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Holler, F. James

Skoog, Douglas A. Holler, F. James and Nieman, Timothy A. (1998). Principles of Instrumental Analysis, 5th edition. Orlando, FL Harcourt Brace College Publishers. [Pg.76]

Skoog, D.A. West, D.M. and F. James Holler. 1992. Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry,... [Pg.1100]

F. James Holler University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky Christie G. Enke The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico... [Pg.237]

Spreadsheet Applications. Applications of Microsoft Excel in Analytical Chemistry, by Stanley R. Crouch and F. James Holler, treats in detail the spreadsheet approaches summarized in the text. This supplement contains 16 chapters that lead the student from basic concepts and operations to using spreadsheets for simulations, curve fitting, data smoothing, curve resolution, and many other topics. Topics in this companion book are correlated with topics in the text. See pages xvii and xviii for a correlation chart. Summaries in the text point to specific chapters and sections in the companion book. For added value and convenience, this ancillary can be packaged with the text. Contact your Thomson Brooks/Cole representative for details. [Pg.1175]

Skooc, Douglas A, F. James Holler, and Timothy A. Nie,man. Principles of hisirumenial Analysis. 5lh ed. Philadelphia Saunders College Publishers. Harcourt Brace College Publishers. 1998. [Pg.303]

Physical or instrumental methods were extensively developed in the twentieth century and are gradually replacing classical methods. In Principles of Instrumental Analysis, three American chemists, Douglas Skoog, F. James Holler, and Timothy Nieman, detail many instrumental methods that use highly complex and often costly machines to determine the identity and concentration of analytes. While these methods often are not as accurate and precise as classical methods, they require much less sample and can determine concentrations much less than 0.1 percent. In fact, Richard Mathies, professor at the University of California at Berkeley, and coworkers recendy described methods that can determine the presence of one molecule In addition, instrumental methods often produce results more rapidly than chemical methods and are the methods of choice when a very large number of samples of the same kind have to be analyzed repetitiously, as in blood analyses. [Pg.75]

Douglas A. Skoog F. James Holler Stanley R. Crouch... [Pg.1054]

Skoog, Douglas A., James F. Holler, and Stanley R. Crouch, Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry, 8th ed., Thomson-Brooks/Cole, Behnont, CA, 2004. [Pg.537]


See other pages where Holler, F. James is mentioned: [Pg.1160]    [Pg.530]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.555]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.47 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.47 ]




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