justadream Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Apr 29, 2011 Messages 2,171 Reaction score 863 Points 5,246 Jul 31, 2014 #1 Advertisement - Members don't see this ad TBR Ochem page 210 #30 See picture. How do you know that the integration values for the three peaks are: 1:2:2 (this is what TBR says in the answer key) If you count the “plateaus”, the 2 peaks on the right side have 3 plateaus.
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad TBR Ochem page 210 #30 See picture. How do you know that the integration values for the three peaks are: 1:2:2 (this is what TBR says in the answer key) If you count the “plateaus”, the 2 peaks on the right side have 3 plateaus.
T t5Nitro Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Apr 14, 2011 Messages 426 Reaction score 155 Points 5,226 Resident [Any Field] Aug 1, 2014 #2 justadream said: TBR Ochem page 210 #30 See picture. How do you know that the integration values for the three peaks are: 1:2:2 (this is what TBR says in the answer key) If you count the “plateaus”, the 2 peaks on the right side have 3 plateaus. Click to expand... The size of the integration is what matters. About two of the one on the left equals the size of one of those on the right. Upvote 0 Downvote
justadream said: TBR Ochem page 210 #30 See picture. How do you know that the integration values for the three peaks are: 1:2:2 (this is what TBR says in the answer key) If you count the “plateaus”, the 2 peaks on the right side have 3 plateaus. Click to expand... The size of the integration is what matters. About two of the one on the left equals the size of one of those on the right.
justadream Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Apr 29, 2011 Messages 2,171 Reaction score 863 Points 5,246 Aug 2, 2014 #3 @t5Nitro Okay that's simple. So just for curiosity's sake, what do those humps mean? Upvote 0 Downvote