Analysis & Identification

ChemNorth Equipment Wiki

Analysis & Identification

Learn how organic lab samples are checked, compared, and identified through physical properties, quick bench methods, and instrumental analysis.

Bench logic first: what are you trying to learn from a sample? Choose a practical starting point before moving into advanced characterization.

Analysis Workflow Overview
Visualizing the progression from bench checks to molecular evidence

Choose the kind of answer you need first.

Analysis is about answering specific questions. Start with the most efficient method for your current goal.

Check a measurable property

Need a direct value like melting point or density to verify a known substance.

Physical Properties

Run a fast bench check

Quick comparison or reaction monitoring at the bench using TLC or simple visual checks.

Quick Checks

Collect stronger evidence

Requires structural, compositional, or separation data via instrumental techniques.

Instrumental Analysis

Directory by topic

Browse the complete structural catalog of analysis methods, from physical constants to advanced spectroscopy.

Method Selection Decision Map
How to choose between speed, cost, and depth of evidence

Bench logic: matching question to method.

Don’t start with an instrument. Start with the logic of your search.

Direct Physical Evidence

When you need a single, verifiable constant (MP, RI, [α]). Best for verifying known solids or liquids.

Screening & Comparison

When you need to see if a reaction is done or compare two vials quickly. TLC is the gold standard here.

Molecular Characterization

When “what is this?” is the question. Requires functional group (IR), connectivity (NMR), or mass data.

Purity & Composition

When determining how much of what is present. Chromatography (GC/HPLC) provides the quantitative breakdown.

Keep analysis connected.