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Spectroscopy
The study of how matter interacts with electromagnetic radiation (light), often through absorption or emission of specific energies.
Absorption (of light)
When a substance takes in light of certain energies because the photon energy matches an allowed energy change in the substance.
Emission (of light)
When a substance releases light of certain energies as it undergoes a decrease in energy (e.g., electrons relaxing to lower energy levels).
Electromagnetic radiation
Energy that travels as oscillating electric and magnetic fields; described as waves or as photons.
Quantized energy levels
Discrete (step-like) allowed energies in atoms/molecules; energy changes occur only in specific increments, not continuously.
Photon
A discrete packet of light energy; each photon carries an amount of energy determined by its frequency.
Wavelength (λ)
The distance between successive wave crests; typically measured in meters (or nm, then converted to meters for calculations).
Frequency (ν)
The number of wave cycles per second; measured in s⁻¹ (Hz).
Speed of light (c)
A constant in vacuum (~3.00 × 10^8 m/s) relating wavelength and frequency by c = λν.
Wave equation (c = λν)
Relationship showing that wavelength and frequency are inversely related because c is constant (longer λ means lower ν).
Planck’s constant (h)
Constant linking photon energy to frequency: h ≈ 6.626 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s.
Photon energy equation (E = hν)
Equation stating energy per photon is proportional to frequency.
Energy–wavelength relationship (E = hc/λ)
Equation showing photon energy increases as wavelength decreases.
Ultraviolet–Visible (UV–Vis) spectroscopy
Spectroscopy technique primarily involving electronic transitions; commonly used to measure concentration via absorbance.
Infrared (IR) region
Electromagnetic region that typically causes vibrational transitions; used for functional group identification via bond vibrations.
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
Technique using radio-wave-induced nuclear spin transitions to help determine molecular structure.
Photoelectric effect
Emission of electrons from a metal surface when light of sufficiently high frequency shines on it; supports the photon model of light.
Work function (Φ)
Minimum energy required to eject an electron from a given metal surface; a property of the metal.
Threshold frequency (ν₀)
Minimum light frequency needed for electron emission in the photoelectric effect; defined by Φ = hν₀.
Maximum kinetic energy (KEmax)
The greatest kinetic energy of emitted electrons in the photoelectric effect: KEmax = hν − Φ.
Light intensity (brightness)
Related to the number of photons hitting a surface per second; increases the number of emitted electrons (current) but not KEmax.
Beer–Lambert Law (Beer’s Law)
Linear relationship for many solutions: A = εlc, linking absorbance to molar absorptivity, path length, and concentration.
Molar absorptivity (ε)
Measure of how strongly a species absorbs light at a specific wavelength; depends on substance and wavelength.
Transmittance (T)
Fraction of light transmitted through a sample: T = I/I₀ (transmitted intensity over incident intensity).
Absorbance (A)
Logarithmic measure of light absorbed: A = −log(T); unitless and directly proportional to concentration via Beer–Lambert Law.