Analytical Chemistry

UV-Visible Spectroscopy

Counting molecules by their colour

UV-visible spectroscopy passes light from 200 to 800 nm through a sample and records the fraction absorbed. Absorption corresponds to electronic transitions in chromophores — π → π*, n → π*, d–d in transition metals, charge-transfer in donor-acceptor pairs. The Beer-Lambert law A = εcl turns absorbance into concentration. Cheap, fast, robust, quantitative — UV-vis is the everyday workhorse of biochemistry, environmental monitoring, food science and reaction kinetics.

  • Range200 – 800 nm (UV + visible)
  • Beer-LambertA = ε c l
  • Typical ε10² – 10⁵ M⁻¹ cm⁻¹
  • Path length1 mm – 10 cm
  • LampsDeuterium (UV), tungsten (visible)
  • CuvettesQuartz (UV), PMMA / PS (vis-only)
  • Limit of detection~20 nM strong chromophores

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How UV-vis works

Visible light is a band of electromagnetic radiation from roughly 380 nm (violet) to 750 nm (deep red); the ultraviolet stretches below visible, from ~200 nm at the air-cutoff to ~380 nm. Photons in this range carry 1.5 to 6 eV of energy — enough to excite valence electrons from filled molecular orbitals into empty ones. When a sample absorbs a photon, an electron jumps from a bonding or non-bonding orbital (π, n) to an antibonding orbital (π*, σ*). The absorbed wavelength corresponds to the energy gap between those orbitals.

A spectrometer compares the light intensity reaching the detector through the sample (I) against the light reaching it through a blank reference (I₀). Two equivalent observables:

Transmittance:   T = I / I₀                  (range 0 – 1)
Absorbance:      A = log₁₀(I₀ / I) = −log₁₀(T)

Absorbance is the better quantity because it stacks linearly: an A of 1 means 90% absorbed, A of 2 means 99%, A of 3 means 99.9%. Plot A against wavelength and you have a UV-vis spectrum, with peaks at the resonance wavelengths of the molecule's electronic transitions.

The Beer-Lambert law

The cornerstone equation:

A = ε c l

where A is absorbance (dimensionless), ε is the molar absorptivity (M⁻¹ cm⁻¹, a property of the molecule at the chosen wavelength), c is concentration (M), and l is the path length the light travels through the sample (cm). Knowing any three lets you solve for the fourth — most often, you measure A and l, look up ε, and back out c.

Worked example. Single-stranded DNA at 260 nm has an average ε of 8,919 M⁻¹ cm⁻¹ per nucleotide. A 1 cm cuvette of unknown ssDNA reads A_260 = 0.42. Concentration in nucleotides is c = A / (ε l) = 0.42 / 8919 = 4.71 × 10⁻⁵ M = 47.1 µM nucleotides. Multiply by the average mass of a nucleotide (~330 Da) to get mass concentration: 47.1 × 10⁻⁶ × 330 = 15.5 µg/mL. The standard shortcut for double-stranded DNA: A_260 = 1.0 corresponds to 50 µg/mL; for ssDNA, 33 µg/mL; for RNA, 40 µg/mL. NanoDrop instruments use these constants directly.

The DNA 260/280 ratio in the lab

Every molecular biology lab quantifies extracted DNA with a 1 µL drop on a NanoDrop. Two ratios decide whether the prep is usable:

RatioPure DNAPure RNAPure proteinWhat a low value means
A_260 / A_2801.82.0~ 0.6Protein contamination, too much A_280
A_260 / A_2302.0 – 2.22.0 – 2.2Phenol, guanidine, or salt carry-over

The diagnostic logic: nucleobases absorb at 260 nm with ε per nucleotide around 8,000–15,000 M⁻¹ cm⁻¹ (purines higher, pyrimidines lower). Aromatic side-chains of tryptophan and tyrosine give proteins a peak at 280 nm. The 230 nm shoulder picks up phenols and EDTA-buffer remnants. A "good" DNA prep — clean enough for restriction digestion, ligation, sequencing — meets both ratio targets and has A_260 above 0.1.

Common chromophores and their absorption

Chromophoreλ_max (nm)ε (M⁻¹ cm⁻¹)TransitionWhere you see it
Isolated C=C (alkene)~ 175~ 10,000π → π*Below air-cutoff; not measurable
Conjugated diene217~ 21,000π → π*Butadiene; carotenoid analogues
C=O (ketone)270 (weak), 188 (strong)~ 15, ~ 1,100n → π*, π → π*Acetone, ester, aldehyde
Benzene184, 204, 25660,000, 7,900, 200π → π*Aromatics in pharma, dyes
DNA / nucleobases2608,919 (per nt avg)π → π*Quantitation standard
NADH3406,220π → π*Enzyme assays — coupled dehydrogenases
Tryptophan2805,500π → π*Protein quantitation
Tyrosine2741,400π → π*Protein A_280 contributor
Indigo (dye)60222,000π → π*Denim blue
β-carotene450140,000π → π* (extended)Carrots, food colour
Cu(H₂O)₆²⁺80010d–dCopper sulfate solution
MnO₄⁻5252,400charge-transferPermanganate titrations

