Transcription of 1/2000
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Interpreting DSC curvesPart 1: Dynamic measurementsThe art of interpreting curves has yet to be integrated into commercially available com-puter programs. The interpretation of a DSC measurement curve is therefore still some-thing you have to do yourself. It requires a considerable amount of experience in thermalanalysis as well as a knowledge of the possible reactions that your particular sample article presents tips and information that should help you with the systematic inter-pretation of DSC artifactsThe first thing to do is to examine the curve for any obvious artifacts that could lead to apossible misinterpretation of the results.
temperatures of their peak maxima (Fig. 4b and c). Partially crystalline polymers give rise to very broad melting peaks be-cause of the size distribution of the crystal-lites (Fig. 4c). Many organic compounds melt with de-composition (exothermic or endothermic, Figs. 4d and 4e). An endothermic peak in a DSC heating curve is a melting peak if
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