Section 3, Theory and practice of spectroscopy measurements, Theory of spectroscopy measurement – Jenway 6850 User Manual

Page 14: T = i, Log 1

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SECTION 3

– THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SPECTROSCOPY MEASUREMENTS

3.1

THEORY OF SPECTROSCOPY MEASUREMENT

UV-visible spectroscopy is the measurement of the absorbance of light at a specific wavelength in a

sample. This is used to identify the presence and concentration of molecular entities within the

sample. The Beer-Lambert law is used to relate the absorption of light to the properties of the sample

through which the light is travelling through. The Beer-Lambert law states that:

A

is the absorbance

is the molar absorption coefficient (l mol

-1

cm

-1

)

c

is the concentration (mol l

-1

)

l

is the path length (cm)

This law shows that absorbance is linear to concentration but this is only true for low concentrations.

For absorbance levels above 3 the concentration starts to move away from the linear relationship.

Transmittance is the proportion of the light which passes through the sample:

Therefore:

T = I

t

I

o

Absorbance is inversely related to transmittance:

A =

log 1

T

l

I

o

I

t

Where:

I

o

is the incident light

l

t

is the transmitted light

l

is the path length

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