SkoogD.A., Principles of Instrumental Analysis, Third Edition. Saunders College Publishing, New York, p. 315 (1985).
2.
StrobelH.A., Chemical Instrumentation: A Systematic Approach, Second Edition. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts, p. 468 (1973).
3.
CrooksJ.E., The Spectrum in Chemistry. Academic Press, London, p. 52 (1978).
4.
WillardH.H.MerrittL.L.JrDeanJ.A., Instrumental Methods of Analysis, Fifth Edition. D. Van Nostrand Company, New York, pp. 171, 174 (1974).
StrobelH.A., Chemical Instrumentation: A Systematic Approach, Second Edition. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts, pp. 448–449 (1973).
7.
MarkH. (Mark Electronics, 21 Terrace Avenue, Suffern, NY 10961, USA) has pointed out to me that this is actually a specific result for 98 samples at a confidence level of 90%. The subject is discussed in detail in Statistics in Spectroscopy by MarkH.WorkmanJ., Academic Press, New York, pp. 50–54 (1991).
8.
HammondStephen (Pfizer Ltd, Ramsgate Road, Sandwich Kent, CT13 9NJ, United Kingdom), “An On-Line Application of NIR Pharmaceutical Production”, 35th Annual Eastern Analytical Symposium, Somerset, New Jersey, November 18, 1996, paper #130.