Thin layer chromatography, a case study |
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Authors: | J.C. Akkerboom P. Schepers J. v.d. Werff |
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Affiliation: | *Department of Mathematics until 1–1–1980, now Department of Paediatrics, Groningen University.;**Department of Toxicology, Groningen University.;***Department of Mathematics, Groningen University. |
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Abstract: | This paper gives an account of the collaboration between two mathematical statisticians and a toxicologist (the second author) interested in thin layer chromatography (TLC). A TLC "system" consists of a medium through which a solvent is transported. If a solution of some (toxic) sample is applied to the medium, then the components are carried forward by the solvent over different distances. Section 1 describes the concept of a data bank which provides standard values for the degrees of migration characteristic for each of m well-studied substances in each of n systems. Sections 2–5 are mainly devoted to the construction of The "best design(s)"{ j 1*… j k * } of k systems from the n available ones. The attention is restricted to the situation that an unidentified sample exclusively contains one of the m substances covered by the data bank and produces the scores xj … xjk in the systems j,… j krespectively. Three different approaches to the identification problem were successively considered. Each approach leads to a class of procedures and their performances. The performance of the optimum procedure can be used to define the performance of any of the ( nk ) designs ( j 1… jk }. The latter performance is maximized in order to determine { j 1*.,., jk* }. In practice usually data is obtained for mixtures instead of single. pure substances. Section 6 gives some tentative theory for the evaluation of such data. |
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