About refractometryIn a vacuum, light travels at 330.000 km/s while travelling through water, the speed is about 225.000 km/s, which is 25% less. In a sapphire it will only reach 170.000 km/s. ![]() Who is interested in the speed of light in samples?The refractive index is a value specific to a material. It depends on temperature and wavelength (? = colour) of the light. Thus using a refractometer, will enable you to determine the concentration of a material, if temperature and wavelength are known. But it is also possible, that different materials have the same refractive index at various concentrations. Thus a clear determination of liquid substances may only be successful with binary mixtures (Mixtures consisting of two compounds). Thus refractometry is a quality control of substances. There is a definite correlation between the refractive index and the composition of many two-compound solutions. The best known example for such a mixture is a solution of sucrose in water, which has been studied throughly. A refractometer can be grated in a way that the value may be indicated directly as dry substance %RTS. For sucrose, this unit is also named Brix (abb. Bx). Refractometers convert the measured refractive indices in concentration or density. |
Detailed description of the technical basics of refractometry as PDF-data sheet |
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