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Physics; Prentice-Hall: New York, 1943. (Brashear's method was also given in the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics until at least 1963.) (7) Beckm...
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V. Z. Ind. Eng. Chem., Anal Ed. 1943, 15, 66. b. Strong, J. Phys. Today April 1951, 659-709. p. 14. (6) Strong, J. Procedures in Experimental (18) Barnes, R. B.; Gore, R. C; Liddel, U.; Physics; Prentice-Hall: New York, 1943. Williams, V. Z. Infrared Spectroscopy. In­ (Brashear's method was also given in dustrial Applications and Bibliography; the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics Reinhold Publishing Corp.: New York, until at least 1963.) 1944. (19) Bellamy, L. J. The Infrared Spectra of (7) Beckman, A. O.; Gallaway, W. S.; Complex Molecules; Methuen and Co.: Kaye, W.; Ulrich, W. F. Anal. Chem. London, and John Wiley and Sons: New 1977, 49, 280 A-300 A. York, 1954. (8) Barnes, R. B.; Perkin, R.; Sanderson, J. Α.; Warga, M. E. Phys. Today June (20) Colthup, N. B.J. Opt. Soc.Amer. 1950, 1966, p. 115. 40, 397-400. (9) Firestone, F. A. Rev. Sci. Instrum. (21) Coblentz, W. W. Investigations ofInfra­ 1932, 3, 162-88. red Spectra; Publication No. 35, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1905. Re­ (10) Randall, H. M.; Fowler, R. G.; Fuson, printed in 1962 by the Coblentz Society N.; Dangl, J. R. Infrared Determination of and Perkin Elmer. Organic Structures; Van Nostrand: New York, 1949. (22) Lecomte, J. Cahiers de Physique 1943, 17, 1-26. (11) a. Walsh, A. D. /. Opt. Soc. Amer. 1952, 42, 94-100, 496-500; b. Walsh, (23) Wright, N. Ind. Eng. Chem., Anal. Ed. A. D. /. Opt. Soc. Amer. 1953, 43, 215, 1941, 13, 1-8. 989—92 (24) Crocket, D. S.; Haendler, H. M. Anal. Chem. 1959, 31, 626-27. (12) Wright, N.; Herscher, L. W. /. Opt. Soc. Amer. 1947, 37, 211-16. (25) Stimson, M. M.; O'Donnell, M. J. / Am. Chem. Soc. 1952, 74, 1805-08. (13) Baird, W. S.; O'Bryan, H. M.; Ogden, G.; Lee, D. /. Opt. Soc. Amer. 1947, 37, (26) Fahrenfort, J. Spectrochim. Acta 1961, 754-61. 17, 698-709. (27) a. Harrick, N. J. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1960, (14) a. Wood, R. W. Phil. Mag. 1910, 20, 4, 224-26. b. Harrick, N. J. /. Phys. 770-78. b. Wood, R. W.; Trowbridge, A. Chem. 1960, 64, 1110-14. Phil. Mag. 1910, 20, 886-98. (15) a. Zahl, Η. Α.; Golay, M.J.E. Rev. Sci. (28) Norman, I.; Porter, G. Nature 1954, Instrum. 1946, 17, 511-15. b. Harrison, 174, 508. G. R.; Lord, R. C; Loofbourow, J. R. (29) Whittle, E.; Dows, D. Α.; Pimentel, Practical Spectroscopy; Prentice-Hall: En- G. C.J. Chem. Phys. 1954, 22, 1943. glewood Cliffs, NJ, 1948; pp. 308-09. (30) White, J. U. /. Opt. Soc. Amer. 1942, 32, 285-88. (16) Lord, R. C. Spectroscopy 1989, 4, 2 8 29. (31) a. Weir, C. E.; Lippincott, E. R.; Van Valkenburg, Α.; Bunting, Ε. Ν. /. Res. (17)'Barnes, R. B.; Liddel, U.; Williams,

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Foil A. Miller is professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh. He received his B.S. degree in chemistry from Hamline University in 1937 and his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1942. After holding various positions at the Univer­ sity of Minnesota, the University of Illi­ nois, and the Mellon Institute, he joined the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh in 1967. He obtained his first IR spectrum in 1941 through the courtesy of IR pio­ neers at American Cyanamid Co. Re­ search Laboratories and acquired his first IR instrument in 1945.

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