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By Dr Pramod Kumar Pandey - October 26, 2025

Dr Pramod Kumar Pandey BSc (Hons), MSc, PhD, founder of PharmaGuru.co, is a highly experienced Analytical Research Expert with over 31 years in the pharmaceutical industry. He has played a key role in advancing innovation across leading Indian and global pharmaceutical companies. He can be reached at admin@pharmaguru.co

An Uv Visible Spectrophotometer is an analytical instrument that measures the absorbance or transmittance of a sample across the ultraviolet and visible light spectrum (typically 200–800 nm). By passing a beam of light through a sample and detecting the absorbed or transmitted intensity it enables the identification and quantification of substances in liquids or solids. […]

Uv Visible Spectrophotometer: How to Perform Assay And Identification Test Quickly

Uv visible spectrophotometer: How to Perform Assay And Identification Test
Uv visible spectrophotometer: Bing

An Uv Visible Spectrophotometer is an analytical instrument that measures the absorbance or transmittance of a sample across the ultraviolet and visible light spectrum (typically 200–800 nm). By passing a beam of light through a sample and detecting the absorbed or transmitted intensity it enables the identification and quantification of substances in liquids or solids. Widely used in chemistry, pharmaceuticals, and biology, it serves both quantitative (e.g., assay, content determination) and qualitative (e.g., identification, wavelength maxima determination) purposes. This article provides a concise, skill-based overview of the principles, applications, and practical uses of UV-Vis spectrophotometry, enhancing understanding through real-world examples and case studies.

Uv Visible Spectrophotometer: How to Perform Assay And Identification Test

The UV/Vis spectrophotometer is one of the most common analytical tools used in the pharmaceutical industry for both assay (quantitative) and identification (qualitative) analysis of drugs. It works by measuring how much ultraviolet or visible light a sample absorbs at specific wavelengths.

The following is the structure of paracetamol:

Paracetamol
Paracetamol structure (Wiki)

Principle

From the structure, it is clear that Paracetamol absorbs ultraviolet light strongly due to the presence of aromatic rings and amide functional groups. According to the Beer–Lambert Law, the absorbance of light is directly proportional to the concentration of the absorbing substance.

2. Identification Test (Qualitative Analysis)

Objective: To confirm the identity of paracetamol by determining its characteristic absorption maximum (λmax).

Procedure:

  1. Dissolve a known quantity of paracetamol in 0.1 M NaOH or distilled water to prepare a dilute solution.
  2. Scan the solution from 200–400 nm using a UV/Vis spectrophotometer.
  3. Record the wavelength at which maximum absorbance (λmax) occurs.

Observation:
Paracetamol typically shows a λmax around 243 nm in the UV region.

Interpretation:
A peak at ~243 nm confirms the presence of paracetamol since this wavelength corresponds to its characteristic electronic transition.

Expert Tips:

If a standard is available, both the standard and sample solutions are prepared in the same solvent and scanned from 200–400 nm using a UV/Vis spectrophotometer. If both show a maximum absorbance at approximately 243 nm, the compound is identified as paracetamol.”

3. Assay (Quantitative Determination)

Objective: To determine the concentration or percentage purity of paracetamol in a formulation (e.g., tablet).

Procedure:

  1. Prepare a standard solution of pure paracetamol (10mcg/ml in 0.1 M NaOH or distilled water, or suitable diluent).
  2. Prepare a paracetamol sample solution (in 0.1 M NaOH or distilled water or suitable diluent).
  3. Measure the absorbance of both standard and sample solutions at 243 nm.
  4. Calculate the concentration of paracetamol in the sample by the following formula:
paracetamol assay calculation formula

4. Case Study Result

  • λmax found: 243 nm
  • Absorbance (standard): 0.420 at 10mcg/mL
  • Absorbance (sample): 0.418 t 10mcg/mL
    → % Assay = 99.5% (within acceptable range)

5. Conclusion

Using a UV/Vis spectrophotometer, both identification and assay of paracetamol can be performed quickly, accurately, and economically.

