Posts Tagged spectrum
Multidimensional Technique Enhances Vibrational Spectroscopy
By combining ultrashort pulses from a mid-infrared laser with pulses of visible light, chemists at the University of Illinois have added an important new dimension to vibrational spectroscopy. The new spectroscopic technique allows researchers to investigate vibrational energy redistribution in molecules with unprecedented detail.
“Molecules have specific vibrational motions, which can be used as spectral fingerprints,” said Dana Dlott, a UI professor of chemistry. “Our spectroscopic method allows us to monitor vibrational energy flow through a molecule on femtosecond time scales. We can therefore characterize the dynamic mechanical properties of molecules in real time — which is important in virtually every chemical process and of special interest in the field of nanotechnology, where machines will be the size of molecules.”
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System Combines Capillary Electrophoresis And NMR Spectroscopy
By using micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) technology, researchers at the University of Illinois have developed a chip-based analytical system that combines capillary electrophoresis and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Integrated microfluidic-NMR systems could have important applications in a wide variety of combinatorial chemistry areas — such as drug discovery — and might facilitate the development of desktop NMR spectrometers.
“Capillary electrophoresis and NMR spectroscopy have competing design goals, but by integrating them with MEMS technology we can maximize the performance of both systems,” said David Beebe, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and a researcher at the university’s Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. “By using very small channels and samples, we can do high-performance capillary electrophoresis separations. And by performing those separations multiple times, we can collect a large enough sample to do NMR spectroscopy.”
Tags: capillary, capillary electrophoresis, design, electrophoresis, institute, magnetic resonance, mr spectroscopy, nmr spectrometer, nmr spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance, professor, research, science, spectrometer, spectrometers, spectroscopy, spectrum, university, university ofRelated posts
Spectrophotometry and Its Working Principle
Spectrophotometry is one of the most important practices carried out in physics laboratories. Spectrophotometry is the study of the reflection or transmission properties of a substance as a function of wavelength. It is the quantitative study of electromagnetic spectra of a material. During the process, the transmittance or reflectance of the substance is measured through the careful geometrical and spectral consideration.
To carry out spectrophotometry, a spectrophotometer is required. A spectrophotometer is a device or more specifically a photometer that is used to measure intensity of light as a function of the wavelength of light. Different types of spectrophotometers are found in the market. They are classified on various basis. The most important distinctions used to classify them are:
Tags: concentration, lab equipment, light, process, spectra, spectrometer, spectrophotometer, spectrophotometers, spectrum, study, wavelength, working principleRelated posts
MR Spectroscopy Helps Identify Cancerous Breast Tumors
Measuring the biochemical changes in breast tumors with magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy enables radiologists to more accurately distinguish benign tumors from cancerous ones, according to a study appearing in the August issue of the journal Radiology.
“Adding spectroscopy to breast MR examinations will not only reduce concern over possible missed cancers and unnecessary biopsy procedures, it may also improve the efficiency and quality of patient care,” said co-author Sina Meisamy, M.D., a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Minnesota Center for Magnetic Resonance Research in Minneapolis.
MR imaging of the breasts has a high rate of sensitivity (94 percent – 100 percent) for detecting tumors, but a variable rate of specificity (37 percent – 97 percent) for distinguishing malignant from benign tumors.
Tags: benign tumor, benign tumors, biopsy, brain, breast, breast mr, breast tumor, breast tumors, cancer, cancerous tumors, journal, magnetic resonance, malignant tumor, malignant tumors, mr spectroscopy, professor, quality, research, special, spectroscopy, spectrum, study, tumor, tumors, university, university ofRelated posts