found it, just FYI.lil_eeveeMay 9 2005, 18:49:54 UTC
Beer's law is the physical law stating that the quantity of light absorbed by a substance dissolved in a nonabsorbing solvent is directly proportional to the concentration of the substance and the path length of the light through the solution; the law is sometimes also referred to as the Beer-Lambert law or the Bouguer-Beer law. Beer's law is commonly written in the form A=epsiloncl, where A is the absorbance, c is the concentration in moles per liter, l is the path length in centimeters, and epsilon is a constant of proportionality known as the molar extinction coefficient. The law is accurate only for dilute solutions; deviations from the law occur in concentrated solutions because of interactions between molecules of the solute, the substance dissolved in the solvent.
Hey Eeveeweevee, don't clog up my precious Live Journal comment space with your inanely blasphemous chemistry dibber dabber nonsense; you're alienating my viewerbase.
(I'm just kidding, help me with chemistry please, I'm dying.)
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The absorbance is directly proportional to the concentration according to Beer's Law.
no honestly this is a quote from sparknotes
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(I'm just kidding, help me with chemistry please, I'm dying.)
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