Q&A for How to Calculate Molar Absorptivity

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  • Question
    What is Beer Lambert's law?
    Mohsin257
    Community Answer
    In simple words it states that light absorbed by the sample is directly proportional to the path length (l or x) and concentration.
  • Question
    Is the molar absorptivity constant, or does it change as the length of the cuvette changes?
    Community Answer
    It is constant. Units of molar absorptivity constant is in M^-1 cm^-1, which is essentially how much is absorbed per unit length. As the length of cuvette increases, more is absorbed as a whole, but the constant is independent of length of cuvette!
  • Question
    How do I know the path length?
    Mohsin257
    Community Answer
    It is known by sample compartment. Path-length is the area of the cell/sample compartment. It is mostly 1cm and depends on that compartment may be .5cm etc.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the concentration of the unknown?
    Community Answer
    Concentration is molarity. So you use Mol's/solute, which is the M=Mol's/ml.
  • Question
    How do I calculate molar concentrations?
    Community Answer
    Molarity is expressed in moles/liters. So find the number of moles using dimensional analysis, and then divide that by a volume measured in liters.
  • Question
    How do I find the absorbance of radiation?
    Community Answer
    Use the formula A = ebc, where A is absorbance, e is molar extinction coefficient, b is path length (cm), and c is concentration (mol/L).
  • Question
    Shouldn't the slope be multiplied by path length and not divided in the 4th method? The absorptivity will be more at 1 cm path length than at 0.5 cm, won't it?
    Community Answer
    The formula is A = ɛlc. To solve for ɛ you use the formula A/lc, but the slope or gradient is A/c. So solving for ɛ would be the gradient multiplied by 1/l or the gradient divided by l.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the absorbance?
    Community Answer
    In this procedure the absorbance is measured on a spectrophotometer. If, for some reason, you know all values except absorbance you can solve for it as A=e*l*c.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the concentration of an extract if I don't know the molar absorbity?
    Community Answer
    In this procedure, you're preparing solutions of known concentration for analysis. You can't solve for the molar absorptivity if you don't know the concentration.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the concentration from absorbance?
    Community Answer
    If you know the value of all variables except concentration, you can rearrange the equation as c = A/le.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the molar absorptive if the concentration value is in PPM? How do I get the slop in moles per liter?
    Community Answer
    You must convert your units from ppm to mol/L. To do this, look up the molar mass (g/mol) of the compound of interest. Also, 1 ppm can be equated to 1 mg/L (or 0.001 g/L). For example, nitrate (NO3) is 62 g/mol. If you have a 62,000 ppm NO3 solution, it is equal to 1 mol/L NO3. (62,000 ppm = 62,000 mg/L * 1g/1000mg * 1mol/62g = 1 mol/L) The slope will not be in mol/L. It will be in your units for molar absorptivity (L mol^-1 cm ^-1).
  • Question
    What is the maximum wavelength of absorption for each dye?
    Community Answer
    You would have to run a scan of the wavelength spectrum rather than at a single wavelength to determine this.
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