Comparing the Performance of the Cary 3500 and Cary 8454 UV-Vis Spectrophotometers
Technical notes | 2019 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
UV-Vis spectrophotometry is a cornerstone technique in analytical chemistry, underpinning quality control, method validation, and routine quantification across pharmaceuticals, environmental monitoring, and industrial laboratories. Ensuring method equivalence when transferring protocols between instruments guarantees reliable, reproducible results that meet regulatory requirements and operational efficiency targets.
This study evaluates the performance of two Agilent UV-Vis spectrophotometers—the long-established Cary 8454 diode-array system and the newer Cary 3500 monochromator-based design—by comparing their ability to quantify potassium dichromate solutions. Key aims include assessing spectral accuracy, photometric range, calibration linearity, throughput, and overall suitability for regulated laboratory environments.
A series of certified potassium dichromate standards (40–240 mg/L) and a 60 mg/L test sample were prepared in 0.001 M perchloric acid. Both instruments were baseline-zeroed with blank solution. Wavelength scans (190–600 nm for Cary 8454; 190–1100 nm for Cary 3500) identified absorbance peaks at 257 nm and 350 nm. Calibration curves were constructed at 257 nm using six standards and linear regression. Signal integration times: 3 s for quantification; minimum possible for timing comparisons (0.1 s on both, and 0.004 s on Cary 3500).
Used Instrumentation:
Both instruments produced identical absorbance peaks (257 nm and 350 nm) and linear calibration curves with R2 = 0.9999. Measured sample concentrations (61.37 mg/L on Cary 8454; 60.72 mg/L on Cary 3500) closely matched the certified value (60.73 mg/L). The Cary 3500’s extended photometric range (up to 4 Abs vs. ~3 Abs on Cary 8454) allowed more accurate measurement of high-absorbance standards. Timing studies showed that a full-spectrum scan took 7 s on the Cary 8454 versus 92 s on the Cary 3500 at 0.1 s averaging, while calibration and sample runs required 141 s on the Cary 8454 and 92 s on the Cary 3500. Simultaneous, true multicell measurement on the Cary 3500 preserves standard-to-sample integrity and boosts throughput.
Advances in UV-Vis instrumentation will emphasize higher throughput through multiplexed sampling, integration with laboratory information management systems (LIMS), and enhanced automation. Software improvements leveraging artificial intelligence could enable real-time spectral interpretation and predictive maintenance. Expanding photometric ranges and novel light sources may further broaden application scope in complex matrices and field-deployable devices.
The Cary 3500 matches or exceeds the performance of the Cary 8454 in peak identification, calibration linearity, and quantitative accuracy while offering an extended absorbance range and multicell capability. These attributes, combined with modern software and compliance options, make the Cary 3500 an ideal successor for GMP/GLP laboratories seeking robust, high-throughput UV-Vis analysis.
No additional literature references were provided in the source document.
UV–VIS spectrophotometry
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the Topic
UV-Vis spectrophotometry is a cornerstone technique in analytical chemistry, underpinning quality control, method validation, and routine quantification across pharmaceuticals, environmental monitoring, and industrial laboratories. Ensuring method equivalence when transferring protocols between instruments guarantees reliable, reproducible results that meet regulatory requirements and operational efficiency targets.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates the performance of two Agilent UV-Vis spectrophotometers—the long-established Cary 8454 diode-array system and the newer Cary 3500 monochromator-based design—by comparing their ability to quantify potassium dichromate solutions. Key aims include assessing spectral accuracy, photometric range, calibration linearity, throughput, and overall suitability for regulated laboratory environments.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
A series of certified potassium dichromate standards (40–240 mg/L) and a 60 mg/L test sample were prepared in 0.001 M perchloric acid. Both instruments were baseline-zeroed with blank solution. Wavelength scans (190–600 nm for Cary 8454; 190–1100 nm for Cary 3500) identified absorbance peaks at 257 nm and 350 nm. Calibration curves were constructed at 257 nm using six standards and linear regression. Signal integration times: 3 s for quantification; minimum possible for timing comparisons (0.1 s on both, and 0.004 s on Cary 3500).
Used Instrumentation:
- Cary 8454 UV-Vis spectrophotometer with ChemStation software
- Cary 3500 UV-Vis spectrophotometer with multicell module and Cary UV Workstation software
Main Results and Discussion
Both instruments produced identical absorbance peaks (257 nm and 350 nm) and linear calibration curves with R2 = 0.9999. Measured sample concentrations (61.37 mg/L on Cary 8454; 60.72 mg/L on Cary 3500) closely matched the certified value (60.73 mg/L). The Cary 3500’s extended photometric range (up to 4 Abs vs. ~3 Abs on Cary 8454) allowed more accurate measurement of high-absorbance standards. Timing studies showed that a full-spectrum scan took 7 s on the Cary 8454 versus 92 s on the Cary 3500 at 0.1 s averaging, while calibration and sample runs required 141 s on the Cary 8454 and 92 s on the Cary 3500. Simultaneous, true multicell measurement on the Cary 3500 preserves standard-to-sample integrity and boosts throughput.
Practical Benefits of the Method
- Enhanced photometric range reduces need for sample dilution and potential dilution errors.
- Simultaneous multicell acquisition increases throughput and data consistency.
- Robust, research-grade optics ensure high spectral accuracy and reproducibility.
- Streamlined software workflows simplify method setup, data analysis, and reporting.
- Optional 21 CFR Part 11/EU Annex 11 compliance supports regulated laboratory use.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advances in UV-Vis instrumentation will emphasize higher throughput through multiplexed sampling, integration with laboratory information management systems (LIMS), and enhanced automation. Software improvements leveraging artificial intelligence could enable real-time spectral interpretation and predictive maintenance. Expanding photometric ranges and novel light sources may further broaden application scope in complex matrices and field-deployable devices.
Conclusion
The Cary 3500 matches or exceeds the performance of the Cary 8454 in peak identification, calibration linearity, and quantitative accuracy while offering an extended absorbance range and multicell capability. These attributes, combined with modern software and compliance options, make the Cary 3500 an ideal successor for GMP/GLP laboratories seeking robust, high-throughput UV-Vis analysis.
Reference
No additional literature references were provided in the source document.
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