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FTIR

What Is FTIR?

FTIR measures how a material absorbs infrared light across a range of wavelengths. Different chemical bonds absorb infrared energy at characteristic frequencies, producing a spectrum that can be used to identify materials and functional groups.

Because FTIR is relatively fast and versatile, it is often one of the first techniques used to screen unknown materials or verify material identity.

What FTIR Measures

FTIR provides information on:

  • Functional groups (e.g., C–H, O–H, N–H, C=O, Si–O)

  • Chemical composition of organic materials

  • Polymer and resin identification

  • Additives, plasticizers, and binders (qualitative)

  • Contaminants and residues

  • Chemical changes due to aging, oxidation, or degradation

FTIR results are commonly compared against reference libraries for material identification.

Why Use FTIR?

FTIR is chosen when you need:

  • rapid identification of unknown materials

  • confirmation of suspected material identity

  • detection of contamination or foreign matter

  • comparison between similar materials

  • investigation of chemical degradation

Typical questions FTIR can answer:

  • What polymer or resin is this?

  • Is this residue organic or inorganic?

  • Did the material degrade or oxidize?

  • Are two samples chemically the same or different?

What Materials Can Be Analyzed?

APT is commonly applied to:

  • Metals and alloys (steel, aluminum alloys, superalloys, titanium alloys)

  • Semiconductor materials and devices

  • Thin films and multilayer structures

  • Some advanced ceramics and complex materials (depending on sample preparation feasibility)

If you are unsure whether your material is suitable, Xinbodi can evaluate sample feasibility based on your material system and analysis objectives.

Typical Application Scenarios

Polymer & Plastic Identification

  • Identification of unknown plastics, rubbers, and elastomers

  • Comparison of grades or suppliers

  • Verification of incoming materials

Contamination & Residue Analysis

  • Identification of surface residues or films

  • Investigation of foreign materials and particles

  • Root-cause analysis of cleanliness-related issues

Coatings, Adhesives & Sealants

  • Resin and binder identification

  • Evaluation of curing or chemical changes

  • Comparison of “good vs. failed” materials

Failure Analysis & Aging Studies

  • Detection of oxidation, hydrolysis, or thermal degradation

  • Chemical comparison before and after exposure

  • Support for root-cause investigations

Quality Control & Supplier Qualification

  • Batch consistency verification

  • Incoming material inspection

  • Rapid screening of suspect materials

Sample Types

FTIR can be applied to:

  • solids, powders, and films

  • liquids and gels

  • coatings and thin layers

  • polymers, rubbers, and composites

Multiple sampling modes (such as ATR, transmission, or reflection) may be used depending on sample form and thickness.

What You Will Receive

Each FTIR project is delivered with a clear, structured report designed for technical decision-making. A typical deliverable includes:

  • test objective and sample description

  • sampling mode and measurement conditions

  • FTIR spectra with key peak assignments

  • library match results (when applicable)

  • comparison between samples or reference materials

  • interpretation focused on chemical identity and changes

  • recommendations for follow-up analysis if needed

Why Choose Xinbodi for FTIR?

  • Extensive experience with polymers, coatings, and organic materials

  • Rapid turnaround for screening and identification

  • Access to broad spectral libraries and expert interpretation

  • Ability to integrate FTIR with other analytical techniques

  • Clear, application-focused reporting

  • Confidential handling of proprietary samples and data

FAQs

FTIR primarily provides qualitative identification. For full formulation breakdown, Xinbodi may recommend deformulation or complementary techniques such as GC-MS or LC-MS.

FTIR is generally non-destructive or minimally destructive, depending on the sampling mode.

Yes. FTIR can often analyze very small amounts of material, especially using ATR sampling.

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