Two practical patterns. Conjugation length sets λ_max: each additional double bond adds ~30–40 nm (Woodward-Fieser rules formalise this). Allowed transitions (π → π* in flat aromatics) have ε of 10⁴ – 10⁵, while symmetry-forbidden d–d transitions in aqua-metal complexes have ε ≈ 1–100, which is why dilute Cu²⁺ looks pale blue while millimolar permanganate looks intensely purple.

UV-vis vs fluorescence vs phosphorescence

TechniqueWhat it measuresSensitivitySelectivityBest for
UV-vis absorptionLight absorbed (A vs λ)~ 20 nM (strong chromophore)Low — many things absorbRoutine concentration assay
Fluorescence emissionLight emitted after excitation~ 1 pM (good fluorophore)High — pick excitation + emission λTrace detection, imaging, qPCR
PhosphorescenceSlow emission from triplet stateComparable to fluorescenceVery high — long lifetimes filter backgroundLanthanide assays, time-resolved FRET
Circular dichroism (CD)Differential absorption of L vs R circular lightModerateStereochemistry-specificProtein secondary structure, drug chirality
Diffuse reflectance UV-vis (DRS)Reflected light from solid powdersQuantitative for solidsLike UV-visHeterogeneous catalysts, mineral analysis

Fluorescence beats absorption on sensitivity by a factor of ~10⁴ because a fluorophore radiates against a dark background, whereas an absorbing molecule has to dim a bright lamp by a measurable fraction. Use absorption when concentrations are µM to mM; use fluorescence below µM; use phosphorescence (or time-resolved fluorescence) when autofluorescence backgrounds drown the signal.

Hardware

  • Light source. Deuterium arc lamp for 190–400 nm, tungsten halogen for 350–800 nm. The two switch over automatically around 350 nm.
  • Monochromator. A diffraction grating + slits select a narrow band (typical 1–4 nm bandpass) to send through the sample. Bandwidth narrower than the absorption band keeps Beer-Lambert linear; wider bandwidth distorts peak shape.
  • Sample compartment. Holds 1, 4 or 8 cuvettes. Temperature-controlled holders with stirrers handle kinetics. NanoDrop and 96-well plate readers replace cuvettes with droplet pedestals or microplate wells.
  • Detector. Photomultiplier tube for low-light/wide range, photodiode or photodiode-array for fast multi-wavelength acquisition. Diode arrays capture 200–800 nm in 100 ms — essential for HPLC detectors.
  • Cuvettes. Quartz for UV; glass for visible-only; plastic disposables for high-throughput. Wash with ethanol then water; never with acetone (etches polystyrene).

Real-world applications

  • DNA quantification. Every molecular biology lab quantifies extracted DNA on a NanoDrop using A_260 with the 50 µg/mL × A_260 conversion for double-stranded DNA. The 260/280 ratio (target 1.8) and 260/230 ratio (target ≥ 2.0) flag protein and reagent contamination respectively.
  • Enzyme kinetics. Coupled-enzyme assays watch NADH at 340 nm — dehydrogenase reactions either consume or produce NADH, and the rate of A_340 change times the cuvette dimensions gives turnover number. The pyruvate-kinase / lactate-dehydrogenase system tracks ATP-consuming kinases this way.
  • Protein quantification. A_280 with ProtParam-derived ε (calculated from Trp, Tyr and disulfide counts) gives concentration to 5%. Bradford and Lowry assays use dye binding for less spec-friendly samples and read out at 595 or 750 nm.
  • Drinking water testing. EPA-approved colorimetric methods quantify nitrate (220 nm direct, or 543 nm after Griess reaction), iron (510 nm with phenanthroline), chlorine (515 nm with DPD), and dozens more. Field-deployable handheld units sell for under $1,000.
  • HPLC detection. A diode-array UV detector at 254 or 280 nm sits at the outlet of every analytical HPLC column. Peak area integrates to mass; full-spectrum acquisition lets a software match each chromatographic peak against a UV library.
  • Pharmaceutical dissolution testing. USP requires UV monitoring of drug release from tablets into simulated gastric fluid; an automated robot pulls aliquots at 5, 15, 30, 60 minutes and reads them on a 96-cell spectrophotometer.
  • Industrial colour control. Paint, ink, food and textile factories run quality-control UV-vis on every batch — a colour delta of more than three "tristimulus" units rejects the lot.

