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Cyclohexane is used as a solvent for xylene FTIR. Some other solvents used are hexane, diethyl ether, acetone etc. depending on the type of analyte.
Mull technique is the only technique which can be used for Ethacrynic acid. silicon oil is used to grind sample and in it. irt is placed on sodiun cells and cells are overlapped and kept in holder in FTIR apparatus.
Dipole moment
S. Wartewig has written: 'IR and Raman spectroscopy' -- subject(s): Infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy
liquid
Easy - water.
Infrared spectroscopy (IR spectroscopy) is the subset of spectroscopy that deals with the infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. It covers a range of techniques, with the most common type by far being a form of absorption spectroscopy. As with all spectroscopic techniques, it can be used to identify a compound and to investigate the composition of a sample. For further details, see the links to the left of this answer.
Potassium fluoride isn't used in infrared spectroscopy.
The application for IR spectroscopy include the identification of functional group and structure elucidation. It also includes the identification of substances and detection of impurities.
IR deals with spectra itself and almost without any processing. FTIR transforms IR spectra using Fourier transformation which allows to find very specific frequencies (each element has its own FTIR spectra).
(Latteman, M, 2003) attributed a Si-C stretch at 782-794cm-1
IR spectroscopy works by using infrared beams to work out the structure of a chemical. The chemical is placed in an inert substance, e.g. Potassium Bromide. The refraction of the beams brings up a characteristic trace of the mystery compound, which can then be used to work out the structure.