MORE ABOUT ULTRAVIOLET AND VISIBLE SPECTRA
Use of spectra
Spectra are useful for two reasons:
1.They may be used as a ‘fingerprint’ of a compound or element. This is useful in
chemical identification (qualitative analysis). Infrared and NMR absorption
spectra are widely used in the laboratory for this purpose.
2.The absorbance of a substance at a particular wavelength is proportional to the
concentration of that substance – a relationship called the Beer–Lambert law (see
p. 392). Similarly, the intensity of light emission by a substance increases with the
concentration of emitter. These relationships are useful in finding out the con-
centration of compounds or elements in mixtures (quantitative analysis).
For example, in the steel industry steel is analysed by subjecting it to a powerful
electric spark. This causes the atoms in the steel to emit certain wavelengths of light
(‘spectral lines’) which are used by the operators to deduce the elements (e.g. Mn, Cr),
in addition to iron, which are present in the steel. The intensity of the lines depends
upon the percentage of the element present in the sample of steel.
The remainder of this chapter discusses types of spectra (and their applications)
in greater detail.
More about ultraviolet and visible
spectra
Lyman emission series of the hydrogen atom
The simplest type of electronic spectra result from transitions within the simplest
atom, hydrogen. The emission spectrum of the hydrogen atom at ultraviolet wave-
lengths consists of a series of emission peaks (or in a photographic emulsion, dark
lines) called the Lyman series.
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In an atomic absorption spectrometer, a
sample is turned into atoms (atomized)
using a hot flame. UV or visible radiation at
a suitable wavelength is passed through
the atomized sample. The concentration of
absorbing atoms in the sample is
proportional to the observed absorbance at
that wavelength. The technique allows
accurate measurements to be made of the
concentrations of trace metals (e.g. Cu,
Pb, Cr or Mn) even where the
concentrations are below 1 mg per dm^3.