  • Identification confirms the drug by its unique λmax.
  • Assay complies with the active ingredient

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Uv Visible Spectrophotometer: Interview FAQs

1. What is a UV/VIS Spectrophotometer?

A UV/VIS spectrophotometer is an analytical instrument used to measure the absorbance or transmittance of a sample as a function of wavelength in the ultraviolet (UV) and visible (Vis) regions of the electromagnetic spectrum (typically 190–1100 nm).
It helps determine the concentration, purity, and chemical composition of substances based on their interaction with light.

2. What is the basic principle of UV visible spectroscopy?

The UV-visible spectrophotometer works by passing a light beam through a sample to measure the light intensity of a sample. The sample must have UV absorption. The compounds containing functional groups such as C=C, C=O, N=N and aromatic rings are analysed by uv-spectrophotometer

3. Which types of samples are analysed by UV spectroscopy?

The compounds having UV absorption can be analysed by a UV spectrophotometer such as acetone, toluene, naphthalene, benzoic acid, phenol, paracetamol etc

4. What are the different applications of UV spectroscopy?

UV spectroscopy plays an important role in pharmaceutical development due to its simplicity, fast results and cost-effectiveness. It is used for Quantitative analysis, Qualitative analysis and HPLC method development

5. What are the limitations of UV spectroscopy?

UV spectroscopy has several limitations such as it is not a specific method, it can not be used for impure compounds and it can not be used for compounds having no UV response.

6. What is the Principle of UV Spectrophotometer?

The instrument operates based on the Beer–Lambert Law, which relates the absorbance (A) of light to the concentration (C) of the absorbing substance and the path length (l) of the sample cell.
When monochromatic light passes through a sample, certain wavelengths are absorbed by the molecules, leading to electronic transitions (usually π → π* or n → π*). The remaining transmitted light is detected and

7.0 What is the Beer–Lambert Law?

The Beer–Lambert Law states that absorbance is directly proportional to the concentration and path length:
A=ε×C×l
Where:

A = Absorbance (no units)

ε = Molar absorptivity (L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹)

C = Concentration of the solution (mol·L⁻¹)

l = Path length of the cuvette (cm)

8.0 What are chromophores?

Chromophores is a groups of atoms responsible for UV-Visible absorption of the molecules such as C=C, C=O, N=N and aromatic rings.

9.0 What is Redshift?

Redshift is the change in absorption to a longer wavelength

10.0 What is the blue shift?

Blueshift is the change in absorption to a shorter wavelength

11.0 What is the effect of solvents on UV Maxima?

The solvent used for the sample diluent should not have UV absorption. For example, if any compound has a maximum at 220 nm, then acetone can not be used as a sample diluent. Solvents like water, methanol and ethanol can be used.

12.0 What is the difference between IR spectroscopy and UV spectroscopy?

FTIR spectroscopy uses a longer, lower-energy wavelength range, typically 4,000 to 400 cm-1 (2,500 to 25,000 nm. UV-Visible spectrophotometers are used between 190 to 900 (UV to visible)

13. What are the types of UV/VIS Spectrophotometers?

There are mainly two types of UV/VIS Spectrophotometers:

  1. Single-beam Spectrophotometer:
    • Measures light intensity before and after passing through the sample separately.
    • Simple and inexpensive but less stable over time.
  2. Double-beam Spectrophotometer:
    • Splits light into two paths—one through the sample and the other through a reference (blank).
    • Measures both simultaneously for higher accuracy and stability.

14. What is the range of UV/VIS Spectrophotometer?

  • Ultraviolet region: 190 – 400 nm
  • Visible region: 400 – 700 nm
  • Some instruments also measure up to 1100 nm (near-infrared range)

15. What are the different Components of a UV Spectrophotometer?

The following are the different Components of a UV Spectrophotometer:

  1. Light Source:
    • Deuterium lamp for UV region (190–400 nm)
    • Tungsten/halogen lamp for visible region (400–1100 nm)
  2. Monochromator: Uses prisms or diffraction gratings to isolate specific wavelengths.
  3. Sample Holder (Cuvette): Usually made of quartz for UV and glass for visible light.
  4. Detector: Converts transmitted light into electrical signals (e.g., photodiode, photomultiplier tube).
  5. Display & Processor: Records absorbance or transmittance and displays spectra.

