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Beer’s law
physics
- Also called:
- Lambert-Beer law or Beer-Lambert law
- Related Topics:
- light
- absorption
- spectrophotometry
- Lambert’s law
Beer’s law, in spectroscopy, a relation concerning the absorption of radiant energy by an absorbing medium. Formulated by German mathematician and chemist August Beer in 1852, it states that the absorptive capacity of a dissolved substance is directly proportional to its concentration in a solution. The relationship can be expressed as A = εlc where A is absorbance, ε is the molar extinction coefficient (which depends on the nature of the chemical and the wavelength of the light used), l is the length of the path light must travel in the solution in centimetres, and c is the concentration of a given solution.