The Photographic Journal, August, 1922.
MICRO-SPECTRO OCULARS
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167
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normal condition; (B) with a pH of 1.8 (acid reaction);
and (C) with a pH of 9.6 (alkaline reaction). Absorption spectra
can be obtained in a similar way in the ultra-violet spectrum by substituting
for the wedge a small sector, as suggested by E. Belin, which is driven
by a small motor during the exposure.
A spectroscopic ocular is sometimes used in microscopic
examination. Most of these oculars are fitted with a small
direct vision prism train, mounted just above the eye-lens
of the ocular, the slit being placed in the plane of the eyepiece diaphragm.
A comparison prism and a photographed scale are generally provided, so
that an absorption can be roughly measured or estimated. In order to provide
for cases where the coloured image under analysis is not of sufficient
dimensions to flood the whole slit, some device for shortening the slit
should be present.
Spectroscopic oculars, fitted with wave-length scales
of considerable accuracy, are manufactured, notably by Zeiss and Leitz,
the scale itself being adjustable by means of a micrometer screw, so that
if monochromatic light, such as that of a sodium flame, be employed, the
scale can be
adjusted so that the D line is in accurate position,
when the whole scale will automatically read correctly. Chamot,* however,
suggests that such instruments are usually too crude to be of value to
the chemist, and gives methods of calibrating an ocular, or using a wave-length
scale prepared similarly to those already described in Chapter IV. He also
describes the Andrews cell for measuring absorption spectra with the microscope,
in which the thickness of liquid in a cell can be varied, so that the position
of maximum intensity of an absorption band can be determined correctly
i.e. by observing the situation of the vanishing point after repeated
dilutions.
An illustration of the Leitz micro-spectroscope is seen
in Fig. 86.
. . .
* 'Chemical Microscopy,' p. 135
. . .