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Great material, regular text...: The book is subdivided into only 3 of the 4 classical methods for spectrometric identification of compounds: IR, MS, and finally NMR (covering 1H, 13C and very little of 19F and 31P). UV is left out in this edition, so maybe getting a hold of the old edition's UV chapter (which is extremely well-written) might be desired. The MS and the IR chapters are also well-written and explained out. It is in the main technique (NMR) that the author fails to deliver the subject in a straightforward manner and lacks what I think is most important in this field: a large number of exercises and problems.
Good in NMR Spectra analysis information, but weak elsewhere: This book lacked information in my opinion. Silverstein started a good project but just didn't give enough information about IR interpretation, mass spec, C-13 NMR, etc. He focussed on 2-D NMR a great deal, and I believe that there are much better textbooks on this subject.
An Important book: This book provide a the basis of the fundamentals of Spectroscopy in many fields (IR, HNMR, CNMR, DEPT, COSY, HMBC, HMQC, TOCSY, MS, and much more) It has many real problems in an special chapter. And the most important, it has a lot of important tables and spectrums.
| Author: | Robert M. Silverstein | | Author: | Francis X. Webster | | Author: | David Kiemle | | Binding: | Hardcover | | Dewey Decimal Number: | 543.5 | | EAN: | 9780471393627 | | Edition: | 7 | | ISBN: | 0471393622 | | Number Of Pages: | 512 | | Publication Date: | 2005-01-03 |
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