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Transient species, resonance Raman spectroscop

Once the transient species has been formed, it has to be monitored by some form of kinetic spectroscopy, typically with ultraviolet-visible absorption or emission, infrared (time-resolved infrared or TRIR) (74), or resonance Raman (time-resolved resonance Raman or TR3) (80) methods of detection. The transient is usually tracked by a probe beam at a single characteristic frequency, thereby giving direct access to the kinetic dimension. Spectra can then be built up point by point, if necessary, with an appropriate change of probe frequency for each point, although improvements in the sensitivity of multichannel detectors may be expected to lead increasingly to the replacement of the laborious point-by-point method by full two-dimensional methods of spectroscopic assay (that is, with both spectral and kinetic dimensions). [Pg.137]


See other pages where Transient species, resonance Raman spectroscop is mentioned: [Pg.575]    [Pg.5418]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.263]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.734]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.371]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.488 ]




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