I guess it depends on if the reagent color change is linearly related to the concentration of the target compound (say, nitrate).
(originally asked here)
Beer's Law determines the relationship between opacity and concentration. According to Beer's Law, if you double the concentration of a liquid, you should see double the opacity -- that is, it'll be twice as dark when you shine light through it. Here's some work people have shared to demonstrate this:
Title | Author | Updated | Likes | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Can a DIY spectrometer be used to measure water turbidity? | @warren | about 7 years ago | 0 | 6 |
Draft: Find the concentration of a liquid with a DIY spectrometer | @warren | about 7 years ago | 1 | 3 |
Does the Beer Lambert law apply to the opacity of reagents? | @warren | about 7 years ago | 0 | 4 |
Mini spectrophotometer - how does this deviate from the Beer-Lambert law? | @FoxClass | over 8 years ago | 1 | 7 |
CCD Photodiode Array Spectrometer | @bhickman | about 11 years ago | 8 | 27 |
Using the Spectroscope for Analysis of Concentration (Beer's Law) | @straylight | over 11 years ago | 4 | 14 |
Does Coffee Obey Beer's Law? A Spectrometric Investigation | @akjeff91 | over 11 years ago | 1 | 4 |
Attempt at Quantitative Analysis for Desktop Spectrometer | @ben.alley43 | over 11 years ago | 1 | 8 |
Copying in answer from @stoft, here:
https://publiclab.org/questions/interestedperson_ha/06-27-2016/question-can-diy-spectrometer-be-used-for-analysis-of-soil#answer-0-comment-14873
Just to clarify here, I believe to sum up we can say that:
IF a reagent reacts linearly (for example, if doubling the concentration of the thing the reagent reacts to DOUBLES the opacity of the reagent)
...then YES, you can use the principle of Beer's Law to determine concentration of what the reagent is reacting to.
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Also noting that @ygzstc cited some work supporting the use of the area under the curve in a spectrum data reading instead of intensity at one wavelength, as a possibly better measure of concentration:
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Related:
How can we detect contaminants in water samples with a DIY spectrometer using reagents?
https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/12-18-2017/can-a-diy-spectrometer-be-used-to-measure-water-turbidity
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