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Emission and Absorbance Spectra Explained

This section discusses emission and absorbance spectra, detailing how atoms, ions, or molecules emit or absorb photons when transitioning between energy states. Emission spectra can be categorized into line spectra, characterized by narrow bands from well-separated energy states, and band spectra, which appear as broad peaks due to numerous transitions in molecules. Absorbance spectra similarly range from narrow lines to broad bands, with examples including sodium's atomic absorption spectrum and the UV/Vis spectrum of cranberry juice.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views3 pages

Emission and Absorbance Spectra Explained

This section discusses emission and absorbance spectra, detailing how atoms, ions, or molecules emit or absorb photons when transitioning between energy states. Emission spectra can be categorized into line spectra, characterized by narrow bands from well-separated energy states, and band spectra, which appear as broad peaks due to numerous transitions in molecules. Absorbance spectra similarly range from narrow lines to broad bands, with examples including sodium's atomic absorption spectrum and the UV/Vis spectrum of cranberry juice.

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Jacquese
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

6.

4: Emission and Absorbance Spectra


In the last section we considered the source of emission and absorption. In this section we consider the types of emission and
absorbance spectra that we will form the basis for many of the chapters that follow.

Emission Spectra
When an atom, ion, or molecule moves from a higher-energy state to a lower-energy state it emits photons with energies equal to
the difference in energy between the two states. The result is an emission spectrum that shows the intensity of emission as a
function of wavelength. The shapes of these emission spectra fall into two broad types: line spectra and band spectra.

Line Spectra
When the energy states are well separated from each other, and when there is just one type of transition between the energy states,
the result is a line spectrum that consists of a small number of narrow bands. Figure 6.4.1, for example, shows the emission
spectrum from gas phase Cu atoms, which consists of seven lines, two of which are too close to each other to resolve them from
each other. The individual emissions lines are very narrow, as we might expect, because the atom's energy levels have precise
values.

Figure 6.4.1 . Emission spectrum from a Cu hollow cathode lamp in which Cu atoms are present in the gas phase. This spectrum
consists of seven distinct emission lines (the first two differ by only 0.4 nm and are not resolved at the scale shown in this
spectrum). Each emission line has a width of approximately 0.01 nm at 1⁄2 of its maximum intensity. See Chapter 9 for more
information on hollow cathode lamps.

Band Spectra
The emission spectrum for a gas phase atom is relatively simple because the number of possible transitions is small and because
their individuals energies are well-separated from each other. When a molecule in a solvent emits light, the number of possible
changes in energy levels can be quite large if the molecule undergoes transitions between electronic, vibrational, and rotational
energy levels. The resulting spectrum has so many emission individual emission lines that we see a single broad peak, or band, that
we call a band spectrum. Figure 6.4.2 shows the emission spectrum for the dye coumarin 343, which is incorporated in a reverse
micelle and suspended in cyclohexanol.

6.4.1 [Link]
Figure 6.4.2 . Emission spectrum of the dye coumarin 343, which is incorporated in a reverse micelle suspended in cyclohexanol.
The sharp peak at 409 nm is from the laser source used to excite coumarin 343. The broad band centered at approximately 500 nm
is the dye’s emission band. Source: data from Bridget Gourley, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, DePauw University.

 Note

When considering sources of electromagnetic radiation for spectroscopic instruments, we usually describe them as line sources
and continuous sources depending on on whether they emit discrete lines, as is the case for the hollow cathode lamp in Figure
6.4.1, or exhibit emission over a broad range of wavelengths without any gaps, as is the case for a green light-emitting diode

(LED), whose spectrum is shown in Figure 6.4.3.

Figure 6.4.3 . Spectrum showing the emission from a green LED, which provides continuous emission over a wavelength range
of approximately 530–640 nm.

Absorbance Spectra
When an atom, ion, or molecule moves from a lower-energy state to a higher-energy state it absorbs photons with energies equal to
the difference in energy between the two states. The result is an absorbance spectrum that shows the intensity of emission as a
function of wavelength. As is the case for emission spectra, absorbance spectra range from narrow lines to broad bands. The atomic
absorption spectrum for Na is shown in Figure 6.4.4, and is typical of that found for most atoms. The most obvious feature of this
spectrum is that it consists of a small number of discrete absorption lines that correspond to transitions between the ground state
(the 3s atomic orbital) and the 3p and the 4p atomic orbitals.

6.4.2 [Link]
Figure 6.4.4 . Atomic absorption spectrum for sodium. Note that the scale on the x-axis includes a break.
Another feature of the atomic absorption spectrum in Figure 6.4.4 is the narrow width of the absorption lines, which is a
consequence of the fixed difference in energy between the ground state and the excited state, and the lack of vibrational and
rotational energy levels. Natural line widths for atomic absorption, which are governed by the uncertainty principle, are
approximately 10–5 nm. Other contributions to broadening increase this line width to approximately 10–3 nm.
The absorbance spectra for molecules consists of broad bands for the same reasons discussed above for emission spectra. The
UV/Vis spectrum for cranberry juice in Figure 6.4.5 shows a single broad band for the anthocyanin dyes that are responsible for its
red color. The IR spectrum for ethanol in Figure 6.4.6 shows multiple absorption bands, some broader and some narrower. The
narrow bands, however, are still much broader than the lines in the atomic absorption spectrum for Na.

Figure 6.4.5 . Visible absorbance spectrum for cranberry juice. The anthocyanin dyes in cranberry juice absorb visible light with
blue, green, and yellow wavelengths; as a result, the juice appears red.

Figure 6.4.6 . Infrared spectrum of ethanol.

This page titled 6.4: Emission and Absorbance Spectra is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by
David Harvey.

6.4.3 [Link]

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