SEMINAR ON
UV-VISIBLE SPECTROSCOPY
PRESENTED BY                                 GUIDED BY
MR. NITIN P. KANWALE                         DR.D.V.DERLE
M.PHARM. 1ST SEM.                            Principal of M.V.P. Samaj’s
M.V.P. Samaj’s college of                    college of pharmacy,
Pharmacy Nashik-2                            Nashik-2
    NDMVP SAMAJ’S COLLEGE OF PHARMACY NASHIK-2
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    Content
     Introduction
     Principle and Basic concept
     Some important terms
     Instrumentation
     Applications
     Conclusion
     References
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    INTRODUCTION
 Spectroscopy is a technique that measures the interaction of molecules with
electromagnetic radiation.
 Light in the near-ultraviolet (UV) and visible (vis) range of the electromagnetic spectrum
has an energy of about 150– 400 kJ mol.
The energy of the light is used to promote electrons from the ground state to an excited
state.
A spectrum is obtained when the absorption of light is measured as a function of its
frequency or wavelength.
The absorbance of a solute depends linearly on its concentration and therefore absorption
spectroscopy is ideally suited for quantitative measurements.
Spectroscopic measurements are very sensitive and nondestructive, and require only small
amounts of material for analysis
Application of derivative technique of spectrophotometry offers a powerful tool for
quantitative analysis of multi-component mixtures.
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    Principle and Basic concept
Ultraviolet – visible spectroscopy (λ 200 - 800 nm) studies the changes in electronic
energy levels within the molecule arising due to transfer of electrons from π- or non-
bonding orbital's.
It commonly provides the knowledge about π-electron systems, conjugated unsaturations,
aromatic compounds and conjugated non-bonding electron systems etc
UV- Visible is divided into the ultraviolet (UV, 190-400 nm) and visible (VIS, 400-800
nm) regions. Since the absorption of ultraviolet or visible radiation by a molecule leads
transition among electronic energy levels of the molecule, it is also often called as
electronic spectroscopy.
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      Nature of Electronic Transitions
      The total energy of a molecule is the sum of its electronic, its vibrational energy and its
      rotational energy.
       Energy absorbed in the UV region produces changes in the electronic energy of the
      molecule. As a molecule absorbs energy, an electron is promoted from an occupied
      molecular orbital (usually a non-bonding n or bonding π orbital) to an unoccupied
      molecular orbital (an anti-bonding π∗ or σorbital) of greater potential energy (figure1).
Fig.1)Relative energies of orbitals most commonly involved in electronic spectroscopy of organic
molecules
        increasing order of their energies viz. n→π* < n→σ* < π →π* < σ→π* < σ →σ*
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Principles of Absorption Spectroscopy: Beer’s and Lambert’s Law
The greater the number of molecules that absorb light of a given wavelength, the greater the
extent of light absorption and higher the peak intensity in absorption spectrum .
This makes the basis of Beer-Lambert Law which states that the fraction of incident
radiation absorbed is proportional to the number of absorbing molecules in its path .
When the radiation passes through a solution, the amount of light absorbed or transmitted is
an exponential function of the molecular concentration of the solute and also a function of
length of the path of radiation through the sample. Therefore,
Log Io / I = ε c l
Where Io = Intensity of the incident light (or the light intensity passing through a reference
cell)
I = Intensity of light transmitted through the sample solution
c = concentration of the solute in mol l-1
l = path length of the sample in cm
ε = molar absorptivity or the molar extinction coefficient , ε is numerically equal to the
absorbance of a solution of unit molar concentration (c = 1) in a cell of unit length ( l = 1)
and its units are liters. moles-1. cm-1.
The ratio I / Io is known as transmittance T and the logarithm of the inverse ratio Io / I is
known as the absorbance A. Therefore
- Log I / Io = - log T = ε c l
and Log Io / I = A = ε c l
6 A=εc
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Spectral Measurements
    The UV-Vis spectra are usually measured in very dilute solutions and the most
    important criterion in the choice of solvent is that the solvent must be transparent
    within the wavelength range being examined.
     Table lists some common solvents with their lower wavelength cut off limits. Below
    these limits, the solvents show excessive absorbance and should not be used to
    determine UV spectrum of a sample.
              SR.NO.         Solvent                    Cut off
                                                        wavelength(nm)
              1              Acetonitrile               190
              2              Water                      191
              3              Cyclohexane                195
              4              Methanol                   203
              5              95% ethanol                304
 Of the solvents listed in table , water, 95% ethanol and hexane are the most commonly
used solvents.
For recording the spectrum 1 cm square quartz cell is commonly used. These require
approx. 3 ml of solution.
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    Solvent Effects
     Highly pure, non-polar solvents such as saturated hydrocarbons do not interact with
    solute molecules either in the ground or excited state and the absorption spectrum of a
    compound in these solvents is similar to the one in a pure gaseous state.
     However, polar solvents such as water, alcohols etc. may stabilize or destabilize the
    molecular orbital's of a molecule either in the ground state or in excited state and the
    spectrum of a compound in these solvents may significantly vary from the one recorded
    in a hydrocarbon solvent.
    Some important terms
    (i) Chromophore: The energy of radiation being absorbed during excitation of electrons
    from ground state to excited state primarily depends on the nuclei that hold the electrons
    together in a bond.
     The group of atoms containing electrons responsible for the absorption is called
    chromophore. Most of the simple un-conjugated chromophores give rise to high energy
    transitions of little use.
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 (ii) Auxochrome: The substituents that themselves do not absorb ultraviolet radiations but
their presence shifts the absorption maximum to longer wavelength are called
auxochromes. The substituents like methyl, hydroxyl, alkoxy, halogen, amino group etc. are
some examples of auxochromes.
