Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1366/000370207782217734
Title: Remote monitoring of a multi-component liquid-phase organic synthesis by infrared emission spectroscopy: The recovery of pure component emissivities by band-target entropy minimization
Authors: Cheng, S.
Tjahjono, M.
Rajarathnam, D. 
Chuanzhao, L.
Lyapkalo, I.
Chen, D.
Garland, M. 
Keywords: Band-target entropy minimization
BTEM
Emittance
Infrared emission spectroscopy
Liquid-phase reaction
Issue Date: Oct-2007
Citation: Cheng, S., Tjahjono, M., Rajarathnam, D., Chuanzhao, L., Lyapkalo, I., Chen, D., Garland, M. (2007-10). Remote monitoring of a multi-component liquid-phase organic synthesis by infrared emission spectroscopy: The recovery of pure component emissivities by band-target entropy minimization. Applied Spectroscopy 61 (10) : 1057-1062. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1366/000370207782217734
Abstract: A liquid-phase cycloaddition reaction near ambient temperature involving dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate (DMAD) and cyclopentadiene (CP) as reactants was measured using a conventional Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectrometer with an emission accessory. Two semi-batch experiments were performed and a total of 55 spectra were collected using a DTGS detector. Band-target entropy minimization (BTEM), a pure component spectral reconstruction technique, was applied to analyze the data set to retrieve the pure component emission spectrum from the reaction system. The estimated emission spectra of the solvent chloroform, DMAD, CP, and product, namely dimethyl bicyclo[2.2.1]-2,5- heptadiene-2,3-dicarboxylate, were all reconstructed with rather good quality. The estimated emission spectra are similar to independent FT-IR spectra of the same cycloaddition reaction. Using a least squares fit, the relative concentration profiles of the species are obtained. Because this appears to be the first time that a liquid-phase reaction has been monitored by infrared emission spectroscopy, further improvements and opportunities for general multi-phase liquid reaction monitoring are discussed. © 2007 Society for Applied Spectroscopy.
Source Title: Applied Spectroscopy
URI: http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/90012
ISSN: 00037028
DOI: 10.1366/000370207782217734
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications

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