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Page 1: ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY CHEM 3811 CHAPTER 19

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY CHEM 3811

CHAPTER 19

DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMANAssistant professor of chemistryDepartment of natural sciences

Clayton state university

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CHAPTER 19

SPECTROPHOTOMETRY

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COMPONENTS OF THE SPECTROPHOTOMETER

Po PLightsource

monochromator

(λ selector) sample readout detector

b

Absorption (UV-Vis)

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COMPONENTS OF THE SPECTROPHOTOMETER

Lightsource

monochromator

(λ selector) sample readout detector

Absorption (IR)

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COMPONENTS OF THE SPECTROPHOTOMETER

Source& sample

monochromator

(λ selector)

readout detector

Emission

- Sample is an integral portion of the source

- Used to produce the EM radiation that will be measured

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COMPONENTS OF THE SPECTROPHOTOMETER

Sourceλ selector

sample

monochromator

(λ selector)

readout detector

Fluorescence

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LIGHT SOURCE

- A steady power supply is essential to provide constant signal

Tungsten Filament Lamp- Glows at a temperature near 3000 K

- Produces radiation at wavelengths from 320 to 2500 nm- Visible and near IR regions

Dueterium (D2) Arc Lamp- D2 molecules are electrically dissociated

- Produces radiation at wavelengths from 200 to 400 nm- UV region

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LIGHT SOURCE

Mercury and Xenon Arc Lamps- Electric discharge lamps

- Produce radiation at wavelengths from 200 to 800 nm- UV and Visible regions

Silicon Carbide (SiC) Rod - Also called globar

- Electrically heated to about 1500 K- Produces radiation at wavelengths from 1200 to 40000 nm

- IR region

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LIGHT SOURCE

Also for IR Region

- NiChrome wire (750 nm to 20000 nm)

- ZrO2 (400 nm to 20000 nm)

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LIGHT SOURCE

Laser

- Produce specific spectral lines- Used when high intensity line source is required

Can be used forUV

Visible FTIR

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MONOCHROMATOR

- Optical device- Disperses a beam of light into its component wavelengths

- Allows only a narrow band of wavelengths to pass - Blocks all other wavelengths

Components- Two slits (entrance and exit)

- Concave Mirrors- Grating

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MONOCHROMATOR

- Mirror collimates light (parallel rays)- Gating disperses light

- Prisms were formerly used to disperse light

- Light coming through entrance slit is polychromatic- Light out of exit slit is monochromatic

Dispersive Spectrophotometers- Spectrophotometers that use monochromators

to select wavelengths

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MONOCHROMATOR

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SAMPLE CELL

Fused silica Cells (SiO2)- Transmits visible and UV radiation

Plastic and Glass Cells- Only good for visible wavelengths

NaCl and KBr Crystals- IR wavelengths

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DETECTOR

- Produces an electric signal proportional to the radiation intensity- Signal is amplified and made available for direct display

- A sensitivity control amplifies the signal- May be controlled manually or by a microprocessor

(the use of dynodes)

ExamplesPhototube (UV)

Photomultiplier tube (UV-Vis)Thermocouple (IR)

Thermister (IR)

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PHOTODIODE ARRAY SPECTROPHOTOMETER

- Records the entire spectrum (all wavelengths) at once

- Makes use of a polychromator

- The polychromator disperses light into component wavelengths

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ANALYSIS OF A MIXTURE

- Occurs when there is more than one absorbing species

Absorbance at a given λ = sum of absorbances from all species

AT = ε1b1c1 + ε2b2c2 + ε3b3c3 + ….

For the same sample cellb1 = b2 = b3 = b

AT = b(ε1c1 + ε2c2 + ε3c3 + ….)

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LUMINESCENCE

- Includes any EM emission

Emission Intensity (I)

I = kPoc

k is a proportionality constantk is a proportionality constantPPoo is the incident radiant power is the incident radiant power

c is the concentration of emitting speciesc is the concentration of emitting species

- Only holds for low concentrations- Only holds for low concentrations

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LUMINESCENCE

Fluorescence- Emission of light from a molecule in an excited state

- Initial absorbance followed by emission

Phosphorescence- Similar to fluorescence

- There is a delay (from seconds to hours) before emission

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LUMINESCENCE

Photoluminescence (PL)- EM absorption and re-radiation

- Period between absorption and emission is usually very short

Chemiluminescence (CL)- Emission of light as a result of a chemical reaction

Electrochemiluminescence (ECL)- Emission produced during electrochemical reactions

- Luminescence as a result of electrochemically generated species

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SPECTROELECTROCHEMISTRY

- Spectral and electrochemical signals are simultaneously obtained

- Change in absorbance is concurrent with the electrochemistry

Generally- Positive scan (oxidation) - absorbance decreases

- Negative scan (reduction) - absorbance increases

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-2.5

-1.5

-0.5

0.5

1.5

2.5

-0.4-0.200.20.40.60.8Volts vs Ag/AgCl

Curre

nt (M

illia

mps

)

Epa

Epc

ipa

ipc

0

200

400

600

800

1000

0 100 200 300 400 500 600

Time (Seconds)In

ten

sity

Io

I

ipa = anodic peak current ipc = cathodic peak current

Modulated Absorbance

Am = -log(I/Io)

SPECTROELECTROCHEMISTRY