16. How Does a UV-Vis Spectrophotometer Work?

  1. The light source emits radiation.
  2. The monochromator selects a specific wavelength.
  3. The beam passes through the sample in a cuvette.
  4. The detector measures the intensity of transmitted light.
  5. The instrument calculates absorbance using:

A = log10(I/I0)

where I0I_0 = intensity of incident light and II = transmitted light.

17. How is Sample Analysis Performed?

  1. Prepare the blank (solvent only) and sample solution.
  2. Calibrate the instrument using the blank.
  3. Select the wavelength of maximum absorbance (λmax).
  4. Measure absorbance of the sample.
  5. Determine concentration using a calibration curve or Beer–Lambert law.

18. What are the uses of UV Spectrophotometer?

  • Quantitative analysis of solutions.
  • Purity checking of compounds.
  • Detection of functional groups.
  • Enzyme kinetics and DNA/protein quantification.
  • Pharmaceutical quality control and chemical research.

19. What are the Applications UV Spectrophotometer?

UV Spectrophotometer is widelu used in the Pharmaceuticals, Biochemistry, Environmental, Food industry and Forensics for various applications such as:

The following are the different applications of UV-visible spectrophotometer:

  1. Quantitative analysis such as Drug assay, dissolution studies.
  2. Qualitative analysis
  3. HPLC method development
  4. Drug formulation studies

1.Quantitative analysis

UV-visible spectrophotometer is used for quantitative analysis such as assay testing, content testing and purity testing of pharmaceuticals

2. Qualitative analysis

The UV-visible spectrophotometer is used for qualitative analysis such as identification test (by comparing wavelength maxima of standard solution) and purity tests such as transmittance test and absorbance test

3. Chromatographic method development

The UV-visible spectrophotometer is used to find out the wavelength maxima of pharmaceuticals during the HPLC method development. It is very helpful in deciding the HPLC operating wavelength.

20. What are the Limitations of a UV Spectrophotometer?

  • Works only with transparent or clear samples.
  • Turbid or colored solutions can scatter light.
  • Nonlinearity at high concentrations.
  • Interference from solvent absorption.
  • Not suitable for very low absorbing compounds without concentration steps.

21. What is the Absorption Law?

The Absorption Law (combination of Beer’s and Lambert’s laws) states that:

  • Absorbance is proportional to the path length of the absorbing medium (Lambert’s law).
  • Absorbance is proportional to the concentration of the absorbing species (Beer’s law).

Together, ( A = εcl ).

22. How is UV Spectra Presented?

The UV spectrum plots absorbance vs. wavelength (A vs. λ).A
UV spectrophotometer provides the data in the form of an absorption spectrum. The absorption spectrum is normally presented in the form of a graph, where the y-axis represents the absorbance, and the x-axis represents the wavelengths. Peaks in the spectrum are known as the absorption peaks, indicating the wavelength of light that is absorbed by the sample. The following is the typical representation of the UV spectrum:

How is UV Spectra Presented?
UV spectrum

23. What is the Price of a UV Spectrophotometer?

Prices vary based on features:

  • Basic single-beam models: $800 – $2,000
  • Double-beam benchtop models: $3,000 – $10,000
  • Advanced/automated systems: $10,000 – $50,000+

24. Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

  • Qualitative: Identify compounds based on λmax and absorption pattern.
  • Quantitative: Measure concentration by comparing absorbance to a standard calibration curve or using Beer–Lambert law.

25. How is Identification Using a UV Spectrophotometer?

  • Each compound has a characteristic λmax due to its molecular structure.
  • Comparing λmax and absorbance pattern with standard data helps in compound identification.

26. What are the Advantages and Disadvantages UV Spectrophotometer?

Advantages:

  • Rapid, simple, and non-destructive.
  • Requires a small sample volume.
  • High sensitivity and accuracy.
  • Suitable for both qualitative and quantitative studies.
  • Low cost

Disadvantages:

  • Limited to UV/Visible absorbing compounds.
  • Interference from impurities or solvents. It is not a specific method and can not be used for impure compounds
  • The sample must be clear and homogeneous.

