Guide to UV visible Spectroscopy in chemical analysis

UV visible Spectroscopy in chemical analysis
Spectroscopy is the branch of science dealing with the study of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.

OR

It is the measurement of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) absorbed or emitted when the molecule or cons are atoms of a sample move from one energy state to another state .

🔶Principle of Spectroscopy

• The Principle of spectroscopy is based on the measurement of the spectrum of a sample containing atoms / molecules. 

Spectrum is a graph of intensity of absorbed or emitted radiation by sample versus frequency or wavelength .

• Spectrometer is an instrument design to measure the Spectrum of a compound.

🔶 Theory

The theory of UV spectroscopy is based on the absorption of ultraviolet (UV) light by molecules, causing electronic transitions. When UV light passes through a sample, the molecules absorb specific wavelengths, exciting electrons from a lower-energy ground state to a higher-energy excited state.

The amount of light absorbed at different wavelengths is measured, producing a spectrum. This spectrum provides information about the molecular structure, including conjugation and functional groups. The absorption follows Beer-Lambert’s law, relating absorbance to the concentration of the absorbing species.

Gamma Rays             <0.001 nm

X-rays                 <0.01-10nm

U.V                     200-400nm

Visible light           400-800 nm

Infra Red                0.8-200 µm

Microwaves               0.01-1m

Radio waves              1-107m

This is completely based on Beer-Lambert Law.

Beer’s law :

Beer’s Law states that the amount of light absorbed by a medium is directly proportional to the concentration of the absorbing species in the medium and the path length of the light through it.

Lambert’ s Law :

Lambert’s Law focuses on the path length and states that:
“Equal thicknesses of the same medium absorb the same proportion of the incident light.”

🔶 Application

1. Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis: Identifies and determines the concentration of compounds, especially those with conjugated systems or aromatic rings, using the Beer-Lambert law.


2. Detection of Impurities: Identifies impurities in samples by comparing the UV spectra of the test sample with a standard.


3. Structure Elucidation: Analyzes functional groups, unsaturation, and conjugation in organic compounds through characteristic absorption bands.

By Arpita

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