Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

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Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

description

Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy. Vibrations. What is a vibration in a molecule?. Any change in shape of the molecule- stretching of bonds, bending of bonds, or internal rotation around single bonds http://academic.pgcc.edu/~ssinex/VibMol/form.html. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Page 1: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Molecular Vibrationsand

IR Spectroscopy

Page 2: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

VibrationsWhat is a vibration in a molecule?

Any change in shape of the molecule- stretching of bonds, bending of bonds, or internal rotation around single bondshttp://academic.pgcc.edu/~ssinex/VibMol/form.html

Can a vibration change the dipole moment of a molecule?

Asymmetrical stretching/bending and internal rotation change the dipole moment of a molecule. Asymmetrical stretching/bending are IR active. Symmetrical stretching/bending does not. Not IR active

Page 3: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Infrared (IR) electromagnetic radiation causes vibrations in molecules (wavelengths of 2500-15,000 nm or 2.5 – 15 m or mcm)

What wavelength of electromagnetic radiation is involved in causing vibrations in molecules?

For a vibration at 4111 cm-1 (the stretch in H2), how many vibrations occur in a second?120 x 1012 vibrations/sec or a vibration

every 8 x 10-15 seconds!WOW !!!!!

120 trillion vibration per second!!!!

Page 4: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

How does the mass influence the vibration?

H2 I2

MM =2 g/moleMM =254 g/mole

The greater the mass - the lower the wavenumber

Page 5: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

How much movement occurs in thevibration of a C-C bond?

For a C-C bond with a bond length of 154 pm, the variation is about 10

pm.

For C-C-C bond angle a change of 4o is typical.This moves a carbon atom about 10 pm.

4o 10 pm

10 pm

154 pm

stretching vibration

bending vibration

Page 6: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Vibrational Distortions for CCl2FCClF2

http://www2.ess.ucla.edu/~schauble/MoleculeHTML/CCl2FCClF2_html/

CCl2FCClF2_page.html

Page 7: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

A little physics of electromagnetic radiation

• Energy (E) E = h = hc/ – where h is Planck’s constant, c is the speed of

light, is frequency or the number of vibrations per secondand is the wavelength

• Wavenumber (’) ’ = 1/ – given in cm-1

• Period (P) P = 1/– the time between a vibration

= hc’

Energy, frequency, and wavenumber are directly proportional to each other.

Page 8: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

What type of vibrations would occur in pentane?

Let’s examine the IR spectrum of pentane.

Page 9: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

IR spectrum

Increasing wavenumber (energy, frequency)

Increasing absorption of IR radiation

Increasing wavelength

C-Hstretching

C-Cbending

C-Hbending

Page 10: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

IR Spectra of chloroform and deuterochloroform

Mode of vibration CHCl3Calculated

*

CHCl3Measured

CDCl3Measured

C-H stretching 3002 3020 2256C-H bending 1120 1219 912

C-Cl stretching 701 773 737C-Cl bending 418 671 652* Spartan ’02 AM1 minimization

Shift of peak due to replacement of H with D (2x mass)In

crea

sing

abso

rban

ce

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Some results• Calculated values using computational

software give lower wave numbers

• Increasing mass of substituted atoms shifts wave numbers to lower values

(Excel spreadsheet)

• Stretching energies > bending energies > internal rotation energies (occur at higher wavelengths)

Page 12: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Does the stretching energy have any relationship to the

strength of the bond?Wavenumber vs. Bond Energy

010002000300040005000

200 300 400 500 600Bond energy (kJ / mole)

Wav

enum

ber (

cm-1)

W = 6.3286BE + 401.38

r2 = 0.7979

Page 13: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Let’s examine the carbonyl group on three compounds

formaldehyde phosgene acetone

How does the C=O stretching energy compare for these three molecules?

2053 cm-1 1951 cm-1 2063 cm-1

The carbonyl group has a range of 1700-3000 cm-1.

Page 14: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Functional group analysis in organic compounds

• Unlike atomic spectroscopy where sharp energy transitions occur due to well quantized electron transitions, molecular spectroscopy tends to show bands.

• Molecular vibrations are influenced by the surrounding groups!

Page 15: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

4000 3000 2000 1000

WAVENUMBER (cm-1)

Basic Functional Groups

C-H

O-H

CC C=C

alkenesaromatic

C=O C-O

C-H

O-Hbend

ing

stre

tchi

ng

C-C

400

Page 16: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

http://wwwchem.uwimona.edu.jm/spectra/iranim/index.html

Animations Showing Vibrations and Accompanying

Spectrahttp://www.chem.umass.edu/~nermmw/Spectra/irspectra/index.htm

Page 17: Molecular Vibrations and IR Spectroscopy

Use of IR spectra• Identification of functional groups on a

molecule – this is a very important tool in organic chemistry

• Spectral matching can be done by computer software and library spectra

• Since absorbance follows Beer’s Law, can do quantitative analysis