Methods of Dispersing Spectra
Methods of Dispersing Spectra
REFRACTION
Historically glass prisms were first used to break up or disperse light into its
component colours. The path of a light ray bends (refracts) when it passes from one
transparent medium to anothere.g., from air to glass. Different colours
(wavelengths) of light are bent through different angles; hence a ray leaves a prism in
a direction depending on its colour (see Figure 3). The degree to which a ray bends at
each interface can be calculated from Snells law, which states that if n1 and n2are the
refractive indices of the medium outside the prism and of the prism itself,
respectively, and the angles i and r are the angles that the ray of a given wavelength
makes with a line at right angles to the prism face as shown in Figure 3, then the
equation n1 sin i = n2 sin r is obtained for all rays. The refractive index of a medium,
indicated by the symbol n, is defined as the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to
the speed of light in the medium. Typical values for n range from 1.0003 for air at 0
C and atmospheric pressure, to 1.51.6 for typical glasses, to 4 for germanium in the
infrared portion of the spectrum.
Since the index of refraction of optical glasses varies by only a few percent across the
visible spectrum, different wavelengths are separated by small angles. Thus, prism
instruments are generally used only when low spectral resolution is sufficient.
DIFFRACTION
At points along a given wavefront (crest of the wave), the advancing light wave can
be thought of as being generated by a set of spherical radiators, as shown in Figure
4A, according to a principle first enunciated by the Dutch scientist Christiaan
Huygens and later made quantitative by Fraunhofer. The new wavefront is defined by
the line that is tangent to all the wavelets (secondary waves) emitting from the
previous wavefront. If the emitting regions are in a plane of infinite extent, the light
will propagate along a straight line normal to the plane of the wavefronts. However, if
the region of the emitters is bounded or restricted in some other way, the light will
spread out by a phenomenon called diffraction.
Diffraction gratings are composed of closely spaced transmitting slits on a flat surface
(transmission gratings) or alternate reflecting grooves on a flat or curved surface
(reflection gratings).
If collimated light falls upon a transmission grating, the wavefronts successively pass
through and spread out as secondary waves from the transparent parts of the grating.
Most of these secondary waves, when they meet along a common path, interfere with
each other destructively, so that light does not leave the grating at all angles. At some
exit angles, however, secondary waves from adjacent slits of the grating are delayed
by exactly one wavelength, and these waves reinforce each other when they meet
i.e., the crests of one fall on top of the other. In this case,constructive
interference takes place, and light is emitted in directions where the spacing between
the adjacent radiators is delayed by one wavelength (see Figure 4B). Constructive
interference also occurs for delays of integral numbers of wavelengths. The light
diffracts according to the formula m = d(sin i sin r), where iis the incident
angle, r is the reflected or transmitted angle, d is the spacing between grating slits, is
the wavelength of the light, and m is an integer (usually called theorder of
interference). If light having several constituent wavelengths falls upon a grating at a
fixed angle i, different wavelengths are diffracted in slightly different directions and
can be observed and recorded separately. Each wavelength is also diffracted into
several orders (or groupings); gratings are usually blazed (engraved) so that a
particular order will be the most intense. A lens or concave mirror can then be used to
produce images of the spectral lines.
As the grating in a spectrometer is rotated about an axis parallel to the slit axis, the
spectral lines are transmitted successively through the instrument. An
electronicphotodetector placed behind the slit can then be used to measure the amount
of light in each part of the spectrum. The advantage of such an arrangement is that
photodetectors are extremely sensitive, have a fast time response, and respond linearly
to the energy of the light over a wide range of light intensities (see belowOptical
detectors).
ractical considerations
GENERAL METHODS OF SPECTROSCOPY
Production and analysis of a spectrum usually require the following: (1) a source oflight (or other
electromagnetic radiation), (2) a disperser to separate the light into its component wavelengths,
and (3) a detector to sense the presence of light afterdispersion. The apparatus used to accept
light, separate it into its component wavelengths, and detect the spectrum is called
a spectrometer. Spectra can be obtained either in the form of emission spectra, which show one
or more bright lines or bands on a dark background, or absorption spectra, which have a
continuously bright background except for one or more dark lines.
Absorption spectroscopy measures the loss of electromagnetic energy after it illuminates the
sample under study. For example, if a light source with a broad band of wavelengths is directed
at a vapour of atoms, ions, or molecules, the particles will absorb those wavelengths that can
excite them from one quantum state to another. As a result, the absorbed wavelengths will be
missing from the original light spectrum after it has passed through the sample. Since most atoms
and many molecules have unique and identifiable energy levels, a measurement of the missing
absorption lines allows identification of the absorbing species. Absorption within a continuous
band of wavelengths is also possible. This is particularly common when there is a high density of
absorption lines that have been broadened by strong perturbations by surrounding atoms
(e.g., collisions in a high-pressure gas or the effects of near neighbours in a solid or liquid).
