Analytical Gas Chromatography
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.66 (897 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0123843553 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 280 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 0000-00-00 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
A must read book for serious chromatographer Jim Luong Analytical gas chromatography, second edition is an excellent reference book for those of us who take gas chromatography seriously, not as a fringe technology, nor learn enough to get by. The second edition was substantially revised from the first edition. Very up to . Maybe/maybe not This book has an excellent chapter on injections. The rest of the book contains things you can typically find in your user's manual. If you are interested in knowing every single aspect of the GC, this would be a good book. If you are just trying to get the GC up and
Lott, University of Missouri-Kansas City in THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY . Thus, if you desire a well-written, interesting treatment on the practical considerations involved in gas chromatography, emphasizing the selection, installation, evaluation, application, and basis for the use of open tubular glass capillary columns, this book should be your choice."--Peter F. The authors style of writing makes the book easy to read and interesting. "Eminently readableIt is the sort of reference book that should be on the shelf of every laboratory that contains a gas chromatograph."--Brian Bush, Wadsworth Laboratory, New York State Department in ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY"The treatment is superb and complete
The accuracy of theVan Deemter plots has been greatly enhanced; a new program corrects for the first time for the changes in gas density and diffusion that occur during the chromatographic process because of solute progression through the pressure drop of the column. The practical effects that these changes cause to the chromatography is examined in pressure-, flow-, and"EPC-"regulated systems."Column Selection, Installation, and Use"has been completely rewritten as well. Gas chromatography remains the world's most widely used analytical technique, yet the expertise of a large proportion of chromatographers lies in other fields. A new section has also been added on meeting thespecial requirements of columns destined for mass spectral analysis. The ways in which carrier gas velocity influences chromatographic performance is considered in detail, and includes what may be the first rational explanation of the seemingly anomalous effects that temperature exercises on gas viscosity (and gas flow). Many users have little real kn