Pre-processing of ultraviolet resonance Raman spectra

The application of UV excitation sources coupled with resonance Raman have the potential to offer information unavailable with the current inventory of commonly used structural techniques including X-ray, NMR and IR analysis. However, for ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy to become a m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analyst (London) 2011-03, Vol.136 (6), p.1239-1247
Hauptverfasser: SIMPSON, John V, OSHOKOYA, Olayinka, WAGNER, Nicole, JING LIU, JIJI, Renee D
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 1239
container_title Analyst (London)
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creator SIMPSON, John V
OSHOKOYA, Olayinka
WAGNER, Nicole
JING LIU
JIJI, Renee D
description The application of UV excitation sources coupled with resonance Raman have the potential to offer information unavailable with the current inventory of commonly used structural techniques including X-ray, NMR and IR analysis. However, for ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy to become a mainstream method for the determination of protein secondary structure content and monitoring protein dynamics, the application of multivariate data analysis methodologies must be made routine. Typically, the application of higher order data analysis methods requires robust pre-processing methods in order to standardize the data arrays. The application of such methods can be problematic in UVRR datasets due to spectral shifts arising from day-to-day fluctuations in the instrument response. Additionally, the non-linear increases in spectral resolution in wavenumbers (increasing spectral data points for the same spectral region) that results from increasing excitation wavelengths can make the alignment of multi-excitation datasets problematic. Last, a uniform and standardized methodology for the subtraction of the water band has also been a systematic issue for multivariate data analysis as the water band overlaps the amide I mode. Here we present a two-pronged preprocessing approach using correlation optimized warping (COW) to alleviate spectra-to-spectra and day-to-day alignment errors coupled with a method whereby the relative intensity of the water band is determined through a least-squares determination of the signal intensity between 1750 and 1900 cm(-1) to make complex multi-excitation datasets more homogeneous and usable with multivariate analysis methods.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c0an00774a
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source Royal Society of Chemistry Journals Archive (1841-2007); Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Analytical chemistry
Chemistry
Exact sciences and technology
General, instrumentation
Spectrometric and optical methods
title Pre-processing of ultraviolet resonance Raman spectra
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