In the laboratory environment, transparent chambers or containers with windows at both ends
serve as absorption cells for the production of absorption spectra. Light with a continuous
distribution of wavelength is passed through the cell. When a gas or vapour is introduced, the
change in the transmitted spectrum gives the absorption spectrum of the gas. Often, absorption
cells are enclosed in ovens because many materials of spectroscopic interest vaporize
significantly only at high temperatures. In other cases, the sample to be studied need not be
contained at all. For example, interstellar molecules can be detected by studying the absorption
of the radiation from a background star.
ICATIONS
Spectroscopy is used as a tool for studying the structures of atoms and molecules. The
large number of wavelengths emitted by these systems makes it possible to investigate
their structures in detail, including the electron configurations of ground and various
excited states.
Spectroscopy also provides a precise analytical method for finding the constituents in
material having unknown chemical composition. In a typical spectroscopic analysis, a
concentration of a few parts per million of a trace element in a material can be
detected through its emission spectrum.
In astronomy the study of the spectral emission lines of distant galaxies led to the
discovery that the universe is expanding rapidly and isotropically (independent of
direction). The finding was based on the observation of a Doppler shift of spectral
lines. The Doppler shift is an effect that occurs when a source of radiation such as a
star moves relative to an observer. The frequency will be shifted in much the same
way that an observer on a moving train hears a shift in the frequency of the pitch of a
ringing bell at a railroad crossing. The pitch of the bell sounds higher if the train is
approaching the crossing and lower if it is moving away. Similarly, light frequencies
will be Doppler-shifted up or down depending on whether the light source is
approaching or receding from the observer. During the 1920s, the American
astronomer Edwin Hubble identified the diffuse elliptical and spiral objects that had
been observed as galaxies. He went on to discover and measure a roughly linear
relationship between the distance of these galaxies from the Earth and their Doppler
shift. In any direction one looks, the farther the galaxy appears, the faster it is receding
from the Earth.
Spectroscopic evidence that the universe was expanding was followed by the
discovery in 1965 of a low level of isotropic microwave radiation by the American
scientists Arno A. Penzias and Robert W. Wilson. The measured spectrum is identical
to the radiation distribution expected from a blackbody, a surface that can absorb all
the radiation incident on it. This radiation, which is currently at a temperature of 2.73
kelvin (K), is identified as a relic of the big bang that marks the birth of the universe
and the beginning of its rapid expansion.
Practical considerations
lternative title: spectral analysis
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Survey of optical spectroscopy
o
o
General principles
Practical considerations
Molecular spectroscopy
o
o
o
o
General principles
Theory of molecular spectra
Experimental methods
Fields of molecular spectroscopy
X-ray spectroscopy
Radio-frequency spectroscopy
Resonance-ionization spectroscopy
o
o
o
o
o
Ionization processes
Atom counting
Resonance-ionization mass spectrometry
RIS atomization methods
Additional applications of RIS
IMAGES
QUIZZES
LISTS
Electromagnetic phenomena
approximate wavelength range
(metres)
radio waves
101,000
3 1053 107
television waves
110
3 1073 108
1 1031
3 1083 1011
infrared
8 1071 103
3 10114 1014
visible light
4 1077 107
4 10147 1014
ultraviolet
1 1084 107
7 10143 1016
X-rays
5 10121 108
3 10166 1019
<5 1012
>6 1019
microwaves,
radar
gamma rays
( rays)
One nanometre (nm) is 109 metre. The micrometre (m), which equals
106 metre, is often used to describe infrared radiation.
The decomposition of electromagnetic radiation into its component
wavelengths is fundamental to spectroscopy. Evolving from the first
crude prism spectrographs that separated sunlight into its constituent colours,
modern spectrometers have provided ever-increasing wavelength resolution.
Large-grating spectrometers (see belowPractical considerations: Methods of
dispersing spectra) are capable of resolving wavelengths as close as
103 nanometre, while modern laser techniques can resolve optical
wavelengths separated by less than 1010 nanometre.
The frequency with which the electromagnetic wave oscillates is also used to
characterize the radiation. The product of the frequency () and the
wavelength () is equal to the speed of light (c); i.e., = c. The frequency is
often expressed as the number of oscillations per second, and the unit of
frequency is hertz (Hz), where one hertz is one cycle per second. Since the
electromagnetic spectrum spans many orders of magnitude, frequency units
are usually accompanied by a Latin prefix to set the scale of the frequency
range. (See measurement system: The metric system of measurement: The
International System of Units for a table of the prefixes commonly used to
denote these scales.)