3
Applications
Measure UV-Vis
Thermo Scientific
NanoDrop One
C
with NanoDropQC Software User Guide
17
Settings for UV-Vis Measurements
To show the UV-Vis settings, from the Home screen, select
UV-Vis
.
Setting
Available Options
Description
Monitored
wavelengths
Enter up to 40
wavelengths between
190 nm and 850 nm
User-defined wavelengths to be measured and reported at run
time
. Absorbance values for the first three entered wavelengths
are displayed in the
screen. To see absorbance
values for 8 monitored wavelengths, swipe left in the
measurement screen to show the
. To see all monitored
wavelengths, press and hold a sample row to show the
screen (scroll up to display absorbance values for any
additional user-defined wavelengths).
Note
: If Baseline Correction is selected, all displayed absorbance
values are the corrected values.
Analytical Wavelength
Any wavelength between
190 nm and 850 nm
This is the wavelength the software will use to determine the
pathlength selection.
Automated Pathlength On or Off
(affects pedestal
measurements only)
Optional automated pathlength selection
. Allows the software
to use the optimal (shorter) pedestal pathlength for high
concentration samples to help prevent detector saturation (see
• When selected, the shorter pathlength is used when any
wavelength between 220 nm and 850 nm has 10 mm
equivalent absorbance value of 12.5 or higher. For
wavelengths between 190 nm and 219 nm the change to the
shorter pathlength occurs when any wavelength in this range
has a 10 mm equivalent absorbance value of 10 or higher.
• When deselected, the pedestal pathlength is restricted to
10 mm across all wavelengths.
Note
: In either case, displayed absorbance values have been
normalized to a 10 mm pathlength equivalent.
Baseline Correction
On or off
Enter baseline correction
wavelength in nm or use
default value (750 nm)
Optional user-defined baseline correction
. Can be used to
correct for any offset caused by light scattering particulates by
subtracting measured absorbance at specified baseline correction
wavelength from absorbance values at all wavelengths in sample
spectrum. As a result, absorbance of sample spectrum is zero at
specified baseline correction wavelength.