For decades, Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was sold as a hardware story—better lasers, better interferometers, better detectors. But in 2024, the hardware has largely plateaued. The real differentiator between a $20,000 benchtop unit and a $60,000 research-grade system isn't the optics anymore.
Because in the end, you aren't paying for the interferometer. You are paying for the intelligence to turn photons into answers. And that intelligence lives entirely in the software. ftir software
Minor baseline tilt, CO2 subtraction artifacts, or slight humidity can tank a Hit Quality Index (HQI) from 98% to 70%. The operator then assumes the sample is unknown, when in reality, the software was just too rigid. Because in the end, you aren't paying for the interferometer
Now comes the hard part: What am I actually looking at? Minor baseline tilt, CO2 subtraction artifacts, or slight
If you have worked in an analytical lab for more than a week, you know the feeling. You have just scanned a perfect infrared spectrum. The signal-to-noise ratio is immaculate. The baseline is flat. You stare at the screen and see a series of sharp, beautiful peaks.