Dear Dolphinsiu,
In case I have caught correctly what you did, you have only done the half of
the exercise you got, and that’s why you have problems.
First you did all your experiments in %T, as you had to do it, but then you
lost the red line.
Under 2. you write something about
ABSORBANCE, but I’m not able
to see any of your result in this particular “UNITS”. Do you have an idea, why
you should do it in absorbance anyway?
If you would have done it, and even drawn a plot of absorbance vs. wavelength,
you should result in a similar plot as this one below, only with single wavelengths,
but with more dilution (conc.) steps:
With other words, if you translate ALL into absorbance, you result for each
wavelength in a plot as on the 2
nd Linearity Report Page (“Measurement”) on:
"
Linearity: -- maybe a little more ?"
http://www.p-forster.com/english/themes/Spectroscopy/Linearity.htm,
but each graph will show you a different slope (Why?), AND in case of
“full spectra” you get a similar/”quasi identical” graph as on the 3
rd Linearity
Report Page (“Raw Results”) of:
"
Linearity: -- maybe a little more ?"
http://www.p-forster.com/english/themes/Spectroscopy/Linearity.htm,
Now it’s easy to answer most of your questions, especially if you keep in
mind, that still, nobody knows why (I too!), WHY Everybody thinks in
OLD, NOT VERY STABLE AND NOT VERY REPRODUCIBLE spectrometers:a.) Your 440 nm seams to be best, at most, because two facts:
1. Everybody defines sensitivity as
?Signal divided by
?Concentration, and that
means, THAT YOU HAVE (But it's NOT true!) to measure
it “very near” the Lambda
max.
2. If you
ADD the tangent at the spectrum at Lambda
max, and at a strong
increasing/decreasing region of the spectrum, then you see it very easy, that at
Lambda
max the tangent is a horizontal line, what is indicating, that
near this region, you are nearly independent of the wavelength stability/reproducibility
of your "very bad" spectrometer.
But what’s in the other situation? As you may have realised, THAT IS by far NOT LONGER TRUE, you have
only to inspect the 4
th Linearity Report Page (“Validation”, see above),
where all dilution spectra are conc. normalised,
whoops! Yea, - Beer-Lambert tells you, that “HE” IS true for EVERY wavelength! So it’s even not longer true, that you ONLY have to use the range 20%-80%T, or?
b.) The two peaks will never be caused by the two oxidation state, because
Complexation/Coordination will mostly go prior, as you can easily extract from
the following table:
A very big bouquet of thank you for the table, to: His complete report you may find under:
http://wwwchem.uwimona.edu.jm:1104/courses/Tanabe-Sugano/TSintro.html An other source of information may be:
http://digitalcommons.fau.edu/dissertations/AAI1380720/I hope, it is of any help to you,
too!Good Luck:
ARGOS
++