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UV-vis Absorption (Extinction) Spectroscopy

UV-vis Absorption (Extinction) Spectroscopy. Single-Beam or Double-Beam Fixed l or Dispersive Common: Source – Tungsten Halogen Lamp (360-2000 nm) Sample – Liquid In Cuvette Dispersion – Spectrograph w/ Diffraction Grating Detector – CCD. Beer’s Law: A = e bc. Assumptions.

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UV-vis Absorption (Extinction) Spectroscopy

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  1. UV-vis Absorption (Extinction) Spectroscopy Single-Beam or Double-Beam Fixed l or Dispersive Common: Source – Tungsten Halogen Lamp (360-2000 nm) Sample – Liquid In Cuvette Dispersion – Spectrograph w/ Diffraction Grating Detector – CCD Beer’s Law: A = ebc

  2. Assumptions Ingle and Crouch, Spectrochemical Analysis

  3. Apparent Deviations from Beer’s Law Non-Zero Intercept Improper blank measurement or correction. Instrumental drift. Skoog, Hollar, Nieman, Principles of Instrumental Analysis, Saunders College Publishing, Philadelphia, 1998.

  4. Apparent Deviations from Beer’s Law Non-Linear Calibration Plot Chemical Equilibrium – if multiple chemical forms of analyte exist and only one absorbs Other Chemical Effects – solute/solvent interactions, solute/solute interactions, H bonding at high concentrations Using Polychromatic Radiation – non-optimum wavelengths are still transmitted and detected Stray Light – causes measured transmittance to be larger than it should be Skoog, Hollar, Nieman, Principles of Instrumental Analysis, Saunders College Publishing, Philadelphia, 1998.

  5. Absorbed/Emitted Colors Pretsch/Buhlmann/Affolter/Badertscher, Structure Determination of Organic Compounds

  6. Chromophores Often transitions are localized in specific bonds or functional groups within a molecule. Group will have a characteristic lmax and e. Molecular structure or environment can influence lmax and e. Shift to longer l bathochromic (red) shift. Shift to shorter l  hypsochromic (blue) shift. Increase in e  hyperchromic effect. Decrease in e  hypochromic effect. What effect does conjugation usually have? hyperchromic effect / bathochromic shift

  7. Characteristic Electronic Transitions L mol-1 cm-1 Pretsch/Buhlmann/Affolter/Badertscher, Structure Determination of Organic Compounds

  8. Characteristic Electronic Transitions L mol-1 cm-1 Pretsch/Buhlmann/Affolter/Badertscher, Structure Determination of Organic Compounds

  9. Auxophore Does not absorb Induces a bathochromic shift and hyperchromic effect when conjugated to a chromophore (e.g. -OH, -Br, -NH2). Solvent Effects Hypsochromic shiftin n  p* transitions as solvent polarity increases. Solvation stabilizes the nonbonding pair. Bathochromic shiftin p  p* transitions as solvent polarity increases. Solvation stabilizes p*, which is often more polar than p.

  10. Conjugated Alkenes Woodward-Fieser Rules Pretsch/Buhlmann/Affolter/Badertscher, Structure Determination of Organic Compounds

  11. * 1,3-butadiene antibonding bonding

  12. Conjugated Dienes

  13. UV Absorption of Conjugated Alkenes e units = L mole-1 cm-1 • Increasing conjugation gives: • longer wavelength absorption • more intense absorption

  14. b-Carotene 11 double bonds lmax = 460 nm (e = 139,000)

  15. Fieser-Kuhn Rules Systems with More than 4 Double Bonds lmax (nm) = 114 + 5M + n(48.0-1.7n) – 16.5Rendo – 10Rexo n = number of conjugated double bonds M = number of alkyl or alkyl like substituents on the conjugated system Rendo = number of rings with endocyclic double bonds in the conjugated system Rexo = number of rings with exocyclic double bonds

  16. Are you getting the concept? Calculate the absorption maximum for lycopene:

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