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Analytical Chemistry

Analytical chemistry is the branch of science that develops and applies methods, instruments, and strategies for obtaining information on the composition and nature of matter.

  • It develops, optimizes, and applies methods of measurement to produce quality (bio)chemical information of various natural and artificial objects and systems to solve analytical challenges derived from information.
  • Analytical chemistry is not limited to any certain kind of chemical substance or reaction, in contrast to other important subfields of chemistry like inorganic chemistry and organic chemistry.
  • Geometric aspects like molecular morphologies and species distributions are examined in analytical chemistry, along with characteristics like composition and species identity.
  • The goal of analytical chemistry is to identify the qualitative and quantitative composition of substances.
  • Quantitative analysis determines the amount of various chemical components contained in a given sample.  It is concerned with determining the amount or percentage of one or more elements in a sample.
  • The qualitative analysis offers information on the chemical compound’s quality. The qualitative analysis investigates a material’s chemical composition. It demonstrates the presence of distinct elements or sets of elements in the sample, such as functional groupings.
  • A chemical analysis (wet) technique can be classed as either a classical method or an instrumental method. As a result, both qualitative and quantitative analysis is split into two categories: Classical (“wet”) analysis and instrumental analysis.
  • The classical analysis is carried out using chemical processes. It involves volumetric analysis and gravimetric analysis processes.
  • The volumetric analysis determines the volume of the known concentration solution needed to completely react with the analyte. The volumetric analysis is also known as the titrimetric analysis.
  • Gravimetric analysis is an analytical technique used for the quantitative determination of an analyte based on the mass of a solid. Using this method of analysis, the element to be detected is precipitated from a solution by the addition of a suitable precipitating agent.
  • The instrumental analysis employs instruments and relies on the physical and physicochemical properties of the substance being analyzed such as absorption or emission of electromagnetic radiation or electrical properties. So instrumental method can be further subdivided into chromatographic method, electroanalytical method, and spectroscopic method.
  • Chromatography is a process for separating a mixture of chemical substances into their components so that the individual components can be thoroughly analyzed. It is a method of separating the constituents, or solutes, of a mixture based on the relative amounts of each solute distributed between a flowing fluid stream, known as the mobile phase, and a  stationary phase. The mobile phase might be a liquid or a gas, whereas the stationary phase can be solid or liquid.
  • Electrochemical methods of analysis are based on the measurement of electrical information such as current, potential, and charge and their correlation with the chemical properties of a sample. An electrical response is produced by electrochemical reactions that take occur at the electrode-solution interface, where a tiny number of molecules in the bulk solution play a role to generate an electrical response.
  • Optical methods of analysis are often known as spectroscopic methods. All spectroscopic techniques rely on electromagnetic radiation’s interaction with the quantized energy levels of the substance. These methods examine the quantitative and quantitative properties based on emission, absorption, scattering, or a change in some property of electromagnetic radiation dependent on the kind or amount of the constituent on the sample using various approaches. These techniques are categorized according to the type of effect (emission, absorption, or scattering) or the type of electromagnetic radiation (IR, visible, x-ray).

Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR): Principle, Instrumentation, Applications, Advantages, Limitations

July 8, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
FTIR

Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy is the preferred method of infrared spectroscopy. IR radiation is transmitted through a sample in infrared spectroscopy. The sample absorbs some of the infrared energy, … Read more

Thermogravimetric Analysis: Types, Applications, TGA Curve

August 9, 2023July 4, 2023 by Jyoti Bashyal
Thermogravimetric Analysis

Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) is a technique utilized to measure alterations in mass or the overall mass of a substance in relation to variations in temperature. During the process of thermogravimetric … Read more

X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS): Principle, Instrumentation, Applications, Advantages, Limitations

July 4, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy

X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy is a surface-sensitive analytical technique that involves bombarding a material’s surface with X-rays and measuring the kinetic energy of the released electrons. The surface sensitivity and capacity … Read more

Auger Electron Spectroscopy: Principle, Instrumentation, Applications, Advantages, Limitations

July 1, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Auger electron spectroscopy

Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) is a type of electron spectroscopy that detects electrons produced by Auger relaxation processes. It is a non-destructive core-level electron spectroscopy used to determine the elemental … Read more

Absolute and Relative Error: Definition, Formula, Examples, Differences

June 27, 2023 by Jyoti Bashyal
Absolute and Relative Error

The concept of absolute and relative error pertains to the degree of approximation error in a given data value. It represents the difference between the exact value and the approximated … Read more

Gas-Liquid Chromatography: Principle, Instrumentation, Applications

October 17, 2024June 15, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Gas-Liquid Chromatography

Gas-Liquid Chromatography (GLC) is a separation methodology that employs a gaseous mobile phase, typically an inert gas like helium or a nonreactive gas like nitrogen, and a liquid stationary phase. … Read more

Flame Photometry: Principle, Instrumentation, Applications, Advantages, Disadvantages

June 15, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Flame Photometry

Flame Photometry is a type of atomic spectroscopy and is used in chemical analysis to quantify the concentration of metal ions such as sodium, potassium, lithium, calcium, and so on.  The … Read more

Single beam spectrophotometer: Principle, Instrumentation, Applications, Advantages, Limitations

June 14, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
single beam spectrophotometer

Spectrophotometers are used to ascertain the wavelength distribution of light through the measurement of the percentage of reflectance from an object, as well as the identification of the color of … Read more

Double-Beam Spectrophotometer: Working Principle, Advantages

March 2, 2024June 14, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Double-Beam Spectrophotometer

Spectrophotometers are instruments that measure the distribution of light through different wavelengths. Scientists utilize these devices to measure various types of light, such as visible and near-ultraviolet light. In order … Read more

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