In optics, the Beer-Lambert law, also known as Beer's law or the Lambert-Beer law or the Beer-Lambert-Bouguer law is an empirical relationship that relates the absorption of light to the properties of the material through which the light is travelling.
There are several ways in which the law can be expressed:
In essence, the law states that there is a logarithmic dependence between the transmission of light through a substance and the concentration of the substance, and also between the transmission and the length of material that the light travels through. Thus if l and α are known, the concentration of a substance can be deduced from the amount of light transmitted by it.
The units of c and α depend on the way that the concentration of the absorber is being expressed. If the material is a liquid, it is usual to express the absorber concentration c as a mole fraction i.e. a dimensionless fraction. The units of α are thus reciprocal length (e.g. cm-1). In the case of a gas, c may be expressed as a density (units of reciprocal length cubed, e.g. cm-3), in which case α is an absorption cross-section and has units of length squared (e.g. cm²). If concentration c is expressed in moles per unit volume, α is a molar absorptivity (usually given the symbol ε) in units of mol-1 cm-2 or sometimes L mol-1 cm-1.
The value of the absorption coefficient α varies between different absorbing materials and also with wavelength for a particular material. It is usually determined by experiment.
In spectroscopy and spectrophotometry, the law is almost always defined in terms of common logarithms and powers of 10 as above. In general optics, the law is often defined in an alternate exponential form:
The values of α' and A' are approximately 2.3 (≈ln 10) times larger than the corresponding values of α and A defined in terms of base-10 functions. Therefore, care must be taken when interpreting data that the correct form of the law is used.
The law tends to break down at very high concentrations, especially if the material is highly scattering. If the light is especially intense, nonlinear optical processes can also cause variances.
where each is an extinction coefficient whose subscript identifies the source of the absorption or scattering it describes:
is the optical mass, a term basically equal to where is the solar azimuth (the solar angle with respect to a direction perpendicular to the Earth's surface at the observation site).
This equation can be used to retrieve , the aerosol optical thickness, which is necessary for the correction of satellite images and also important in accounting for the role of aerosols in climate.
Scattering, absorption and radiative transfer (optics) | Exponentials | Eponymous laws | Spectroscopy
Lambert-Beersches Gesetz | Ley de Beer-Lambert | Loi de Beer-Lambert | Legge di Lambert-Beer | Prawo Lamberta-Beera | Закон Бугера — Ламберта — Бера | Lambertov-Beerov zákon | Absorpcijski zakon | Beerin ja Lambertin laki
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