To determine the optical parameters of crude oil and seawater systems, we carried out spectral investigations using the ellipsometry method, which is a highly sensitive and accurate optical method for studying the surfaces and interfaces of various media. This method is based on studying the change in the polarization state of reflected light after its interaction with the surface of interfaces of these media. Crude oil and seawater from different regions of Caspian Sea were accessed by spectroscopic ellipsometry over the 200–1700 nm spectral range at room-temperature. Optical constants and dielectric function were obtained for massive samples of each substance, as well as for ultrathin layers of the oil spilled over the sea surface. Dielectric function, when completely determined in the frequency regions corresponding to electronic transitions and excitation of atomic or molecular vibrations in the object, is a unique dielectric fingerprint of this object. Oils with even miserable difference in type and concentration of biomarkers and heterocomponents will have different dielectric functions. The possibility to use dielectric function as a unique optical fingerprint for oil identification is figured out.
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