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Journal ArticleDOI

Molar absorptivities of glucose and other biological molecules in aqueous solutions over the first overtone and combination regions of the near-infrared spectrum

Airat K. Amerov, +2 more
- 01 Oct 2004 - 
- Vol. 58, Iss: 10, pp 1195-1204
TLDR
It is shown that the net absorbance of light is controlled by the magnitude of the absorptivity of glucose compared to the product of the absorption of water and the water displacement coefficient for glucose.
Abstract
Molar absorptivities are measured for water, glucose, alanine, ascorbate, lactate, triacetin, and urea in the near-infrared spectral region at 37 degrees C. Values are based on the Beer-Lambert law and cover the first overtone (1550-1850 nm; 6450-5400 cm(-1)) and combination (2000-2500 nm; 4000-5000 cm(-1)) spectral windows through aqueous media. Accurate calculations demand accounting for the impact of water displacement upon dissolution of solute. In this regard, water displacement coefficients are measured and reported for each solute. First overtone absorptivities range from 2 to 7 x 10(-5) mM(-1)mm(-1) for all solutes except urea, for which absorptivity values are below 0.5 x 10(-5) mM(-1) mm(-1) across this spectral range. Molar absorptivities over the combination spectral region range from 0.8 to 3.2 x 10(-4) mM(-1) mm(-1), which is a factor of four to five greater than the first overtone absorptivities. Accuracy of the measured values is assessed by comparing calculated or modeled spectra with spectra measured from standard solutions. This comparison reveals accurately modeled spectra in terms of magnitude and position of solute absorption bands. Both actual and modeled spectra from glucose solutions reveal positive and negative absorbance values depending on the measurement wavelength. It is shown that the net absorbance of light is controlled by the magnitude of the absorptivity of glucose compared to the product of the absorptivity of water and the water displacement coefficient for glucose.

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Citations
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Noninvasive Glucose Sensing

TL;DR: The ability to measure glucose noninvasively in human subjects is a major objective for many research groups and two fundamentally different approaches are identified for the development of noninvasive glucose sensing technology.
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Multivariate calibration of NIR spectroscopic sensors for continuous glucose monitoring

TL;DR: It is recommended selecting the most informative variables and exploiting the available expert knowledge on known interferences in pre-processing or multivariate calibration to develop an NIR-based CGM sensor for in-vivo use.
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Silicon-on-insulator spectrometers with integrated GaInAsSb photodiodes for wide-band spectroscopy from 1510 to 2300 nm.

TL;DR: Good performance of the miniature spectrometers over all operational wavelengths which paves the way to on-chip absorption spectroscopy in this wavelength range.
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Scattering and absorption effects in the determination of glucose in whole blood by near-infrared spectroscopy.

TL;DR: Optical properties of whole bovine blood are examined under conditions of different glucose loadings and evidence that absorption information is needed in order to obtain a glucose calibration model with acceptable performance is provided.
References
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Book

CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

TL;DR: CRC handbook of chemistry and physics, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, CRC handbook as discussed by the authors, CRC Handbook for Chemistry and Physiology, CRC Handbook for Physics,
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Constants of Water in the 200-nm to 200-microm Wavelength Region.

TL;DR: Extinction coefficients k(lambda) for water at 25 degrees C were determined through a broad spectral region by manually smoothing a point by point graph of k( lambda) vs wavelength lambda that was plotted for data obtained from a review of the scientific literature on the optical constants of water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Refractive indices of water and ice in the 0.65- to 2.5-µm spectral range.

TL;DR: The imaginary part of refractive index of supercooled water shows a systematic shift of absorption peaks toward the longer wavelengths compared with that of water at warmer temperatures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of water in the near infrared.

TL;DR: In this paper, the real n (ν) and imaginary k(ν) parts of the complex refractive index Nˆ = n + i k of water at 27 °C have been determined from measurements of spectral reflectance at near-normal incidence and measurements of the transmittance of water in carefully constructed absorption cells.
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This comparison reveals accurately modeled spectra in terms of magnitude and position of solute absorption bands.