BEERS LAWS

 BEERS LAWS

 

Education,Law,Writing Beers law is also known as Beer-Lambert law. Beers law is the equation that relates attenuation of the light to the properties of a particular material. The beers law states that the chemical concentration is directly proportional to solution absorbed. This relationship is used to decide the chemical species concentration in a specified solution with the use a spectrophotometer. Beer law is written as A=?bc. Where A is the absorbance, ? is the molar absorptivity, b is the path length of a sample and c is a concentration of a compound solution. When calculating absorbance, you have to consider the

 following assumptions. The first assumption is that absorbance is quite directly proportional to a length of a path of a particular sample which can be expressed as A ?c(1.1) A?c and the second assumption is that the absorbance is said to be directly proportional to concentration of a particular sample it is expressed as A?1(1.3)(1.3)A?1. Though the comparison of the blank cuvette with a sample is the most common method used in beer’s law calculation, you can also draw a graph using the normal solutions to decide a

 concentration of a particular specimen. The proportion of light absorbed depends on how many molecules it interacts with. The absorbance of the solution varies as the concentration or size of the container varies. The values of the molar absorptivity vary hugely. Beers law is limited by both chemical and instrumental factors, which include a scattering of lights, the fluorescence of the sample, the change in the refractive index at the high analyte concentration, stray lights, shift in the chemical equilibria and non-monochromatic radiation.

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