Litcius/Paper detail

Selection of Formal Baseline Correction Methods in Thermal Analysis

Rebecca L. Gibson, Mark Simmons, E. Hugh Stitt, L. E. Horsburgh, Robert W. Gallen

2021Chemical Engineering & Technology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Baseline correction is a key step in processing of thermal analysis data. Whilst this is a common step, techniques range from linear baselines to use of high‐order polynomials. When considering a formal baseline correction (those without physical or experimental justification), only linear correction methods should be used: linear with time, linear with temperature, and linear with extent of reaction. The absence of baseline correction should also be considered. An in silico study shows that the wrong baseline correction can significantly impact the parameters obtained from kinetic modeling. The four baseline correction methods are demonstrated with a mass spectrometry dataset. It is recommended that the selection of correction method should be based on comparison of Akaike weights.

Topics & Concepts

Akaike information criterionBaseline (sea)Range (aeronautics)Selection (genetic algorithm)MathematicsComputer scienceStatisticsAlgorithmArtificial intelligenceEngineeringOceanographyGeologyAerospace engineeringThermal and Kinetic AnalysisChemical Thermodynamics and Molecular StructureChemistry and Chemical Engineering