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CHM3205: Lectures 2 - 3

In today’s session we will:


• Explore the general features of spectroscopy
• Examine the process of spectral generation.
• Distinguish between emission and absorption
spectroscopy.
• Discuss Gross selection rules for vibrational spectroscopy.
• Examine Vibrational modes of Homonuclear and
Heteronuclear Diatomic Molecules.
• Observe the vibrational modes of Polyatomic molecules
(CO2, H2O).
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy

Molecular spectroscopy di ers from atomic spectroscopy in


that molecules have additional energy states available.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy

This means that in addition to electronic transitions,


molecules have access to rotational and vibrational energy
states, making their spectra more complex.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Categories of Spectroscopy

Two main categories of spectroscopy exist. These are:


1.Emission spectroscopy
2.Absorption spectroscopy
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Categories of Spectroscopy

Emission Spectroscopy entails the transition of a molecule


from a state of high energy E1 to a state of low energy E2
and emits the excess energy as a photon of radiation.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Categories of Spectroscopy

In Absorption Spectroscopy a radiation source of nearly


monochromatic single (frequency) radiation is incident on a sample
and the net absorption is monitored as the radiation is swept over a
range of frequencies.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
General Categories of Spectroscopy

The term net absorption is used because when a sample is


irradiated, both absorption and emission processes take
place at a given frequency .
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Categories of Spectroscopy

The detector measures the di erence and records the data


either in the form of % transmittance or absorbance.

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.


Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Categories of Spectroscopy

Transmittance is de ned as the ratio of the radiant power


transmitted by a sample to the radiant power incident on
the sample.
% T = I/I0
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Categories of Spectroscopy

Absorbance is the logarithm to the base 10 of the reciprocal


of the transmittance:
A = -log10 (T)
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
General Categories of Spectroscopy

Both forms give information regarding energy level separations.


However, absorption spectroscopy is widely used in the
exploration of molecular vibrations, rotations and electronic
transitions.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
General Categories of Spectroscopy

Transitions between electronic energy levels are stimulated


by or emit:
1. Ultraviolet radiation
2. Visible radiation
3. Near infrared Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
General Categories of Spectroscopy

Direct absorption or emission of infrared radiation causes changes


in the vibrational energy levels of a molecule, while direct
absorption of microwave radiation does the same in its rotational
energy levels.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9 & 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
General Features of Spectroscopy

Spectral analysis provides data pertaining to bond and molecular properties

Bond strengths Molecular dimensions

Bond lengths Molecular shapes

Bond angles Dipole moments

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
General Features of Spectroscopy

Spectral lines or bands in spectroscopy are the outcome of


the absorption, emission, or scattering of a photon of
energy when the energy of the molecule changes.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

They are expressions of the unique energy levels of the


molecule.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

This energy is quantized and is given by the Bohr frequency


condition:
h = ∣E1 - E2∣
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

It is expressed according to the stimulation e ect of the


radiation. For vibrational stimulation
h = ∣E1 - E2∣ becomes
∣E1 - E2∣ = ħ (with ħ representing the Hamiltonian
operator)
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

The quantized energy states are not equally accessible to


the molecule.

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

Consequently, the states are not all occupied (or


populated).

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Energy

Occupied states are populated based on criteria laid out in


selection rules.

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

These general rules give unique spectral outcomes for


each molecule as they de ne which energy states are
accessible to the molecule for the speci c mode of
stimulation.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

The gross selection rule for a change in vibrational state


brought about by absorption or emission of radiation is
that “the electrical dipole moment of the molecule must change
when the atoms are displaced relative to one another.”
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

vibrational
modes

Vibrational energy states are referred to as vibrational


modes.

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (vibrational modes)

Six (6) typical vibrational modes are seen above.


Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (vibrational modes)

While many vibrational modes exist in a molecule’s


movement, only SOME of these modes are responsive to
radiation (i.e. lead to an energetic transition).
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

Depending on whether molecule is linear or nonlinear, the


number of accessible vibrational modes can be determined
based on a general formula derived from the gross
selection rule for IR radiation.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

The following equation applies for linear molecules,

Degrees of freedom = 3N - 5
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

And for nonlinear molecules,


Degrees of freedom = 3N - 6

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection rules

In both cases, N represents the number of atoms


contained in the molecule.

Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules

Only vibrational modes that result in a rhythmic change in


the dipole moment of the molecule are IR active, even if
the change is temporal.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules

This rhythmical change in dipole moment causes a


changing charge distribution that creates an alternating
electric eld that couples the molecular vibration with
the oscillating electrical eld of the incident IR
radiation.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules

The oscillation of a molecule, can therefore cause


temporal variations in its dipole moments and allow for
even non polar molecules to interact with the
electromagnetic eld.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules

Diatomic molecules have only ONE mode of vibration,


known as the bond stretch.

Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.


Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy: Selection
Rules (Homonuclear Diatomic Molecules)

Nonpolar molecules such as homonuclear diatomic


molecules are una ected by bond stretch vibrations.
These vibrations do not impact the molecule’s dipole
moment.

Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy: Selection
Rules (Homonuclear Diatomic Molecules)

These molecules, therefore, neither absorb nor emit


radiation and are said to be IR inactive.

Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy: Selection
Rules (Homonuclear Diatomic Molecules)

They have dipole moments that remain zero, irrespective


of their bond lengths. Therefore, H2, O2, N2, X2 are all
considered inactive.

Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy: Selection
Rules (Heteronuclear Diatomic Molecules)

Polar Heteronuclear diatomic molecules have dipole


moments that are not zero. They have 0ne mode of
vibration which makes them IR active. This is the bond
stretch mode.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (Polynuclear Molecules)

Polynuclear molecules exhibit bending and stretching


vibrational modes as seen before.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (Polynuclear Molecules)

They possess at least one vibrational mode that results in a change


in dipole moment. In a list of N2, CO2, OCS, H2O, H2C=CH2
and C6H6, all EXCEPT N2 are IR active.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules

Which of the following molecules have infrared active


vibrations: H2, NO, N2O, CH4?
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (vibrational modes)

Steps to determine the vibrational modes of a molecule:


1. Using VSEPR, classify the molecule as linear or nonlinear.
2. Use the applicable equation for degrees of freedom.
3. Input your N value and solve.

Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Vibrational Modes of CO2

O C O

CO2 is a linear, heteronuclear molecule with 3 atoms.


Calculate the number of vibrational modes available to
this molecule.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (vibrational modes of CO2)

O C O

As a linear heteronuclear molecule, the general formula is:


(where N = 3)
Degrees of freedom = 3N - 5
Degrees of freedom = 3 (3) - 5 = 4 vibrational modes
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Vibrational Modes of CO2
Bending
Stretching
S

Scissoring

However, not all the modes of the complex molecules are


vibrationally active. For example, the symmetric stretch
for O-C-O is inactive because it leaves the dipole moment
unchanged.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Selection Rules (vibrational modes of H2O)

H H
O

As a nonlinear heteronuclear molecule, the general


formula is: (N = 3)
Degrees of freedom = 3N - 6
Degrees of freedom = 3 (3) - 6 = 3 vibrational modes
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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General Features of Spectroscopy:
Vibrational Modes of H2O
Bending
Symmetric Stretching Asymmetric Stretching
(scissoring)

Observing the vibrational modes of H2O. Three normal


modes exist, with 2, as the predominantly bending but
occurring at a lower wavenumber than the other two.
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3. Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9/13.

Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.


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Classify the following molecules:
Molecule Geometry Vibrational modes Active (Yes/No)
H2
Cl2
PCl5
H2O2
C60
NO
CH4
N2O
Silverstein, R. Etal. Spectrometric Identi ication of Organic Compounds, 6 ed. Chap 3.
Atkins, P. Physical Chemistry, 8 ed.; Chap. 9.
Lecturer: Dr. Keisha K. Ellis-Holder, Department of Chemistry, University of Guyana, 2022.
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