Common mistakes and pitfalls

  • Reading absorbance above 1.5. Stray light makes A flatten; concentrations come out under-reported. Dilute the sample to land in 0.1 – 1.0 absorbance and re-measure.
  • Forgetting to blank. Solvent, buffer salts, even cuvette glass absorb a little. Always blank against the matrix you're measuring in, not pure water.
  • Using a plastic cuvette in the UV. Polystyrene cuts off below 340 nm; PMMA below 280 nm. Reading A_260 in PS gives nonsense — always quartz for UV.
  • Ignoring scattering from particulates. Cloudy samples scatter light, mimicking absorbance with a wavelength-dependent baseline (~1/λ⁴). Filter through 0.22 µm or centrifuge before reading; baseline-subtract a smooth Rayleigh fit if you must.
  • Trusting concentration above the linearity limit. Beer-Lambert holds when molecules don't interact. Aggregating dyes (cyanines, porphyrins) deviate sharply at concentrations above ~10 µM.
  • Not warming the lamp. Deuterium and tungsten lamps drift in the first 15 minutes after switch-on. Quantitative work needs a warm-up period and a fresh blank.
  • Confusing ε at one wavelength with another. Molar absorptivity is wavelength-specific. Quoting "ε = 8919" for DNA without specifying 260 nm will get you 50% errors at neighbouring wavelengths.
  • Mixing up 260/280 and 280/260. The convention is the larger over the smaller, so DNA's 260/280 > 1. Some software flips it; check the axis label.

Frequently asked questions

What does Beer-Lambert assume?

Three things. (1) The light is monochromatic — a single wavelength, ideally narrower than the absorption band. (2) The analyte molecules are non-interacting; aggregation, dimerisation or fluorescence quenching break linearity. (3) The path length and concentration are uniform across the beam. In practice the law stays linear up to absorbance ≈ 1.5 (97% absorption); above that, stray light in the spectrometer makes A flatten out and concentrations get under-reported.

What's a chromophore?

A chromophore is the part of a molecule responsible for absorbing UV-vis light — typically a region with low-energy electronic transitions. Conjugated π-systems (alkenes, aromatics, carbonyls), extended chromophores (carotenoids, indigo), nitrogen heterocycles (DNA bases, flavins) and metal-ligand complexes all qualify. Auxochromes — substituents like OH, NR₂, or OR — don't absorb on their own but shift a chromophore's λ_max when attached.

Why is the DNA 260/280 ratio diagnostic of purity?

DNA's nucleobases absorb maximally at 260 nm; aromatic protein side chains (tryptophan, tyrosine) absorb at 280 nm. Pure DNA gives A_260 / A_280 ≈ 1.8; pure RNA gives ~2.0; pure protein gives ~0.6. A measured ratio significantly below 1.8 means protein contamination; above 2.0 suggests free nucleotides or RNA. Add A_230 to the mix: low A_260/A_230 (< 2.0) flags phenol, EDTA or chaotropic-salt carry-over from extraction kits.

What's the difference between absorption, fluorescence, and phosphorescence?

Absorption raises an electron from the ground state to an excited singlet. Fluorescence is the spin-allowed (singlet → singlet) emission as the electron drops back, on a 1–10 ns timescale. Phosphorescence is the spin-forbidden (triplet → singlet) emission via intersystem crossing — slower (µs to seconds) and often visible in the dark long after the lamp shuts off. Fluorescence intensity scales linearly with concentration over a wide range; absorption only quantifies one species at a time, but fluorescence can pick out one fluorophore at sub-picomolar levels.

Why are quartz cuvettes used below 350 nm?

Standard borosilicate (Pyrex) glass absorbs strongly below ~340 nm — the cuvette itself becomes the dominant absorber. Quartz (fused silica) transmits down to 190 nm and is mandatory for any measurement in the UV. Plastic disposable cuvettes work for visible-only measurements (PMMA above 280 nm, PS above 340 nm) and are convenient for high-throughput biology, but ruin any UV-region quantitation.

How do you choose between single-beam and double-beam instruments?

Single-beam spectrometers measure one cuvette at a time and rely on a stored blank — fine for routine biochemistry, less stable for hour-long kinetics. Double-beam instruments split the source into reference and sample paths simultaneously, cancelling lamp drift; preferred for UV pharmaceutical assays and slow time courses. Diode-array spectrometers are essentially single-beam but capture the full 200–800 nm spectrum in milliseconds — the standard front-end for HPLC.

What's the limit of detection for UV-vis?

Set by the molar absorptivity ε and the cuvette path length. With ε ≈ 50,000 M⁻¹ cm⁻¹ (a moderately strong chromophore like NADH) and a 1 cm cell, the typical 0.001 absorbance noise floor lets you quantify ~20 nM, or 20 pmol per mL. Push to a 10 cm cell and you reach 2 nM. For weaker chromophores (ε ~1,000) the floor sits around 1 µM. Below that, fluorescence or LC-MS take over.