Chemical Instrumentation: A Systematic ApproachWiley, 22 feb 1989 - 1210 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 337
... elements of no interest at a rate of 0.5 μs per element . In a normal mode all elements will be read at 10 μs per element and the signal placed in memory . Or adjacent elements can be grouped to provide both an increase in sensitivity ...
... elements of no interest at a rate of 0.5 μs per element . In a normal mode all elements will be read at 10 μs per element and the signal placed in memory . Or adjacent elements can be grouped to provide both an increase in sensitivity ...
Pagina 470
... elements such as arsenic and mercury are present , " wet - ashing " or oxidation is a better procedure . Nearly always there is an initial heating in concentrated nitric acid followed , if needed , by a second heating in a nitric ...
... elements such as arsenic and mercury are present , " wet - ashing " or oxidation is a better procedure . Nearly always there is an initial heating in concentrated nitric acid followed , if needed , by a second heating in a nitric ...
Pagina 508
... elements are present . Atomic absorption also has quite low limits of detection for many metals and can be used with more ease than the other methods since hollow cathode lamps provide selectivity for elements without careful wavelength ...
... elements are present . Atomic absorption also has quite low limits of detection for many metals and can be used with more ease than the other methods since hollow cathode lamps provide selectivity for elements without careful wavelength ...
Sommario
Measurement and Instrumentation | 1 |
Operational Amplifier Circuits | 4 |
BASIC ELECTRONICS | 21 |
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 amplifier amplitude analyte analytical signal angle atomic band beam Beer's law bits capacitor cell Chem circuit components concentration constant curve detector device diagram differential diffraction diffraction grating diode dispersion electrical electronic elements emission energy ensure equation error example excited exit slit feedback filter flame flip-flop fluorescence frequency gate grating incident input instrument integrated integrated circuit intensity interference lamp laser limit measurements method microprocessor mirror mode modules molecules monochromator noise Ohm's law op-amp operation operational amplifier optical output voltage p-n junction peak photodiode photomultiplier photon polarized precision prism pulse R₁ R₂ radiation Raman range reflection refractive index region resistance resistor resolution result sample scanning Section shown in Fig signal slit width spectral spectrometer spectrophotometer spectrum standard stray light temperature transistor transition tube V₁ variable vibrational wave wavelength wavenumber zener diode