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Published byJustina Harrell Modified over 8 years ago
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Spectrophotometry Measuring Concentrations of Substances in Body Fluids
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Spectrophotometer Measures light absorbance by solutions at specific wavelengths (colors) of light Different chemicals absorb light at different wavelengths Used to determine concentrations solutes in solutions
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Beer’s Law Version #1… –“The concentration of a substance in solution is proportional to the amount of light absorbed” –[X] α A [X] = concentration of substance X A = amount of light absorbed (absorbance)
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Beer’s Law
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Version #2 –“The concentration of a substance in solution is inversely proportional to the logarithm of the amount of light transmitted through the solution” –[X] α 1/log %T %T = % transmittance (% light not absorbed while passing through the solution)
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Beer’s Law
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How Do We Use Beer’s Law? A = 0.250 A = 0.500
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How Do We Use Beer’s Law? We know that [X] α A So for two solutions containing the same solute (standard and sample): [X STD ] α A STD and [X unk ] α A unk Therefore [X unk ] / [X STD ] = A unk /A STD Rearrange equation to solve for [X unk ]
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Determining the Unknown [X unk ] = 50 mg/dL × 0.250 0.500 = 25 mg/dL [X unk ] = [X STD ] × A unk A std
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Directions 1.Obtain 4 clean test tubes 2.Add 5.0 ml glucose reagent to each tube 3.Add the following to the tubes: 1.0.1 ml distilled water (will act as blank) 2.0.1 ml dog blood serum 3.0.1 ml unknown #1 4.0.1 ml unknown #2 4.Immerse each tube in 100 C water bath for 10 min 5.Remove tubes and immediately immerse in ice bath for 3 min 6.Use tube 1 as blank – record absorbance values for remaining three tubes
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Using the Spectrophotometer 1.Turn on the machine w/ front left knob 2.Set wavelength with top right knob 3.With nothing in the holder and the holder lid closed, set transmittance to 0% with front left knob 4.Place the blank in the cuvette holder, close lid. Use right front knob to set the transmittance to 100%. Push mode button to set absorbance to.000 5.Remove blank 6.Insert tube to be tested, close lid, and read absorbance
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Experimental Error Experiments are NEVER perfect –May mix reagents differently –Temperature may change –Instrument may vary High levels of error can lead to erroneous results Is a single reading representative?
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Standard Curves Measure absorbance of multiple standards of different known concentrations [Solute] (g/dL)Absorbance 0.10.050 0.20.090 0.40.210 0.60.290 0.80.400
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Standard Curves Plot Absorbance values vs. [Solute]
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Standard Curves “Best Fit” Line
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Standard Curves Extrapolation (e.g., Unknown A = 0.200)
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