Uv-Vis: Ultraviolet-Visible Spectrophotometer
Uv-Vis: Ultraviolet-Visible Spectrophotometer
Uv-Vis: Ultraviolet-Visible Spectrophotometer
Ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometer
Scientists interpret quantum mechanics to mean that a tiny piece of material like a
photon or electron is both a particle and a wave. It can be either, depending on how one
looks at it or what kind of an experiment one is doing. In fact, it might be more accurate
to say that photons and electrons are neither a particle or a wave -- they're undefined up
until the very moment someone looks at them or performs an experiment, thus forcing
them to be either a particle or a wave. This comes with other side effects: namely that a
number of qualities for particles aren't well-defined. For example, there is a theory by
Werner Heisenberg called the Uncertainty Principle. It states that if a researcher wants
to measure the speed and position of a particle, he can't do both very accurately. If he
measures the speed carefully, then he can't measure the position nearly as well. This
doesn't just mean he doesn't have good enough measurement tools -- it's more
fundamental than that. If the speed is well-established then there simply does not exist
a well-established position (the electron is smeared out like a wave) and vice versa.
Albert Einstein disliked this idea. When confronted with the notion that the laws of
physics left room for such vagueness he announced: "God does not play dice with the
universe." Nevertheless, most physicists today accept the laws of quantum mechanics
as an accurate description of the subatomic world. And certainly it was a thorough
understanding of these new laws which helped Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley invent
the transistor.
Frequency is how often an event repeats itself over a set amount of time.
In physics, the frequency of a wave is the number of wave crests that pass a point in
one second (A wave crest is the peak of the wave).
Hertz (symbol Hz) is the unit of frequency.
The relationship between Frequency and wavelength is expressed by the formula: f = v /
λ
f=c/λ
All electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light in a vacuum but they travel
at slower speeds when they travel through a medium that is not a vacuum. Other
waves, such as sound waves, travel at much much lower speeds and cannot travel
through a vacuum.
E=hxv
𝒉𝒄
E= 𝝀
Photon energy is solely a function of the photon's wavelength. Other factors, such as
the intensity of the radiation, do not affect photon energy. In other words, two photons
of light with the same color (and, therefore, same wavelength) will have the same
photon energy, even if one was emitted from a wax candle and the other from the Sun.
The photon energy can be represented by any unit of energy. Among the units
commonly used to denote photon energy are the electronvolt (eV) and the joule (as well
as its multiples, such as the microjoule). As one joule equals 6.24 × 10 18 eV, the larger
units may be more useful in denoting the energy of photons with higher frequency and
higher energy, such as gamma rays, as opposed to lower energy photons, such as
those in the radiofrequency region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Photons being massless, the notion of "photon energy" is not related to mass through
the equivalence E = mc2.
Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometry (UV-
Vis or UV/Vis) refers to absorption spectroscopy or reflectance spectroscopy in
the ultraviolet-visible spectral region. This means it uses light in the visible and adjacent
ranges. The absorption or reflectance in the visible range directly affects the
perceived color of the chemicals involved. In this region of the electromagnetic
spectrum, atoms and molecules undergo electronic transitions. Absorption spectroscopy
is complementary to fluorescence spectroscopy, in that fluorescence deals with
transitions from the excited state to the ground state, while absorption measures
transitions from the ground state to the excited state.
Instruments for measuring the absorption of U.V. or visible radiation are made up of
the following components;
Sources of UV radiation
It is important that the power of the radiation source does not change abruptly over its
wavelength range.
Wavelength selector (monochromator)
An entrance slit
A collimating lens
A dispersing device (usually a prism or a grating)
A focusing lens
An exit slit
Cuvettes
The containers for the sample and reference solution must be transparent to the
radiation which will pass through them. Quartz or fused silica cuvettes are required for
spectroscopy in the UV region. These cells are also transparent in the visible region.
Silicate glasses can be used for the manufacture of cuvettes for use between 350 and
2000 nm.
Detectors
Charge-Coupled Devices (CCDs) are similar to diode array detectors, but instead of
diodes, they consist of an array of photocapacitors.
*If the sample compound does not absorb light of of a given wavelength, I = I0.
However, if the sample compound absorbs light then I is less than I0, and this difference
may be plotted on a graph versus wavelength, as shown on the right. Absorption may
be presented as transmittance (T = I/I0) or absorbance (A= log I0/I). If no absorption has
occurred, T = 1.0 and A= 0. Most spectrometers display absorbance on the vertical axis,
and the commonly observed range is from 0 (100% transmittance) to 2 (1%
transmittance). The wavelength of maximum absorbance is a characteristic value,
designated as λma
I. Lambert’s Law
For each wavelength of light passing through the spectrometer, the intensity of the
light passing through the reference cell is measured. This is usually referred to as Io
- that's I for Intensity. The intensity of the light passing through the sample cell is
also measured for that wavelength - given the symbol, I. If I is less than Io, then
obviously the sample has absorbed some of the light. A simple bit of maths is then
done in the computer to convert this into something called the absorbance of the
sample - given the symbol, A. For reasons to do with the form of the Beer-Lambert
Law (below), the relationship between A (the absorbance) and the two intensities is
given by:
𝐼𝑜
Absorbance (A) = log 𝐼
100
A = log 𝑇
Transmittance, T = P / P0
% Transmittance, %T = 100 T
Absorbance,
A = log10 P0 / P
A = log10 1 / T
A = log10 100 / %T
A = 2 - log10 %T
A = 𝜀𝑐𝑏
b is the path length of the sample - that is, the path length of the cuvette in which the
sample is contained. We will express this measurement in centimetres.
c is the concentration of the compound in solution, expressed in mol L-1