Public Lab Wiki documentation



How To Obtain Transmittance/ Absorbance Spectra

This is a revision from July 15, 2016 21:06. View all revisions
1 | 13 | | #13291

1) Setup: a) a full-spectrum light source (e.g. a white light LED). The light source has to cover the full spectral range you want to measure b) the Plab spectrometer c) a 180° geometry, that is: shine the light through your sample

2) Measure: a) a first spectrum without sample. Let's call it reference spectrum. b) a second spectrum with sample. Let's call it sample spectrum.

3) Calculate: a) the transmittance spectrum by a division: transmittance = sample / reference . b) the absorbance spectrum by applying a logarithm: absorbance = -1 * log(transmittance)

That's all. No subtraction involved, but a division.

Some more hints: - As long as the light source is stable both in intensity and spectrum shape, you don't have to repeat 2) a) for every sample measurement.(1)

In order to obtain the absorbance properties of only the sample without influence of container + solvent, the 2) a) step is done with a sample container filled with the solvent used for the sample measurement. Of course, both containers should then behave identical for reference and sample measurement. - Negative transmission is meaningless. Transmission above 100% is meaningless. If this occurs, errors have occurred (lamp intensity drifting, swapped sample/reference, ...) - absorbance and transmittance spectra have a "common data base", you can display any absorbance spectrum as transmittance and vice versa. However, you cannot (!) display an intensity spectrum as absorbance. this would be totally meaningless. - For any work on concentration determination, you have to go to absorbance domain. Only there you can use the Lambert-Beer relationship.

Ok, so armed with this knowledge, lets show you step by step how this is done for obtaining absorption measurements of my Rhodamine B in Ethanol sample:

First graph shows STEP 2 (a)(b)

sample_and_NO_sample__together_july_14_first_pic.png

The next graph shows the sample and that of the solvent (ethanol)

SAMPLE_AND_SOLVENT_new_july14CUTOFF_second_pic.png

Here is the sample divided by the solvent

sample_divided_by_solvent_july_14_smoothed_third_pic.png

The fourth graph shows the transmittance/reflectance

sample__july_14_transmtt_relctnce_fourth_pic.png

maxima_minima_for_rhod_b_part_1.png

Here is were I can access the inverted minima and transmission maxima for the absorption spectra of my sample (rhodamine b,) is highlighted, maximum absorption at 0.2259 at 540nm.

Next, when this value of 0.2259 is entered for calculating PPM of my sample, I just take that number and place it under molar concentration and I get a value of 108PPM for my stock solution of rhodamine b.

PPM_calculations_part_4.png

This is an easy explanation of the Beer-Lambert Law

beer_lambert_law_part2.png

beer_lambert_law_part_3.png

Ref: (1) Originally explained by Dr. Freidrich Menges PhD in physical chemistry. http://www.effemm2.de/spekwin/spekwin_kontakt_en.html

http://hplc.chem.shu.edu/NEW/Undergrad/Molec_Spectr/Lambert.html