The
article is a response to a recent opinion piece that log concentration
values should not be applied in analytical chemistry. An essential
aim in the development of analytical chemistry methods is to obtain
more sensitive and accurate detection values. For the application
of chemical analysis methods, the obtained experiment data need to
fit with the mathematical functions in the first place. As influenced
by different detection principles and analytical methods, data can
be displayed in a coordinate system with two linear axes for linear
function fitting, or the data can first be taken through a logarithmic
transformation and then for function fitting. Using raw data or data
after logarithmic transformation primarily depends on analytical principles,
without special rules of data formats. For example, ultraviolet–visible
spectrophotometric data are more suitable for direct linear fitting.
However, enzyme-catalyzed reaction or electrochemical data in logarithmic
form are more appropriate for function fitting. This transformation
of data form will not affect the soundness of fit statistics; rather,
it simplifies the complexity of function analysis and calculation,
which are the essence of analytical chemistry. In this brief article,
we provide justification and legitimacy of the application of logarithmic
processing in various fields of quantitative analytical chemistry