Molecular Spectros
Molecular Spectros
Molecular Spectros
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Wavelength: The distance between two successive crests or troughs of a wave
and denoted by the Greek letter λ (lambda).
Unit: m, cm, mm, μm, nm, and A0
Frequency: The number of waves (cycles or oscillation) per second that pass a
given point in space. Symbolized by the lowercase Greek letter nu, ν.
An electron can radiate or absorb energy as radiation only in a pulse of energy called quanta or photon. This is known as the quantization of energy
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic radiations/spectrum include a range of wavelengths and this array of wavelengths.
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Legend:
γ = Gamma rays
HX = Hard X-rays
SX = Soft X-Rays
EUV = Extreme-ultraviolet
NUV = Near-ultraviolet
NIR = Near-infrared
MIR = Mid-infrared
FIR = Far-infrared
Nuclear spin changes with the energies of the radio frequency region (4-900 MHz) which is in the region of 1.6 x 10-6-3.6 x 10-4
kJ/mol.
Visible
What is signal to noise (S/N) ratio?
Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR or S/N) is a measure used in science and engineering that compares the level of a desired signal
to the level of background noise. SNR is defined as the ratio of signal power to noise power, often expressed in decibels.
How to increase S/N ratio?
1. Signal averaging
2. Using mathematical filters
(digital smoothing filter, moving average filter and
Savitzky-Golay filter).
3. Fourier transform (FT) filtering
Full Width at Half Maximum (FWHM) corresponds to the width of a spectral peak
at half of its maximum amplitude. This can be visualized as the distance between
two points on the y-axis where the curve's intensity is half of its peak value. For
Gaussian line shapes, the FWHM is about 2.4 standard deviations.
Resolution: In spectroscopy, resolution or resolving power is the ability to separate two distinct peaks that are close
together. The resolving power of an optical instrument is its ability to separate the images of two objects, which are close
together.
Electronic spectroscopy
Ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) spectroscopy is used to obtain the
absorbance spectra of a compound in solution or as a solid.
What is actually being observed spectroscopically is the
absorbance of light energy or electromagnetic radiation,
which excites electrons from the ground state to the first
singlet excited state of the compound or material. The UV-vis
region of energy for the electromagnetic spectrum covers 1.5
- 6.2 eV which relates to a wavelength range of 800 - 200 nm.
Transparent
light
source detector
Io I
I – intensity where Io is initial intensity As concentration
b increased, less
T – transmission or %T = 100 x T
light was
(absorption: Abs = 1 – T or %Abs = 100 - %T) Cell with
T = I/ Io transmitted (more
Pathlength, b,
light absorbed).
containing solution
Applications of Ultraviolet/Visible
Molecular Absorption Spectrophotometry