Near Infrared Measurements - How Do They Work?

Near Infrared Measurements - How Do They Work?

Table of Contents

The NIR Spectrum

Near Infrared (NIR) measurements are based on specific absorption bands in the electromagnetic spectrum between 800 and 2500 nanometers (nm). This region is just above the visible light region of 400 - 700 nm. Electromagnetic waves in the region have the best combination of energy, sensitivity and absorption to be useful for quantitative measurements of solid materials.

NIR Region of Electromagnetic Spectrum
The NIR Region

While full spectrum analyzers may utilize the entire spectrum and multivariate mathematical treatments such as Principal Component Regression (PCR), Partial Least Squares (PLS) or neural networks, photometers use “slices” of the spectrum that correspond to specific molecular overtones and associated vibrational absorptions.

NIR Absorbances of Chemical Groups
Common Chemical Groups Easily Measured by NIR

Photometers utilize narrow band pass interference filters that have a specified band width typically 50 nm wide, though the band width is sometimes application dependent. The NIR has broad bands as opposed to the sharp peaks in the Infrared region. Common bonds are O-H (1940 and 1420 nm) in water, C-H (2340 nm) in organics and oils and N-H in proteins. The NIR sensors are extremely sensitive instruments that are optimized to measure the absorbencies of samples at these specific wavelength regions. The quantity of the constituent to be measured us proportional to the absorbance level at these specific wavelengths.

NIR Photometers

NIR Photometer
How an NIR Photometer Measures a Sample

Shining light at these wavelengths causes the corresponding chemical bond to vibrate and absorb energy. Think of different sections of a stadium crowd called upon to shout and jump when their section is highlighted on the stadium Jumbotron.