In the first part of the lab, you'll use ultraviolet and visible light absorption spectroscopy, or UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, to analyze the absorption characteristics of fluorescein, β-carotene, and indigo dye. To perform UV-Vis spectroscopy, you'll place a solution between a light source and a photodetector. The molecules will absorb light at wavelengths that correspond to the energies needed to excite their electrons and scatter or transmit the rest.
An absorption spectrum represents the variation in the number of photons of each wavelength that reach the detector. A higher absorbance corresponds to fewer detected photons of that wavelength. You'll take a spectrum of the pure solvent first, which the instrument will subtract from the spectrum of the dye solution to show you just the absorbance data from the dye. This reference is called a solvent blank.
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Before you start, put on a lab coat, safety glasses, and gloves. Note: The β-carotene and indigo solutions use hexane and dimethylformamide, respectively, so you will work with the dyes in a fume hood. DMF and hexane will degrade thin nitrile gloves, so change your gloves if you get solvent on them.
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Now, obtain a clean quartz cuvette. Cuvettes typically have two transparent sides and two textured or opaque sides. Always hold the cuvette by the textured sides to keep the transparent sides clean.
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First, you'll analyze a solution of fluorescein in water. To make your solvent blank, fill your cuvette about 3/4 full with deionized water.
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Now, clean the transparent sides of the cuvette with a laboratory wipe. Check the cuvette for air bubbles and gently tap the cuvette to dislodge them.
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Then, bring the cuvette to the spectrometer. Open the sample chamber of the spectrometer and clean your cuvette one last time. Smudges and dust can absorb or reflect light, which will introduce errors into the data.
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Now, insert the cuvette into the sample holder so that the transparent sides are in line with the light source. Close the sample chamber door completely. Follow the instructions for your spectrometer software to set up a scan of absorbance from 200 – 800 nm and scan your cuvette as the solvent blank.
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When the scan finishes, empty the cuvette and use compressed air to remove large drops of water.
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Then, bring it to the shared hood and use a clean Pasteur pipette to fill the cuvette 3/4 full of the provided 3 µM fluorescein solution.
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Check the cuvette for air bubbles and remove them as needed before bringing the cuvette to the spectrometer. Remember to clean the transparent sides one last time before placing the cuvette in the sample chamber. Then, scan the cuvette as your sample.
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When the scan finishes, identify the wavelengths that fluorescein absorbed. The wavelength with the highest absorbance is called λmax.
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Record the wavelengths of the absorbance peaks and the overall absorption range in your lab notebook and then save the data.
Table 1: Absorbance and λmax of dyes
|
Absorbance range (nm) |
λmax (nm) |
Fluorescein |
|
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β-carotene |
|
|
Indigo |
|
|
Click Here to download Table 1
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Now, empty your cuvette into the aqueous waste and rinse it with water to remove traces of fluorescein.
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You'll analyze β-carotene next, so you need a hexane solvent blank. Rinse the cuvette with hexane a few times to remove leftover water before filling it 3/4 full of pure hexane.
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Remove air bubbles, clean the sides of the cuvette, and place it in the spectrometer. Make sure that the scan is set for absorbance from 200 – 800 nm, and then scan the cuvette as a solvent blank.
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When the scan finishes, empty the cuvette into the organic waste and dry it with compressed air.
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Use a clean pipette to fill the cuvette 3/4 full of the provided 3 µM β-carotene solution and return to the spectrometer.
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Clean the transparent sides of the cuvette, place it in the spectrometer, and scan it as your sample. Write the wavelengths of the peaks in your lab notebook and save the data.
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Now, analyze the indigo dye. The indigo solution is in DMF, so empty your cuvette into the organic waste and rinse out the leftover β-carotene and hexane with pure DMF.
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Fill the cuvette 3/4 full of pure DMF, place it in the spectrometer, and make sure that the scan settings are the same as before. Run the solvent blank scan, and then empty the cuvette into the organic waste and dry it with compressed air.
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Use a clean pipette to fill the cuvette 3/4 full of the provided 3 µM indigo dye solution and scan it as your sample. Write down the absorbance information and save your data.
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Lastly, empty your cuvette into the organic waste and rinse it with acetone.