CHEM 2302 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Approximation Error, Significant Figures, Caffeine

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Analyte: the compound the concentration of which is to be determined. Assay: procedure used to determine how much analyte is present in a sample. Analysis: only samples are analyzed, while compounds within the sample are identified. Sample matrix: the medium containing the analyte (not of interest in an analysis) Interferences: other chemicals present in the sample that effect the measurement and change the signal when the analyte concentration remains unchanged. Analytical response: the ability of an analytical technique to detect the analyte. Calibration curve: a plot of analytical response versus analytical response versus analyte concentration used to determine the concentration of an unknown and is constructed by measuring the analytical response of a series of standard solutions. Doing an assay: take standard solution (solution of known concentration), aliquot it into different standard concentrations and measure each using an analytical technique. Create a calibration curve by plotting analytical response versus analyte concentration.

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