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Vibrational Spectroscopy

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Title: Vibrational Spectroscopy


1
Vibrational Spectroscopy
  • Physical Biochemistry, November 2006
  • Dr Ardan Patwardhan, a.patwardhan_at_imperial.ac.uk,
    Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College
    London

2
Molecular motion
In general, molecules can undergo three types of
motion
Translation, i.e., displacement of the whole
molecule
Rotation
Vibration
All three types of motion have associated
energies, but only rotational and vibrational
motion have quantized energies
Under certain circumstances, the rotational and
vibrational motion of a molecule can exchange
(absorb or emit) energy with EMR this is the
basis for rotational and vibrational
spectroscopies
3
Born-Oppenheimer approximation
  • The time-scale for rotations(10-11s) is several
    orders of magnitude longer than the time-scale
    for vibrations (10-13s), which in turn is several
    orders of magnitude longer than electronic
    transitions(10-15s)
  • The influence of each of these phenomena can
    therefore be viewed separately, and the energy
    levels are simply the sum of the energy
    contributions from the three phenomena

4
Combining the electronic, vibrational and
rotational energy levels
  • The energy differences between rotational energy
    levels is smaller than the differences between
    the vibrational levels, which in turn are smaller
    than the differences in energy between electronic
    levels
  • To describe a molecules energy state, simply add
    the three contributions together
  • Combine the vibrational energy levels with each
    of the electronic energy levels, and then combine
    the rotational energy levels with every
    combination of these

Electronic
Vibrational
Rotational
Total
5
Molecular rotation
  • Can be probed with microwave radiation in the
    case of molecules with electric dipole moments,
    e.g. heteronuclear diatomic molecules
  • Can be used to determine bond lengths in small
    molecules

6
Vibrating diatomic molecule Simple harmonic
oscillator
7
Simple harmonic oscillator
  • Note that E0 ? 0 ? molecule is always vibrating
    and never completely still ! Manifestation of
    Heisenberg uncertainty principle

8
The anharmonic oscillator
  • In reality, stretching and compressing a bond are
    not energetically equivalent
  • The spacing between energy levels decreases with
    increasing u

9
Normal modes
Symmetric stretch3652 cm-1
Antisymmetric stretch3756 cm-1
Symmetric bend1595 cm-1
  • Normal modes have energy levels that are
    independent of each other and can interact with
    EMR independently
  • Any molecular vibration can be described as a
    linear combination of the normal modes

10
Polyatomic molecules
  • A varying electric dipole is necessary for a
    normal mode of vibration to produce a spectra
  • The symmetric stretch in the above example will
    not produce a vibrational spectra

11
Regions of the spectrum
  • Fingerprint region600-1500cm-1- Complex, can be
    used to identify compound
  • Functional groups have typical absorptions in
    1000-4000cm-1 region

IR spectrum of 1-hexene
12
Functional groups
  • Groups with light atoms have a higher frequency
    than groups with heavier atoms
  • Stretching modes usually have higher frequencies
    that bending modes
  • The stronger the bond the higher the frequency
    (triple bond gt double bond gt single bond)

13
Important characteristic vibrations
  • N-H One or two sharper peaks between
    3500-3300cm-1
  • O-H Broad peak between 3650-3200cm-1
  • CO Strong and sharp peak between 1820-1660cm-1

14
Basic IR spectrometer
  • Measurement is alternated between sample and
    no-sample to minimize influence of background
    radiation and environmental effects
  • If the sample is in a solvent, then a reference
    cell containing only solvent can be used to
    cancel the solvent absorption spectrum

15
Sample Handling
  • Solvents water and alcohol are seldom used as
    they absorb strongly and attack cell window
    materials. No solvent is transparent through-out
    the entire mid-IR region. CCl4 and chloroform are
    common solvents
  • Liquid samples are often analyzed neat for this
    reason and cell thicknesses can be very small
    ranging from 0.1 to 1.0 mm
  • Cells NaCl and KBr often used as a transparent
    material sample holder. Both glass and quartz
    are opaque in the IR region

16
Attenuated Total Reflection (ATR) Infrared
Spectroscopy
  • If the refractive index of the block is higher
    than the sample, given certain constraint on the
    angle of the incident beam, it will be reflected
    at the block sample interface
  • For each reflection, the beam only penetrates
    1-10um into the sample, and will be attenuated
    depending on what is in this thin layer of the
    sample
  • Multiple reflections helps amplify the signal
  • Excellent technique for IR spectroscopy of thin
    layered samples such as membranes

17
Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy
More specifically, the interference imposes a
cosine modulation on the spectrum, which has a
periodicity that is depended on the path
difference
This encoding is known as the Fourier transform
(FT)
To reconstruct the absorption spectrum we need to
decode the signal recorded as a function of
path difference
This decoding is performed computationally by
imposing cosine modulations onto the detected
signal and is known as the inverse Fourier
transform (IFT)
The sample is irradiated by the full spectrum of
the source
  • Due to interference between the two split beams,
    for a given path difference, some wavelengths
    will interfere constructively, others
    destructively, and the rest somewhere in the
    middle

18
Effect of interference on the spectrum
  • The frequency of the modulation imposed on the
    spectrum increases with the path difference dx

19
FTIR Advantages
  • Spectrum over entire frequency range obtained at
    once
  • For a given recording time, FTIR is less noisy
    a 10 min recording with conventional techniques
    takes only 10s
  • Uniform resolution over entire spectrum

20
Case Study
  • Isotope editing modifying the isotope of an atom
    in a functional group is a method for
    specifically shifting the absorption frequency of
    a targeted group
  • By examining the difference spectra between
    edited and unedited specimens, very precise
    information about specific groups can be obtained
  • In the example, the amide I band of a-crystallin
    has been labelled (12C to 13C) leading to a shift
    in absorption from 1632cm-1 to 1591cm-1

21
Main Points
  • Molecular vibrations can be probed using IR
    radiation
  • Only normal modes that represent varying electric
    dipoles will interact with EMR
  • The FTIR technique provides speed and resolution
    in acquiring spectra
  • Isotope editing allows one to study specific
    functional groups in a complicated spectrum
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