Abstract

Infrared spectroscopy appears to be a promising analytical method for the metabolic analysis of breath. However, due to the presence of trace amounts in exhaled breath, the absorption strength of the metabolites remains extremely low. In such low detection limits, the nonlinear detection sensitivity of the infrared detector and electronic noise strongly modify the baseline of the acquired infrared spectra of breath. Fitting the reference molecular spectra with the baseline-modified spectral features of breath metabolites does not provide accurate identification. Therefore, baseline correction of the acquired infrared spectra of breath is the primary requirement for the success of breath-based infrared diagnosis. A selective spectral region-based, simple baseline correction method is proposed for the infrared spectroscopy of breath.

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