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Stopped-Flow Device Improves Time-Resolved FTIR

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To perform long-path absorbance measurements for liquid samples, a luminescence detector cell must act as an optical fiber or waveguide. Otherwise, excessive noise results. And if the cell is to function as a liquid core waveguide, it must be made of material with a lower refractive index than the liquid surrounding it. In the past, systems have used materials such as carbon disulfide in a glass tube or ethanol in a fluorinated ethylene-propylene copolymer. Now a team from Texas Tech University in Lubbock reports the use of an amorphous fluoropolymer, Teflon AF, in liquid core waveguide...Read full article

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    Published: July 1999
    Basic ScienceResearch & TechnologySensors & DetectorsTech Pulse

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