In question 2 of Chapter 6 in the Heinemann Chem 12 textbook, it asks: 'why is it necessary to measure the peak areas produced by a number of standards'
I answered: 'to accurately determine the proportionality of %ethanol to the Relative ethanol peak area, allowing the former to be determined from the latter'. but the textbook has a far more detailed response, containing many terms I'm not familiar with.
the book says: 'Techniques such as AA, GLC, HPLC, UV, etc. do not directly produce measures of concentration. Standards must be used. More than one standard should be used and
the unknown sample should lie between these standards. This is because a zero standard may be contaminated with trace amounts of the chemical being tested . Calibration graphs are often non-linear and multiple standards increase the chance of detecting incorrectly prepared solutions'
I have no clue what exactly the bold text means, could somebody enlighten me?
