Spectrophotometry Self Study Tutorial
Spectrophotometry Self Study Tutorial
INTRODUCTION TO SPECTROPHOTOMETRY
Learning Outcomes: on completion of this tutorial/background reading, you should be able to:
demonstrate a basic understanding of the electromagnetic spectrum and the laws of light
absorption by chromophores in order to apply them to practical quantitative analysis using
spectrophotometric and colorimetric assays.
h.c
E = ────
where: E = energy,
c = velocity of light
= wavelength and h = Planck’s constant
For example: UV and blue light have a shorter wavelength and thus more energy than
red light that has a longer wavelength and thus less energy.
1
2
When a photon strikes an atom or a molecule, one of two things may happen: the photon
may be scattered, or it may be absorbed and its energy transferred to the atom or
molecule, producing an excited state. For a photon to be absorbed, its energy must
match the energy difference between two energy levels of the atom or molecule, ie. the
electron transfers from its ground state to an excited state.
The excited atom or molecule reverts to its ground state by the re-emission – almost
instantaneously and in a random direction – of radiation:
either of the same wavelength in a process known as absorption (or
extinction)
or of a longer wavelength in processes known as fluorescence (and
phosphorescence).
Photons in the visible and UV regions of the spectrum have sufficient energy only to excite
two types of electrons: (i) Lone pairs (requiring a wavelength around 208 nm, ie. fairly high
2
3
energy) and (ii) Double bonds (requiring a wavelength well into the ultraviolet and visible
regions, ie fairly low energy). Hence, visibly coloured compounds often have many double
bonds (usually ‘conjugated’).
For a uniform absorbing medium, the proportion of the radiation passing through is called
the TRANSMITTANCE (T),
The term ABSORBANCE (A) or (more correctly) EXTINCTION (E) is defined as...
The Beer-Lambert law states that the Absorbance is directly proportional to the
concentration of the absorbing substance and to the thickness of the layer:
3
4
BANDWIDTH: the light emerging from a monochromator does not consist of a single
wavelength but a group of wavelengths known as bandwidth. The bandwidth is important
because it is indicative of the actual wavelengths involved in a given Absorbance
measurement and determines the resolution of the spectrophotometer: the narrower the
bandwidth, the better the resolution but also the more expensive is the instrument!
4
5
Colorimetric assays (colorimetry as in definition II) are extremely important and widely-
used techniques in ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY. Substances, which do not possess
significant extinction coefficients in the visible region of the spectrum (and this includes
very many compounds of biological interest), can be made to react quantitatively with
some other reagent to give COLOURED products. This property is used as a basis for
estimating such substances. Moreover, if the method has been well designed in terms of
the wavelength at which the chromophoric product absorbs, the assay can be performed
in the presence of other compounds (a situation frequently encountered in biological
extracts) without the need for purification.
The colour is produced under STANDARD conditions from known quantities (or
concentrations) of the substance and the Absorbances (Extinctions) of these samples are
measured, using a REAGENT BLANK in the reference cuvette. A reagent blank contains
all of the reagents except the substance being estimated. The Absorbance reading is set
to ZERO using this blank. The measured Absorbances are plotted against the quantity
(or concentration) of the test substance producing the colour. This graph is known as the
CALIBRATION CURVE. Then, UNKNOWN quantities (or concentrations) of the
substance may be reacted to produce the colour under the same standard conditions, the
Absorbances measured and, using the calibration curve, the quantity (or concentration)
thus estimated.
5
6
INSTRUMENTATION
The diagrams on the next page show the basic layouts of some spectrophotometric
equipment:
Colorimeter
Spectrophotometer
Fluorimeter. (US spelling, Fluorometer)
Further explanation will be given in the laboratory classes.
SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC EQUIPMENT
a) Colourimeter
6
7
b) Spectrophotometer
The detector is either a photomultiplier tube or a diode array, the latter is more sensitive at
the red end of the spectrum (>600nm).
Single beam machines require the blank to be placed in the light beam first, the machine
set to zero, then the test solution is measured in the light beam.
Double beam machines pass the light through two cuvettes simultantously (or almost) and
subtract the blank reading from the test. There are a number of differences of detail in
these machines, but often the light is either split into two and each half sent through one of
the cuvettes to two separate detectors, or the same beam is “chopped” and sent rapidly
alternately through one cuvette then the other. The Perkin Elmer machines in the
Biochemistry lab use this principle; the light is chopped 32 times / second and the blank
value subtracted automatically each time from the test.
7
8
Note two light sources. A tungsten (W) lamp for visible light, and a deuterium (D2) lamp for ultra
violet.
8
9
The apparatus (test-tubes, pipettes, etc) must be CLEAN and DRY; volumes, timings
and temperatures must be accurately measured and adhered to.
The cuvettes should ideally be OPTICALLY MATCHED (checked by reading them
against each other in the spectrophotometer).
The reference cuvette should be a true REAGENT BLANK, that is, contain all the
reagents other than the substance being assayed in the same concentrations as the test
cuvette.
The reference cuvette and standards require, if anything, MORE CARE than any other
because any error in these will be reflected in all measurements.
A MINIMUM OF FIVE POINTS are required to plot a straight line and MORE THAN
FIVE for a curve.
Normally, all estimations should be performed at least in DUPLICATE and individual
values, NOT mean values, should be plotted.
The Absorbance obtained for a reagent blank is as important BUT NOT MORE SO
than that for any other standard. In other words, a best-fit line should be drawn using all
the points, not necessarily the best-fit line through the origin and the other points.
Because of the LOGARITHMIC nature of the Absorbance scale, calibration curves are
most accurate over the range A = 0.0 to 1.0 (sometimes only up to 0.6), particularly on
basic colorimeters and spectrophotometers. However, it is better to use a calibration curve
with data that extend beyond this rather than extrapolate a curve beyond this range from
inadequate data.
9
10
A chromophore has the COMPLEMENTARY colour to that which it absorbs; eg: a blue
compound appears blue because it absorbs red light; thus, it must be estimated in the red
region of the spectrum!
Colorimetric assays are most sensitive at the WAVELENGTH OF THE ABSORPTION
PEAK (max) of the difference spectrum of the chromophore produced minus reagent
blank. Thus, ideally, this spectrum should be obtained before commencing the assay on
any one spectrophotometer. This enables accurate estimations to be performed even on
poorly calibrated instruments.
If a lower sensitivity can be tolerated, colorimetric assays do not necessarily need to be
performed at max for a number of reasons, eg. interference from other chromophoric
substances, inadequate range of wavelength adjustment on a particular
spectrophotometer, etc.
References
Reed, R., Weyer, J., Jones, A., Holmes, D. (2007) Practical Skills in Biomolecular
Sciences. 3rd ed. Benjamin Cummings.
10