Anionic Surfactants

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advanced surfactant analysis methods
American Chemical Society
Anion Exchange Chromatography
Anionic Surfactants
Aqueous Environmental Samples
Category=PNR
De Henau
Diglycolic Acids
environmental monitoring
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Ethoxylated Alcohol Sulfates
Ethoxylated Alcohols
Fab Mass Spectrum
Fluorinated Surfactants
HMQC Spectrum
Hyamine
La Concentration
laboratory techniques
macro quantities
Mass Spectrum
Maximum Bubble Pressure Method
molecular identification
Negative Ion Electrospray Mass Spectrum
NMR Experiment
NMR Spectroscopy
Per-fluorooctanoic Acid
quantitative analysis
Raman Spectrum
Sample Preparation
Sea Water
SFC
Sodium Dodecylbenzenesulfonate
SPE Column
surface chemistry
trace quantities
volumetric analysis
water contamination testing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367455781
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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"Presents the most comprehensive coverage available of the detection, isolation, identification, and estimation of all anionic surfactants in a wide variety of samples in trace and macro quantities. Features new chapters on volumetric and trace analysis, molecular and mass spectroscopy, and chromatographic processes."
JOHN CROSS has taught Analytical and Physical Chemistry at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia since 1969. Additionally, he is a member of the Chemical Hazards Emergency Management Unit of the Queensland State Government. The editor of Nonionic Surfactants: Chemical Analysis and the coeditor of Cationic Surfactants: Analytical and Biological Evaluation (both titles, Marcel Dekker, Inc.), Dr. Cross is a Fellow of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute and a member of the Australian Association of Science Communicators. He gained his technical qualifications (Higher National Certificate and Graduateship of the Royal Institute of Chemistry) from Kingston University (formerly, Kingston Polytechnic), Kingston upon Thames, United Kingdom. He received the M.Sc. (1965) and the Ph.D. (1967) degrees for his work on the mechanisms of gas-phase reactions from the University of New EnglandasArmidale, Australia.