Does Beer-Lambert's law calculate the absorbance of a solute

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The discussion centers on the application of Beer-Lambert's law in analyzing the absorption characteristics of solutes in blood. The molar extinction coefficient is specific to the solvent at a given concentration and wavelength, and for accurate concentration calculations of a solute, one must select a wavelength that is primarily absorbed by that solute. The complexity arises when considering that absorbance is a cumulative measure of all substances present, making it challenging to define a "molar extinction coefficient" for a mixture with varying compositions. Accurate results in measuring the absorption of a solute in blood require careful sample preparation, which may involve extracting the solute or modifying the sample to eliminate interfering substances. Blood presents particular challenges due to its complex mixture, necessitating tailored procedures for effective analysis.
Irfan Nafi
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I'm currently doing a project that involves beer-lambert's law and am confused as to what it actually calculates. So far, my intuition goes as follows: The molar extinction coefficient is for the solvent at a specific concentration and wavelength. In this case, it is blood. And if you have to calculate the concentration of a solute, then you have to get a wavelength that is primarily absorbed by the solute. So the question is: if I have another wavelength that primarily absorbs something in the blood, then will the molar extinction coefficient be that of blood at that wavelength?
 
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Very roughly speaking measured absorbance is a sum of individual absorbances of all substances present. Doesn't make much sense to speak of "molar extinction coefficient" of a mixture with variable composition.

This is actually much more complicated, as it works reasonably well only for diluted solutions, but that's the general idea.
 
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How would I get the most accurate results?
 
Most accurate results of what?
 
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Sorry for not clarifying - the absorption of the solute in the blood. I'm using an LED and a photodiode for detection. Would I just use the molar extinction coefficient of the blood?
 
No, you need to prepare the sample so that you measure absorbance of the solute you are interested in. There are no simple rules here, sample preparation is not something where a single recipe works for everything. Sometimes you need to extract the solute, sometimes you need to add things that will destroy/precipitate other interfering substances. The more complicated the solution, the more elaborate the procedures are. Blood is quite a difficult mixture to analyze.
 
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