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Class XII · Chemistry · Unit 12 · Interactive Lecture

Analytical Techniques & Spectroscopy

The complete lecture — separation and spectroscopy come alive in the live panel as you read. Scroll down; the animation keeps pace as the inks climb the paper and white light loses its colours.

  • Qualitative analysis — finds which substances are present (e.g. a flame test).
  • Quantitative analysis — measures how much is present (e.g. a UV-visible reading of concentration).
  • Chromatography — separates a mixture by how its components share between a stationary phase (fixed) and a mobile phase (the flowing solvent).

Components held strongly by the stationary phase move slowly; those that prefer the mobile phase move fast — so the mixture spreads out. Separation is by adsorption (sticking to a surface) or partition (dissolving between two liquids).

Energy of radiationE = h ν = h c / λ   (energy increases as λ decreases)

Spot the mixture on a pencil base line, dip the paper in solvent below the spot, and let the solvent climb. Components separate; mark the solvent front, then measure.

Retardation factorRf = (distance moved by spot) ÷ (distance moved by solvent front)

Rf has no units, is between 0 and 1, and is constant for a compound — so it identifies it.

TLC uses a silica/alumina layer on a plate — faster and sharper than paper, by adsorption. In column chromatography the mixture is loaded on a packed column; weakly bound components elute first, strongly bound ones later, and each is collected separately.

Rf worked
spot a = 4.5 cm, front b = 9.0 cm → Rf = 4.5/9.0 = 0.50
  • Distribution coefficient K_d — a solute shared between two immiscible solvents keeps a constant ratio of concentrations.
Distribution lawK_d = (conc. in solvent 1) ÷ (conc. in solvent 2)

Use a separating funnel; run off the lower layer. Several small extractions remove more solute than one large one.

Spectroscopy studies how matter interacts with EM radiation. In absorption, electrons jump up and remove certain wavelengths (dark gaps). In emission, they fall back and give bright lines. Each element has its own fingerprint.

IonFlame colour
Na⁺golden yellow
K⁺lilac
Cu²⁺blue-green

UV-visible reads electronic transitions (and concentration); IR reads bond vibrations (functional groups). A spectrometer = source → monochromator → sample → detector → recorder.

  1. Qualitative vs quantitative analysis.
  2. Chromatography: stationary & mobile phases; adsorption vs partition.
  3. Paper & TLC; Rf = solute ÷ solvent front; column elution.
  4. Solvent extraction; distribution coefficient K_d; multiple extractions.
  5. EM spectrum & E = hc/λ; absorption vs emission.
  6. Flame tests/photometry; UV-visible & IR; the spectrometer.
⚛ Live panelAnalytical Techniques & Spectroscopy
Scroll the lecture — this panel animates each concept as you reach it.