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Analyse thermogravimétrique×Aire de surface BET×Calorimétrie différentielle à balayage×Déconvolution Raman×
DomaineScience des matériauxScience des matériauxScience des matériauxScience des matériaux
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine1960s193819641928
Auteur d'origineWilliam W. WendlandtBrunauer, Emmett, TellerE. S. WatsonChandrasekhara Venkata Raman
TypeCharacterization methodMeasurement methodMeasurement methodAnalytical technique
Source fondatriceWendlandt, W. W. (1986). Thermal Analysis (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. link ↗Brunauer, S., Emmett, P. H., & Teller, E. (1938). Adsorption of gases in multimolecular layers. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 60(2), 309-319. DOI ↗Watson, E. S., O'Neill, M. J., Justin, J., & Brenner, N. (1964). A differential scanning calorimeter for quantitative differential thermal analysis. Analytical Chemistry, 36(7), 1233-1238. DOI ↗Raman, C. V., & Krishnan, K. S. (1928). The scattering of light by molecules. Nature, 121(3048), 501-502. link ↗
AliasTGA, thermal gravimetry, thermogravimetryBET analysis, nitrogen adsorption, surface area measurementDSC, differential thermal analysis, thermal analysisRaman deconvolution, Raman peak fitting, spectral analysis
Apparentées3333
RésuméThermogravimetric Analysis (TGA) is a thermal characterization technique that continuously measures mass loss or gain of a material as a function of temperature (or time at constant temperature). Developed systematically by William Wendlandt and colleagues in the 1960s, TGA identifies thermal transitions (evaporation, decomposition, oxidation, reduction) and quantifies composition of polymers, pharmaceuticals, ceramics, and other materials. The derivative signal (DTG) highlights transition temperatures. When combined with gas analysis (MS, FTIR), decomposition products are identified.Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) Surface Area Analysis is a technique for measuring the specific surface area of solids by analyzing their nitrogen adsorption isotherms. Developed by Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller in 1938, BET theory extends monolayer adsorption (Langmuir) to multilayer adsorption, enabling quantification of surface area of porous and powdered materials. It is the industry standard for characterizing catalysts, adsorbents, pharmaceuticals, and porous materials, providing critical data for performance prediction and quality control.Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) is a thermal characterization technique that measures the heat flow required to maintain a sample and an inert reference at the same temperature while both are heated or cooled. Invented by Watson, O'Neill, and colleagues in 1964, DSC directly quantifies enthalpy changes during phase transitions, crystallization, melting, and chemical reactions. It is the standard tool in materials science, chemistry, and pharmaceutical research for determining thermodynamic properties, thermal stability, and kinetics of thermal transitions.Raman Deconvolution is the mathematical decomposition of experimental Raman spectra into constituent peaks using spectral fitting algorithms. Building on Raman spectroscopy (discovered by C.V. Raman in 1928), Raman deconvolution resolves overlapping vibrational bands into individual component peaks, revealing detailed information about molecular bonds, crystal phases, strain, and defects. This quantitative analysis transforms raw Raman spectra into actionable chemical and structural insights, making it essential for materials characterization, quality control, and scientific discovery.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Thermogravimetric Analysis · BET Surface Area · Differential Scanning Calorimetry · Raman Deconvolution. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare