Paillier cryptosystem: Difference between revisions

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The '''molar absorption coefficient''', '''[[Mole (unit)|molar]] extinction coefficient''', or '''molar absorptivity''' (''ε''), is a measurement of how strongly a [[chemical species]] [[absorbance|absorbs]] light at a given [[wavelength]]. It is an [[intrinsic property]] of the species; the actual [[absorbance]], ''A'', of a sample is dependent on the pathlength, ''ℓ'', and the concentration, ''c'', of the species via the [[Beer–Lambert law]], <math>A=\varepsilon c \ell</math>.


The [[SI|SI units]] for ε are m<sup>2</sup>/mol, but in practice, they are usually taken as [[Molar_concentration#Units|M]]<sup>−1</sup> cm<sup>−1</sup> or L mol<sup>−1</sup> cm<sup>−1</sup>. In older literature, cm<sup>2</sup> mol<sup>−1</sup> is sometimes used with corresponding values 1000 times larger.  These units may look different, but it is just a matter of expressing volume in cm<sup>3</sup> or in L.


Different disciplines have different conventions as to whether [[absorbance]] is [[Natural logarithm|Napierian]] (e-based) or decadic (10-based), i.e., defined with respect to the transmission via natural logarithm (ln) or common logarithm (log<sub>10</sub>).  The molar absorption coefficient is usually decadic,<ref>[http://www.iupac.org/publications/analytical_compendium/Cha10sec213.pdf][http://www.iupac.org/publications/analytical_compendium/Cha10sec352.pdf][http://www.iupac.org/publications/analytical_compendium/Cha11sec2.pdf]</ref> but when ambiguity exists it is best to qualify it as such.
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In [[biochemistry]], the extinction coefficient of a [[protein]] at 280&nbsp;nm depends almost exclusively on the number of aromatic residues, particularly [[tryptophan]], and can be predicted from the sequence of [[amino acids]].<ref>{{Citation
  | last =Gill
  | first =SC
  | last2 =von Hippel
  | first2 =PH
  | title =Calculation of protein extinction coefficients from amino acid sequence data
  | journal =Analytical Biochemistry
  | volume =182
  | issue =2
  | pages =319–26
  | year =1989
  | url =http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez (PubMed abstract)
  | doi =10.1016/0003-2697(89)90602-7
  | pmid =2610349 }}</ref> If the extinction coefficient is known, it can be used to determine the concentration of a protein in solution.
 
When there is more than one absorbing species in a solution, the overall absorbance is the sum of the absorbances for each individual species (X, Y, etc.):
 
:<math>A = (\varepsilon_{\mathrm X} c_{\mathrm X} + \varepsilon_{\mathrm Y} c_{\mathrm{Y}} + \cdots)\ell</math>,
 
The composition of a mixture of ''N'' components can be found by measuring the absorbance at ''N'' [[wavelength]]s (the values of ε for each compound at these wavelengths must also be known). The wavelengths chosen are usually the wavelengths of maximum absorption (absorbance maxima) for the individual components.  None of the wavelengths must be an ''[[isosbestic point]]'' for a pair of species.  For ''N'' components with concentrations <math>c_i</math> and wavelengths <math>\lambda_i</math>, absorbances <math>A(\lambda_i)</math> are obtained:
 
:<math>A(\lambda_i) = \ell\sum_{j=1}^N \varepsilon_j(\lambda_i) c_j</math>.
 
This set of [[simultaneous equations]] can be solved to find concentrations of each absorbing species.
 
The molar extinction coefficient <math>\varepsilon</math> (if expressed in units of L mol<sup>−1</sup> cm<sup>−1</sup>) is directly related to the [[Absorption cross section]], <math>\sigma</math>, (in units of cm<sup>2</sup>) via the [[Avogadro constant]]:<ref>{{Citation
  | last =Lakowicz
  | first =Joseph R
  | title =Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy
  | publisher = Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
  | address = New York
  | edition = 3rd
  | pages =59
  | year =2006 }}</ref>
 
:<math>\sigma = 1000 \ln(10) \frac{\varepsilon}{N_A} = 3.82 \times 10^{-21} \varepsilon</math>.
 
The molar absorptivity is also closely related to the [[mass attenuation coefficient]], by the equation
:([[Mass attenuation coefficient]])×([[Molar mass]]) = (Molar absorptivity).
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==External links ==
* [http://www.microscopyu.com/articles/livecellimaging/fpintro.html Nikon MicroscopyU Introduction to Fluorescent Proteins] includes a table of molar absorptivity of [[fluorescent protein]]s.
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Molar Absorptivity}}
[[Category:Analytical chemistry]]

Latest revision as of 20:58, 16 December 2014


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