition amplifier analysis analyte angle appears applied atomic beam bits called cell charge circuit compared components concentration constant curve defined detector determined developed device diode direction discussed dispersion effect electronic elements emission energy equation error example excited filter frequency Further gain gate give given grating important incident increase input integrated intensity interference lamp laser light limit measurements method mirror mode modules monochromator needed noise Note obtained occurs op-amp operation optical output peak polarized positive possible precision prism pulse radiation range rays reference reflection refractive region relative representative resistance resolution response result sample scanning scattering selected shown shown in Fig signal slit solution spectral spectrometer spectrum standard Table transition usually vibrational voltage wave wavelength