27. How to Use a UV-Vis Spectrophotometer?

  1. Turn on the instrument and allow it to warm up (usually 15–30 minutes).
  2. Select the desired wavelength.
  3. Place the blank cuvette and set the absorbance to zero.
  4. Insert the sample cuvette and record absorbance.
  5. Save or print the data for analysis.

28. What is the Lamp Warm-up Time?

Both deuterium and tungsten lamps need to stabilise before accurate measurement.

  • Recommended warm-up: 15–30 minutes (varies by model).
  • Ensures stable light intensity and consistent readings.

29. What is the Single Beam UV Visible Spectrophotometer?

One beam of light is directed through the sample and then the detector. The same beam is used for both the sample and the reference. The light source, sample, and detector are part of a single optical path. A typical procedure involves measuring the reference first, then switching to the sample, and manually compensating for any variations.

30. What is a Double Beam UV-Visible Spectrophotometer?

Two beams of light are used: one directed through the sample and the other through a reference (usually air or a blank). A beam splitter divides the light from the light source into two beams – one that passes through the sample and one that passes through the reference. The detectors for each beam are often located side by side, allowing continuous monitoring of both the sample and reference simultaneously. This setup allows for real-time comparison of the sample and reference, providing more accurate and stable measurements.

31. Difference between Single Beam and Double Beam UV-Visible Spectrophotometer

The following are the main differences between single-beam and double-beam UV-Visible Spectrophotometers:

Featureingle Beam UV-Vis SpectrophotometerDouble Beam UV-Vis Spectrophotometer
Measurement MethodTwo separate beams for the sample and referenceMore stable, real-time comparison of the sample and reference
StabilityCan be affected by fluctuations in light source and driftMore stable, real-time comparison of sample and reference
PrecisionLower precision, manual adjustments requiredHigher precision, continuous monitoring
CostLess expensiveMore expensive
ComplexitySimpler, fewer componentsOne beam for both sample and the reference

32. What is Beer-Lambert Law?

Transmittance (T) is calculated by the following formulae:

Where: T is the transmittance, ε is the molar absorption coefficient and l is the pathlength

The following is the relationship between transmittance (T) and absorption (A):

This equation is very helpful and widely used in the industries by Analytical Scientists. This instrument is used to measure the intensity of the light before and after passes through the sample. This instrument provides reading in terms of transmittance (T) and absorbance (A). Transmittance is the ratio of the intensity to the transmittance light to the intensity of the incident light, express as percentage absorbance. Absorbance is the logarithm of the reciprocal of transmittance and is directly proportional to the absorbing species in the sample.

33. What is the operation procedure of a UV Spectrophotometer?

  • Set the measurement parameter required for the analysis, such as wavelength scan range and photometric recording range
  • Set the wavelength scan speed
  • Perform baseline correction
  • Place the cuvette containing blank reagent into both sample and reference cells of the sample compartment.
  • Select baseline correction from the screen
  • After baseline correction is finished, replace the blank reagent with the sample solution for the sample cell
  • Start to perform the spectrum measurement
  • The spectrum measured is being displayed on the measurement screen

Conclusion: Uv Visible Spectrophotometer

The Uv visible spectrometertechnique plays a vital role in the pharmaceutical industry for qualitative and quantitative analysis. I hope this article has clarified all your doubts and that you can now use it effectively in pharmaceutical development.

Abbreviations

  • UV: Ultraviolet
  • nm: nanometer
  • T: Transmittance

Further Reading:

About Dr Pramod Kumar Pandey
Dr Pramod Kumar Pandey

Dr Pramod Kumar Pandey BSc (Hons), MSc, PhD, founder of PharmaGuru.co, is a highly experienced Analytical Research Expert with over 31 years in the pharmaceutical industry. He has played a key role in advancing innovation across leading Indian and global pharmaceutical companies. He can be reached at admin@pharmaguru.co

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