Beer’s Law Concentration Calculator
Instantly calculate the molar concentration of a solution using spectrophotometric data.
Calculate Concentration
0.316
31.62%
15000 L/mol
The concentration (c) is found by dividing the Absorbance (A) by the product of Molar Absorptivity (ε) and Path Length (l).
Beer’s Law Calibration Curve Visualization
This chart visually represents the linear relationship between concentration and absorbance based on your inputs.
Typical Molar Absorptivity Values
| Compound | Solvent | λ max (nm) | ε (L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beta-carotene | Hexane | 450 | 138,000 |
| Caffeine | Water | 274 | 9,200 |
| NADH | Water (pH 7) | 340 | 6,220 |
| Potassium Permanganate | Water | 525 | 2,350 |
What is Beer’s Law?
Beer’s Law, also known as the Beer-Lambert Law, is a fundamental principle in analytical chemistry and spectroscopy that relates the attenuation of light to the properties of the material through which the light is traveling. It states that there is a linear relationship between the absorbance of light by a solution and the concentration of the absorbing species in that solution, provided the path length of the light is fixed.
This law is the foundation for quantitative analysis using spectrophotometry. Analytical chemists, biochemists, and environmental scientists frequently use Beer’s Law to calculate the concentration of unknown samples by measuring how much light they absorb at a specific wavelength.
A common misconception is that Beer’s Law holds true at any concentration. In reality, it is a limiting law that generally only applies to dilute solutions. At high concentrations, interactions between molecules can cause deviations from the linear relationship.
Beer’s Law Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The standard mathematical expression for Beer’s Law used for calculating concentration is:
A = ε · l · c
To rearrange this formula to solve directly for concentration (c), as this calculator does, use:
c = A / (ε · l)
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Symbol | Meaning | Standard Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absorbance | A | A logarithmic measure of the amount of light absorbed. | Unitless | 0.0 to 2.0 |
| Molar Absorptivity | ε (epsilon) | How strongly a chemical species absorbs light at a specific wavelength. | L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹ | 10 to 100,000+ |
| Path Length | l | The distance light travels through the solution (usually the cuvette width). | cm | Fixed at 1.0 cm |
| Concentration | c | The amount of solute dissolved in the solution. | mol/L (Molar) | Variable |
Practical Examples of Calculating Concentration
Example 1: Determining Protein Concentration
A biochemist needs to determine the concentration of a purified protein sample. They know the protein’s molar absorptivity at 280 nm is 45,000 L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹. Using a standard 1.0 cm cuvette, they measure an absorbance of 0.750.
- Input A: 0.750
- Input ε: 45,000
- Input l: 1.0
Calculation: c = 0.750 / (45,000 * 1.0) = 0.00001667 mol/L.
Result: The protein concentration is 1.67 x 10⁻⁵ M.
Example 2: Water Quality Testing for Iron
An environmental technician is testing water for iron contamination using a colorimetric reagent. The complex formed has a molar absorptivity of 11,500 L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹ at 510 nm. They use a longer 5.0 cm path length cell to increase sensitivity and measure an absorbance of 0.230.
- Input A: 0.230
- Input ε: 11,500
- Input l: 5.0
Calculation: c = 0.230 / (11,500 * 5.0) = 0.230 / 57,500 = 0.000004 M.
Result: The iron concentration is 4.0 x 10⁻⁶ M (or 4 micromolar). This low concentration demonstrates why increasing path length is useful for detecting trace amounts.
How to Use This Beer’s Law Calculator
- Obtain Absorbance (A): Run your sample in a spectrophotometer at the appropriate wavelength and record the absorbance value. Enter this into the first field.
- Determine Molar Absorptivity (ε): Find the literature value for your specific substance at the wavelength used, or determine it experimentally using a calibration curve of known standards. Enter this value.
- Verify Path Length (l): Check the width of the cuvette you used. The standard width is 1.0 cm. Enter the value in centimeters.
- Read Results: The calculator instantly provides the molar concentration in scientific notation. It also provides intermediate values like Transmittance (T) and Percent Transmittance (%T) to help verify your data corresponds to the measured absorbance.
- Visualize: The dynamic chart updates to show where your calculated data point lies on the theoretical calibration curve defined by your ε and l inputs.
Key Factors That Affect Beer’s Law Results
When calculating concentration using Beer’s Law, several practical factors can influence the accuracy of your results. Ignoring these can lead to significant errors.
- Wavelength Selection: Measurements must be taken at the wavelength of maximum absorption (λ max) for the analyte. Measuring on the slope of an absorption peak means slight errors in wavelength setting result in large errors in the measured absorbance and calculated concentration.
- Solution Concentration (Deviations from Linearity): Beer’s law is a limiting law for dilute solutions. At high concentrations (usually A > 1.5 or 2.0), molecules may interact chemically (e.g., dimerize) or physically alter the refractive index of the solution, causing the linear relationship to break down.
- Stray Light: Light reaching the detector that did not pass through the sample (stray light) limits the maximum absorbance an instrument can accurately measure. This causes the calculated concentration to appear lower than it actually is at high absorbance values.
- Cuvette Quality and Cleanliness: Fingerprints, scratches, or residual sample on the cuvette walls will scatter or absorb light, leading to falsely high absorbance readings and inaccurate concentration calculations.
- Solvent Effects: The solvent used can affect the electronic structure of the dissolved molecule, shifting the wavelength of maximum absorbance or changing the molar absorptivity. Ensure your ε value matches your solvent system.
- Chemical Deviations: If the absorbing species is in equilibrium with another species (e.g., pH-dependent indicators), the concentration of the absorbing form may not represent the total analytical concentration, leading to calculation errors unless the equilibrium is accounted for.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Molar Mass Calculator: Quickly calculate the molar mass of any chemical compound to assist in preparing standard solutions for Beer’s law calibration.
- Guide to Spectrophotometry Basics: A comprehensive introduction to the instrumentation and techniques used to obtain absorbance readings.
- Serial Dilution Calculator: Essential tool for planning the preparation of standard curves needed to experimentally determine molar absorptivity.
- Mastering Calibration Curves: Learn how to create, analyze, and use linear regression models for quantitative chemical analysis.
- Database of Molar Absorptivities: A reference list of ε values for common biochemical and chemical chromophores.
- Chemistry Unit Converter: Convert between different concentration units, such as ppm, ppb, and Molarity.