(iii) Bathochromic Shift or Red shift: A shift of an absorption maximum towards longer
wavelength or lower energy.
(iv) Hypsochromic Shift or Blue Shift: A shift of an absorption maximum towards shorter
wavelength or higher energy.
(v) Hypochromic Effect: An effect that results in decreased absorption intensity.
(vi) Hyper-chromic Effect: An effect that results in increased absorption intensity.
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 INSTRUMENTATION
     Fig : UV/Vis spectrophotometer
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     A) Radiation source:
     I. Tungstan lamp
     II. Hydrogen discharge lamp
     III. Deuterium lamp
     IV. Xenon discharge lamp
     V. Mercury acr
     B) Monochromators
     Essential element : Entrance slit
                         Dispersing element :prism or grating
                         Exit slit
     C)Detector :
     I. Barrier layer cell
     II. Photocell
     III. Photomultiplier tube
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 Applications
 Application to organic compound
 Detection of conjugation
 Detection of geometrical isomers
 Detection of functional group
 Qualitative analysis
 Detection of impurities
 Quantitative analysis
 Chemical kinetics
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     Simultaneous Estimation of multi-component formulation by
     UV-Visible spectroscopy
     Simultaneous equation is applicable for the estimation of those drugs where the
     spectra of drug overlap properly whereas, DS method has been widely used to enhance
     the signal and resolve the overlapped peak-signals due to its advantages in
     differentiating closely adjacent peaks, and identifying weak peaks obscured by sharp
     peaks.
     Following are the method use
     1. Derivative Spectroscopic Method
     2. Simultaneous Equation
     3. The Absorption Ratio Method : iso-absorptive Point Method
     4. Multi-component Mode Method
     5. Area Under Curve Method
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     Derivative Spectroscopic Method
 DS has rapidly gained application in the field of pharmaceutical analysis to overcome the
 problem of interference, due to the substances other than analytes, commonly present in
 pharmaceutical formulations or for combination of two or more drug substances.
  DS has been successfully used as a quality control tool in pharmaceutical analysis for the
 simultaneous determination of drugs in multi-component formulations. This technique,
 accessible to most laboratories, offers an alternative means of enhancing the sensitivity and
 specificity in mixture analysis. The procedure is simple, rapid and does not require any
 preliminary separations or treatment of the samples.
 During the last few decades, a great interest has been seen in the development of various
 novel drug delivery systems. In many of these formulations, surfactants like polysorbates
 (Tweens) and co-surfactants like propylene glycol and polyethylene glycol (PEG) are used.
 However, as those additives exhibit considerable absorbance at the wavelength of
 maximum absorbance of diazepam UV-spectrometry method cannot be used to estimate
 the drug accurately in their presence. In this sense, Dastidar and Sa present 1st DS as an
 accurate, precise, and simple method in comparison to conventional UV-
 spectrophotometry method for the estimation of diazepam in presence of Tween-20 and
 propylene glycol.
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Conclusions
UV-visible spectroscopy, a simple, rapid, precise and highly accurate method for
quantitative estimation is in great use now a day. Derivative spectrophotometry is an
analytical technique of great utility for extracting both qualitative and quantitative
information from spectra composed of unresolved bands by calculating and plotting one of
the mathematical derivatives of a spectral curve. Therefore the derivative spectra (first to
fourth-order) of the mixtures were checked to select a suitable spectrum to be used for the
simultaneous determination of the components.
Derivative techniques in spectroscopy often offer a powerful tool for a resolution
enhancement, when signal overlaps or interference exists. Several specific signals were
singled out for the components in the spectra of different derivative orders but the first-order
derivative spectra seemed to be generally the most suitable for analytical aim.
A derivative spectrum shows better resolution of overlapping bands than the fundamental
spectrum and may permit the accurate determination of the λmax of the individual bands.
Secondly, DS discriminates in favor of substances of narrow spectral bandwidth against
broad bandwidth substances. All the amplitudes in the derivative spectrum are proportional
to the concentration of the analyte provided that Beer's law is obeyed by the fundamental
spectrum.
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 References:
 1) Gurdeep R. Chatwal, Sham K. Anand, Instrumental Methods Of Chemical Analysis,
 Himalaya Publication, Fifth Edition, Page No.2.149-2.184
 2)Douglas A. Skoog, Holler, Nieman, Principles Of Instrumental Analysis, Fifth Edition,
 Page No.300-352
 3)Frank A. Settle, Editor Handbook Of Instrumental Techniques For Analytical
 Chemistry, Person Education, Page No.481-499
 4) C. Bosch Ojeda, F. Sanchez Rojas, “Recent Applications In Derivative
 Ultraviolet/Visible    Absorption Spectrophotometry: 2009–2011’’,
 Microchemical Journal 106 (2013) 1–16,
 Contents Lists Available At SciverseSciencedirect.
  Journal Homepage: Www.Elsevier.Com/Locate/Microc.
 5) Franz-XaverSchmid, “Biological Macromolecules: UV-Visible Spectrophotometry’’
 ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES / & 2001 Macmillan Publishers Ltd, Nature
 Publishing Group / Www.Els.Net.
 6)Jasmine Chaudhary, Akash Jain, Vipin Saini, “Simultaneous Estimation Of Multi-
 component Formulations By UV-Visible Spectroscopy,’’ International Research Journal
 Of Pharmacy,
 Available Online Www.Irjponline.Com.
 7) Www.Wikipedia.Com Accessed On 2/11/2014; 06:30 PM
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 Thank you
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