UV Teori
UV Teori
UV Teori
At room temperature, most of the atoms, molecules and electrons are in the lowest energy orbital called ground state. The electron of atom (molecule) at ground state can absorb proton and transit to higher energy orbital called excited state. Atom or molecule can absorb the radiation only when the energy of proton is equal to the energy difference of the two orbitals
s-
* s
Transitions
An electron in a bonding s orbital is excited to the corresponding antibonding orbital. The energy required is large. For example, methane (which has only C-H bonds, and can only undergo s - s* transitions) shows an absorbance maximum at 125 nm. Absorption maxima due to s - s* transitions are not seen in typical UV-Vis. spectra (200 - 700 nm)
n-
* s
Transitions
Saturated compounds containing atoms with lone pairs (non-bonding electrons) are capable of n - s* transitions. These transitions usually need less energy than s - s * transitions. They can be initiated by light whose wavelength is in the range 150 - 250 nm. The number of organic functional groups with n - s* peaks in the UV region is small.
n - p* and p - p* Transitions
Most absorption spectroscopy of organic compounds is based on transitions of n or p electrons to the p* excited state. This is because the absorption peaks for these transitions fall in an experimentally convenient region of the spectrum (200 700 nm). These transitions need an unsaturated group in the molecule to provide the p electrons.
n-
* p
and p -
* p
Transitions
(continue)
Molar absorbtivities from n - p* transitions are relatively low, and range from 10 to100 L mol-1 cm-1 . p - p* transitions normally give molar absorbtivities between 1000 and 10,000 L mol-1 cm-1 .
Solvent effect
The solvent in which the absorbing species is dissolved also has an effect on the spectrum of the species. Peaks resulting from n -p* transitions are shifted to shorter wavelengths (blue shift) with increasing solvent polarity. This arises from increased solvation of the lone pair, which lowers the energy of the n orbital.
Choice of Solvent
Solvent Minimum Wavelength (nm) Solvent Minimum Wavelength (nm) Solvent Minimum Wavelength (nm)
water methanol
191 201
Chromophore
Alkanes Alkenes Alkynes Carbonyls alcohols, ethers Amines sulfur compounds Carbonyls
lmax Transition
~ 150 ~ 175 ~ 170 ~ 188 ~ 185 ~ 195 ~ 195 ~ 285 h to p* s to s* p to p*
h to s*
-C=CC=CC=O | R
Six-membered ring or acyclic parent enone Five-membered ring parent enone Acyclic dienone
X=H
X = OH, OR Increments for: Double bond extending conjugation 30 Exocyclic double bond 5 Endocyclic double bond in a 5- or 7-membered ring for X = OH, OR 5 Homocyclic diene component 39
Polar groupings:
-OH
-OC(O)CH3 -OCH3
Solvent correction*:
*Solvent
330
UV-vis Spectrophotometer
Single-Beam UV-Vis Spectrophotometer Single-Beam spectrophotometers are often sufficient for making quantitative absorption measurements in the UV-Vis spectral region. Single-beam spectrophotometers can utilize a fixed wavelength light source or a continuous source.
Instrumentation
The dual-beam design greatly simplifies this process by simultaneously measuring P and Po of the sample and reference cells, respectively. Most spectrometers use a mirrored rotating chopper wheel to alternately direct the light beam through the sample and reference cells. The detection electronics or software program can then manipulate the P and Po values as the wavelength scans to produce the spectrum of absorbance or transmittance as a function of wavelength.
Array-Detector Spectrophotometer
Array-detector spectrophotometers allow rapid recording of absorption spectra. Dispersing the source light after it passes through a sample allows the use of an array detector to simultaneously record the transmitted light power at multiple wavelengths. There are a large number of applications where absorbance spectra must be recorded very quickly. Some examples include HPLC detection, process monitoring, and measurement of reaction kinetics.
Instrumentation
These spectrometers use photodiode arrays (PDAs) or charge-coupled devices (CCDs) as the detector. The spectral range of these array detectors is typically 200 to 1000 nm. The light source is a continuum source such as a tungsten lamp. All wavelengths pass through the sample. The light is dispersed by a diffraction grating after the sample and the separated wavelengths fall on different pixels of the array detector.
Instrumentation
The resolution depends on the grating, spectrometer design, and pixel size, and is usually fixed for a given instrument. Besides allowing rapid spectral recording, these instruments are relatively small and robust. Portable spectrometers have been developed that use optical fibers to deliver light to and from a sample. These instruments use only a single light beam, so a reference spectrum is recorded and stored in memory to produce transmittance or absorbance spectra after recording the sample spectrum.