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C o l ou r a n d M a g n e t i s m

400. 500. 600. 800. C o l ou r a n d M a g n e t i s m. The relationship between colours and metal complexes. Colour & How We Perceive it. Artist colour wheel showing the colours which are complementary to one another and the wavelength range of each colour. The colour of visible light.

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C o l ou r a n d M a g n e t i s m

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  1. 400 500 600 800 ColourandMagnetism • The relationship between colours and metal complexes

  2. Colour & How We Perceive it Artist colour wheel showing the colours which are complementary to one another and the wavelength range of each colour.

  3. The colour of visible light

  4. Black & White When a sample absorbs light, what we see is the sum of the remaining colours that strikes our eyes. If a sample absorbs all wavelength of visible light, none reaches our eyes from that sample. Consequently, it appears black. If the sample absorbs no visible light, it is white or colourless.

  5. 650 580 750 560 400 490 430 Absorption and Reflection If the sample absorbs all but orange, the sample appears orange. Further, we also perceive orange colour when visible light of all colours except blue strikes our eyes. In a complementary fashion, if the sample absorbed only orange, it would appear blue; blue and orange are said to be complementary colours.

  6. Complex Influence on colour • Factors Affecting colour • The metal • Oxidation state • Partially filled d-orbitals (d0 and d10 transparent)

  7. Light absorption Properties of Metal Complexes • Recording the absorption Spectrum

  8. The colour of visible light We have seen that light is a form of energy carried by electric and magnetic fields traveling at 186,000 miles per second. Light has both particle and wave characteristics. The wavelength of the light deter-mines both its colour and its energy; the shorter the wavelength, the higher the energy. Light, also called electromagnetic radiation, ranges in wavelength from gamma rays (10 15 m) through the visible region (500 nm) to the radio wave region (100 m). In the visible region, white light contains a spectrum of wavelengths from 400 nm (violet) to 780 nm (red); these can be seen in a rainbow or when light passes through a prism. The colour of substances depends on the colour of light absorbed by the molecules or atoms that compose the substance. This, in turn, depends on the energy separations between electron orbits. When a molecule or atom absorbs light, electrons are excited from lower energy orbits to higher energy orbits. If the energy of the light is high enough, light can break chemical bonds and destroy or change molecules through photode composition; usually, however, the energy is simply given off again as heat or light through relaxation. The specific wavelengths at which molecules or atoms absorb or emit light serve as fingerprints for specific substances, making spectroscopy—the interaction of light and matter—a useful tool in identifying unknown substances. Magnetic resonance imaging and laser devices are two important applications of light and its interaction with matter. Light is a fundamental part of our lives; by it, we see everything that we see. Sunlight is what keeps the earth alive and is our ultimate energy source. Human eyes can see a narrow band of light called visible light, but humans use many other wave-lengths for various purposes: X-rays and gamma rays are used in medicine, infrared light is used in night vision technology, microwaves are used in cooking, and radio waves are used in communication. The human eye evolved to see not only different intensities of light (black and white vision) but different colours as well. The colours that we see depend on the interaction of light with the molecules or atoms within the thing we are looking at. Just as we can identify some things by their colour in the visible region of the spectrum, so scientists can identify substances by their “colour” in other parts of the spectrum; this is called spectroscopy. Spectroscopy is used to make measurements important to society. For example, ozone levels in the upper atmosphere are monitored by spectroscopy, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a form of spectroscopy by which doctors image internal organs. The development of technology such as MRI is extremely beneficial to humans, but it also raises difficult questions—who should benefit from that technology? Does the high cost of technology leave some people unable to afford it? Is that fair? The ability to make concentrated and pure forms of light with lasers has also impacted society. From CD players to supermarket scanners to laser guided bombs, lasers have changed the way we live in the 40 years that have passed since their discovery.

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