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Introduction to Vibrations

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    77584
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    IR spectroscopy which has become so useful in identification, estimation, and structure determination of compounds draws its strength from being able to identify the various vibrational modes of a molecule. A complete description of these vibrational normal modes, their properties and their relationship with the molecular structure is the subject of this article.

    Introduction

    We are familiar with resolving a translational vector into its three components along the x-, y-, and z- axes. Similarly a rotational motion can also be resolved into its components. Likewise the same is true for vibrational motion. The complex vibration that a molecule is making is really a superposition of a number of much simpler basic vibrations called “normal modes”. Before we take up any further description of “normal modes” it is necessary to discuss the degrees of freedom.

    Degrees of Freedom

    Degree of freedom is the number of variables required to describe the motion of a particle completely. For an atom moving in 3-dimensional space, three coordinates are adequate so its degree of freedom is three. Its motion is purely translational. If we have a molecule made of N atoms (or ions), the degree of freedom becomes 3N, because each atom has 3 degrees of freedom. Furthermore, since these atoms are bonded together, all motions are not translational; some become rotational, some others vibration. For non-linear molecules, all rotational motions can be described in terms of rotations around 3 axes, the rotational degree of freedom is 3 and the remaining 3N-6 degrees of freedom constitute vibrational motion. For a linear molecule however, rotation around its own axis is no rotation because it leave the molecule unchanged. So there are only 2 rotational degrees of freedom for any linear molecule leaving 3N-5 degrees of freedom for vibration.

    Vibrational modes

    1. A normal mode is a molecular vibration where some or all atoms vibrate together with the same frequency in a defined manner.
    2. Normal modes are basic vibrations in terms of which any other vibration is derived by superposing suitable modes in the required proportion.
    3. On the other hand, no normal mode is expressible in terms of any other normal mode. Each one is pure and has no component of any other normal mode (i.e. they are orthogonal to each other). Mathematically, the integral is

    \(\int\psi_A\psi_B \;dR= 0\) (integration is done over the entire space)

    1. The required number of “normal modes” is equal to the vibrational degree of freedom available so the number of modes for a nonlinear molecule is \(3N-6\) and that for a linear molecule is \(3N-5\).
    2. Each mode has a definite frequency of vibration. Sometimes 2 or 3 modes may have the same frequency but that does not change the fact that they are distinct modes; these modes are called degenerate.
    3. Sometimes some modes are not IR active but they exist all the same. We shall revert back to the problem of IR activity and selection rules later.

    The number of vibrational normal modes can be determined for any molecule from the formula given above. For a diatomic molecule, N = 2 so the number of modes is \(3\times 2-5 = 1\). For a triatomic linear molecule (CO2), it is \(3 \times 3-5 = 4\) and triatomic nonlinear molecule (H2O), it is \(3 \times 3-6 = 3\) and so on.

    Example 1: Water

    h2ovibrations.gif

    1. The Symmetric Stretch (Example shown is an H2O molecule at 3685 cm-1)
    2. The Asymmetric Stretch (Example shown is an H2O molecule at 3506 cm-1)
    3. Bend (Example shown is an H2O molecule at 1885 cm-1)

    A linear molecule will have another bend in a different plane that is degenerate or has the same energy. This accounts for the extra vibrational mode.

    Example 2: Carbon Dioxide

    co2vibrations.gif

    Example 3: The Methylene Group

    ch2vibrations.gif

    It is important to note that there are many different kinds of bends, but due to the limits of a 2-dimensional surface it is not possible to show the other ones.

    The frequency of these vibrations depend on the inter atomic binding energy which determines the force needed to stretch or compress a bond. We discuss this problem in the next section. The determination of the nature of the relative displacement of each atom with respect to each other is more complicated and beyond the scope of this article. However, such motion can be seen in some common molecules as shown below.

    Energetics

    For studying the energetics of molecular vibration we take the simplest example, a diatomic heteronuclear molecule AB. Homonuclear molecules are not IR active so they are not a good example to select. Let the respective masses of atoms A and B be \(m_A\) and \(m_B\). So the reduced mass \(\mu_{AB}\) is given by:

    \[ \mu_{AB}=\dfrac{m_A\, m_B}{m_A+m_B} \]

    The equilibrium internuclear distance is denoted by \(r_{eq}\). However as a result of molecular vibrations, the internuclear distance is continuously changing; let this distance be called \(r(t)\). Let \(x(t)=r(t)-r_{eq}\). When \(x\) is non-zero, a restoring force \(F\) exists which tries to bring the molecule back to \(x=0\), that is equilibrium. For small displacements this force can be taken to be proportional to \(x\).

    \[ F=-kx \]

    where \(k\) is the force constant.

    The negative sign arises from the fact that the force acts in the direction opposite to \(x\). This is indeed a case of Simple Harmonic Motion where the following well known relations hold.

    \[x(t)= A \sin \left( 2\pi \nu t \right) \]

    where

    \[ \nu=\dfrac{1}{2\pi} \sqrt{\dfrac{k}{\mu_{AB}}}\]

    The potential energy is given by \( V=\frac{1}{2}kx^2\). The total energy \(E\) (Kinetic+Potential) is obtained by solving the Schrödinger equation:

    \[-\dfrac{h^2}{8\pi^2\mu_{AB}} \dfrac{d^2\psi}{dx^2}+\dfrac{1}{2} kx^2\psi = E\psi\]

    A set of wave functions \(\psi_n\)) and the corresponding Eigenvalues \(E_n\) are obtained. \(E_n=(n+(1/2))hv\) where \(n\) is an integer (-1,0,1,2 etc.). The energy is quantized, the levels are equally spaced, the lowest energy is \((1/2)hv\), and the spacing between adjacent levels is \(hv\).

    Interaction with Electromagnetic Radiation

    As show above, the energy difference between adjacent vibrational energy levels is hvvibration. On the other hand, the photon energy is hvphoton. Energy conservation requires that the first condition for photon absorption be,

    Hvvibration = hvphoton or vvibration = vphoton.

    Such photons are in IR region of the electromagnetic spectrum. In addition, two more conditions must be met.

    1. For absorption of electromagnetic radiation, the dipole moment of the molecule must change with increasing internuclear separation resulting from the vibration (i.e, \(d\mu/dD \neq 0\)).
    2. The probability of a transition from one state to another is large if one of the state is odd and another even. This is possible if nfinal – ninitial = +1 (for absorption). At room temperature, modes are predominantly in energy state n = 0, so this transition is from n = 0 to n = 1, and \(\Delta{E} = h\nu\).

    Applications

    Spectroscopy in the IR region can determine the frequency and intensity of absorption. These frequencies are generally specific for a specific bonds such as c-c, c(double bond)c, c(triple bond)c, c-o, c(double bond)o, etc. So the IR absorption data is very useful in structure determination. The intensity depends on the concentration of the resposble spec. So it is useful for quantitative estimation and for identification.

    Questions

    1. Find the number of vibrational modes for the following molecules: \(NH_3\), \(C_6H_6\), \(C_{10}H_8\), \(CH_4\), \(C_2H_2\)(linear).
    2. State which of the following vibrations are IR active: \(N_2\), \(CO\), \(CO_2\) (stretching), \(HCl\)
    3. Calculate the vibrational frequency of \(CO\) given the following data: mass of C = 12.01 amu, mass of O = 16 amu, the force constant \(k = 1.86 \times 10^3\; kg\cdot s^{-2}\).
    4. Calculate the vibrational energy in Joules per mole of a normal mode in question 3, in its ground state of \(n=0\).
    5. Assuming the force constant to be the same for \(H_2O\) and \(D_2O\). A normal mode for \(H_2O\) is at \(3650\; cm^{-1}\). Do you expect the corresponding \(D_2O\) wave number to be higher or lower?

    Answers

    1.) NH3 – 6

    C6H6 –30

    C10H8 –48

    CH4 –9

    C2H2 – 7

    2.) N2 – IR inactive

    C0 – active

    C02 (stretching) – inactive

    HCl – active

    3.) mAB = mAxmB/(mA+mB) = 11.395x10-27

    v = (1/2pi)(k/mAB).5 = 2143.3 cm-1

    4.) Energy of the mode for n = 0

    E0 = (1/2)hv = 2.13x10-20J

    Energy per mole = 2.13x10-20x6.022x1023 = 12.8KJ/mole

    5.) v for D2O will be lower because v is inversely proportional to 1/(m.5), where m is the reduced mass.

    References

    1. Atkins, Peter and Julio de Paula. Physical Chemistry for the Life Sciences. 2006. New York, NY: W.H. Freeman and Company. p. 550-555
    2. Chang, Raymond. Physical Chemistry for the Biosciences. USA: University Science Books, 2005
    3. Vollhardt, K. Peter C., and N. Schore. Organic chemistry structure and function. New York: W.H. Freeman, 2007.

    Introduction to Vibrations is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Richard Banks, Gaurav Sinha, Charles Chu, & Charles Chu.