molecular mass, and thus ideal for determination ofM, since the contribution of small
solvent molecules can be neglected. In an ideal solution, the macromolecules are
entirely independent from each other, and the light scattering can be described as:
I
I 0
R¼PKcM ð 12 : 9 Þ
whereIyis the intensity of the scattered light at angley,I 0 is the intensity of the
incident light,Kis a constant proportional to the squared refractive index increment,c
is the concentration andRythe Rayleigh ratio.Pydescribes the angular dependence of
the scattered light.
For non-ideal solutions, interactions between molecules need to be considered. The
scattering intensity of real solutions has been calculated by Debye and takes into
account concentration fluctuations. This results in an additional correction term
comprising thesecond virial coefficientBwhich is a measure for the strength of
interactions between molecules:
Kc
R¼
1
P
1
Mþ^2 Bc
ð 12 : 10 Þ
Determination of molecular mass with multi-angle light scattering
In solution, there are only three methods for absolute determination of molecular mass:
membrane osmometry, sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation and light scattering.
These methods are absolute, because they do not require any reference to molecular mass
standards. In order to determine the molecular mass from light scattering, three param-
eters must be measured: the intensity of scattered light at different angles, the concen-
tration of the macromolecule and the specific refractive index increment of the solvent.
As minimum instrumentation, this requires a light source, amulti-angle light scattering
(MALS) detector, as well as a refractive index detector. These instruments can be used
in batch mode, but can also be connected to an HPLC to enable online determination
of the molecular mass of eluting macromolecules. The chromatography of choice is
size-exclusion chromatography(SEC), also called gel filtration (see Section 11.7), and
the combination of these methods is known as SEC–MALS. Unlike conventional size-
exclusion chromatography, the molecular mass determination from MALS is independ-
ent of the elution volume of the macromolecule. This is a valuable advantage, since the
retention time of a macromolecule on the size-exclusion column can depend on its shape
and conformation.
12.6.2 Quasi-elastic (dynamic) light scattering – photon
correlation spectroscopy
While intensity and angular distribution of scattered light yields information about
molecular mass and dimension of macromolecules, the wavelength analysis of scat-
tered light allows conclusions as to the transport properties of macromolecules. Due to
rotation and translation, macromolecules move into and out of a very small region in
the solution. This Brownian motion happens at a timescale of microseconds to
515 12.6 Light scattering