Absorption Spectroscopy From 160 NM To 780 NM Measurement of Transmittance

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 30

Ultraviolet-Visible Spectroscopy

• Introduction to UV-Visible
 Absorption spectroscopy from 160 nm to 780 nm
 Measurement of transmittance
 Conversion to absorbance
* A=-logT=bc

• Measurement of transmittance and absorbance


• Beer’s law
• Noise
• Instrumentation

8-1
Measurement
• Scattering of light
 Refraction at interfaces
 Scatter in solution
 Large molecules
 Air bubbles
• Normalized by comparison to reference cell
 Contains only solvent
 Measurement for transmittance is
compared to results from reference cell
8-2
Beer’s Law
• Based on absorption of light by a
sample
 dPx/Px=dS/S
 dS/S=ratio of absorbance area
P n
to total area dP adn
 x

* Proportional to number of Po
Px 0
S
absorbing particles Po an
 ln 
 dS=adn P S
* a is a constant, dn is number Po an
log 
of particles P 2.303S
 n is total number of particles
within a sample
8-3
Beer’s Law
• Area S can be described by volume and length
 S=V/b (cm2)
Po anb
 Substitute for S log 
P 2.303V
 n/V = concentration
 Substitute concentration and collect
constant into single term 
• Beer’s law can be applied to mixtures
 Atot=Ax

8-4
Beer’s Law Limitations
• Equilibrium shift
 pH indicators
 Need to consider
speciation
 Weak acid
equilibrium

8-5
Beer’s Law Limitation
• Polychromatic Light
 More than one
wavelength

8-6
Noise
• Limited readout resolution
• Dark current and electronic noise
• Photon detector shot noise
• Cell position uncertainty
 Changing samples
• Flicker

8-7
Instrumentation
• Light source
 Deuterium and hydrogen lamps
 W filament lamp
 Xe arc lamps
• Sample containers
 Cuvettes
 Plastic
 Glass
 Quartz

8-8
Spectrometers

8-9
Spectrometer

Time separated double beam

8-10
Spectrometer

Dip probe

Multichannel photodiode array

8-11
Application of UV-Visible Spectroscopy

• Identification of inorganic and organic species


• Widely used method

• Magnitude of molar absorptivities


• Absorbing species
• methods

8-12
Molar Absorptivties
• Range from 0 to 1E5
 =8.7E19PA
 P=transition probability
 A=target cross section (cm2)
* Allowed transitions 0.1>P>1
 range 1E4 to 1E5
* Forbidden transition 0.01
• Absorbing species
 M+->M*
 M* has a short lifetime (nanoseconds)
 Relaxation processes
* Heat
* Photo emission
Fluorescence or phosphorescence

8-13
Absorbing species
• Electronic transitions
 and n electrons
 d and f electrons
 Charge transfer reactions
 and n (non-bonding) electrons

8-14
Sigma and Pi orbitals

8-15
Electron transitions

8-16
Transitions
 
 UV photon required, high energy
 Methane at 125 nm
 Ethane at 135 nm
• n-> 
 Saturated compounds with unshared e-
 Absorption between 150 nm to 250 nm
  between 100 and 3000 L cm-1 mol-1
 Shifts to shorter wavelengths with polar
solvents
* Minimum accessibility
 Halogens, N, O, S
8-17
Transitions
• n->, 
 Organic compounds, wavelengths 200 to
700 nm
 Requires unsaturated groups
 n->low  (10 to 100)
* Shorter wavelengths
 higher  (1000 to 10000)

8-18
Solvent effects

8-19
Transitions
• d-d
 3d and 4d 1st and 2nd transitions series
 Broad transitions
 Impacted by solution

8-20
Transitions

8-21
D transitions
• Partially occupied d orbitals
 Transitions from lower to higher energy
levels
 Splitting of levels due to spatial
distribution

similar

Axial direction
8-22
D transitions
• Binding ligands on axis have greater effect on
axial orbitals

8-23
D transitions
  value dependent upon ligand field strength
 <Br-<Cl-<F-<OH-<C2O42-~H2O<SCN-
<NH3<en<NO2-<CN-
  increases with increasing field strength
• f-f
 4f and 5f (lanthanides and actinides)
 Sharper transitions

8-24
Actinide transitions
5
6+
Pu (835 nm)

4+
4 Pu (489 nm)

Normal
Absorbance

3 Heavy
Light

0
400 500 600 700 800
Wavelength (nm)

Figure 2: UV-vis spectra of organic phases for 13M


HNO3 system 8-25
Charge-transfer Transitions
• Electron donor and acceptor characteristics
 Absorption involves e- transitions from
donor to acceptor
 SCN to Fe(III)
* Fe(II) and neutral SCN
 Metal is acceptor
 Reduced metals can be exception

8-26
Electronic Spectra
• Cr(NH3)63+
 d3
 Weak low energy transition
 Spin forbidden
 2 stronger transitions
 Spin allowed
* t2g and eg
transitions
Lower
energy to
higher
energy
 CT at higher energy
 Ligand to metal
transition

8-27
Charge transfer bands
• High energy absorbance
 Energy greater than d-d
transition
 Electron moves between
orbitals
* Metal to ligand
* Ligand to metal
 Sensitive to solvent
• LMCT
 High oxidation state metal ion
 Lone pair ligand donor
• MLCT
 Low lying pi, aromatic
 Low oxidation state metal
 High d orbital energy

8-28
Solvent effect

8-29
Methods
• Titration
 Change of absorbance with solution
variation
 pH, ligand, metal
• Photoacoustic effect
 Emission of sound

8-30

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy