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Modern Raman Spectroscopy: A Practical Approach


by Ewen Smith, Geoffrey Dent

List Price: $60.00
Price: $54.00
You Save: $6.00 (10%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 325422
Studio: Wiley
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 222
Publication Date: February 07, 2005
Publisher: Wiley


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
This book reflects the dramatic increase in the number of Raman spectrometers being sold to and used by non-expert practitioners. It contains coverage of Resonance Raman and SERS, two hot areas of Raman, in a form suitable for the non-expert.
  • Builds Raman theory up in stages without overloading the reader with complex theory
  • Includes two chapters on instrumentation and interpretation that shows how Raman spectra can be obtained and interpreted
  • Explains the potential of using Raman spectroscopy in a wide variety of applications
  • Includes detailed, but concise information and worked examples


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 2 reviews)

Up to date, but weak  
The big strength of this book is that it's a good single-volume coverage of the current technology involved in the method, including ultrafast laser systems for CARS etc. The chapter that surveys applications is also fairly well-done. The coverage does not provide enough information to make useful conclusions on choice of specific equipment, or even questions such as "would I be better served with visible-light excitation and a good CCD, or a FT instrument?"

The rest of it... well. It's simply not very well written - organization is poor, even within a given paragraph. Information is repeated multiple times; I saw the same sentence (about the need to pick a good baseline when doing quantitative work) on three consecutive pages - and in no case do they provide a good example of a well-chosen baseline. They mention apodization of FT spectra, but they do not explain or define it. They talk about work on standardizing instruments (esp. for quantitative/intensity purposes), but they wander back and forth between "it's very seldom done" and "it's not been studied much" and "it's been satisfactorily addressed" and "it's very nearly a solved problem". (As another example, there's a figure showing FT-Raman spectra of indene at several different excitation powers; the text claims that there's a non-linear power dependence for the relative peak intensities, but the figure suggests the opposite.)

Sentence fragments are common, and at least two figures have typos. Was there a proof-reader?

Paragraphs also contradict each other: They say that "the SMOOTH function" (yes, apparently there's only the one) is a useful tool for bringing out weak features; that it's extremely dangerous because it obscures detail; that it's an excellent way to remove noise. On the basis of those paragraphs, the reader is left with very little indication of whether "the SMOOTH function" should be used or not. They (attempt to) cover the relevant theory, but again, it's poorly arranged and winds up obscuring more than it explains.

As a review of Raman since 2000 (McCreery's book), it's somewhat useful. They do provide extensive references, so it's perhaps an effective set of pointers on where to start reading.

It is not "the perfect book on Raman spectroscopy"; it is not even a very good one. In particular, I cannot see it useful as an introduction to Raman. (I'd hoped to suggest it as a supplement to a class I'm teaching in the fall; I'm glad I read it before giving it to students!) Their idea for the book was good; perhaps a second edition will be more useful.

June 07, 2008

Proabably The Most Concise and Basic Information Needed By Everyone  
I have searched for the perfect book on Raman spectroscopy which would be short and complete. After looking high and low, I must recommend this text to everyone who want an explanation detail by detail. The concepts are handled quite nicely so that anyone with basic physics and chemistry understanding will comprehend. Also, there are plenty of examples of compounds which makes analysis easier to identify different bonds and vibration modes. Keep this handy with you and treasure it forever. This one is a keeper.
January 01, 2007


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

Introductory Raman Spectroscopy, Second Edition
by John R. Ferraro

Infrared and Raman Characteristic Group Frequencies: Tables and Charts
by George Socrates

Surface-Enhanced Vibrational Spectroscopy
by Ricardo Aroca

Molecular Vibrations: The Theory of Infrared and Raman Vibrational Spectra
by Edgar Bright Wilson, J.C. Decius, Paul C. Cross

Modern Spectroscopy
by J. Michael Hollas

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