A molecular vibration is a periodic motion of the atoms of a molecule relative to each other, such that the center of mass of the molecule remains unchanged. The typical vibrational frequencies range from less than 1013 hertz to approximately 1014 Hz, corresponding to of approximately 300 to 3000 cm−1 and of approximately 30 to 3 μm.
Vibrations of polyatomic molecules are described in terms of , which are independent of each other, but each normal mode involves simultaneous vibrations of parts of the molecule. In general, a non-linear molecule with N atoms has vibrational mode, but a linear molecule has modes, because rotation about the molecular axis cannot be observed. A diatomic molecule has one normal mode of vibration, since it can only stretch or compress the single bond.
A molecular vibration is excited when the molecule absorbs energy, Δ E, corresponding to the vibration's frequency, ν, according to the relation , where h is the Planck constant. A fundamental vibration is evoked when one such quantum of energy is absorbed by the molecule in its ground state. When multiple quanta are absorbed, the first and possibly higher are excited.
To a first approximation, the motion in a normal vibration can be described as a kind of simple harmonic motion. In this approximation, the vibrational energy is a quadratic function (parabola) with respect to the atomic displacements and the first overtone has twice the frequency of the fundamental. In reality, vibrations are anharmonicity and the first overtone has a frequency that is slightly lower than twice that of the fundamental. Excitation of the higher overtones involves progressively less and less additional energy and eventually leads to dissociation of the molecule, because the potential energy of the molecule is more like a Morse potential or more accurately, a Morse/Long-range potential.
The vibrational states of a molecule can be probed in a variety of ways. The most direct way is through infrared spectroscopy, as vibrational transitions typically require an amount of energy that corresponds to the infrared region of the spectrum. Raman spectroscopy, which typically uses visible light, can also be used to measure vibration frequencies directly. The two techniques are complementary and comparison between the two can provide useful structural information such as in the case of the rule of mutual exclusion for centrosymmetry.
Vibrational excitation can occur in conjunction with electronic excitation in the ultraviolet-visible region. The combined excitation is known as a vibronic transition, giving vibrational fine structure to electronic transitions, particularly for molecules in the gas state.
Simultaneous excitation of a vibration and rotations gives rise to vibration–rotation spectra.
A nonlinear molecule can rotate about any of three mutually perpendicular axes and therefore has 3 rotational degrees of freedom. For a linear molecule, rotation about the molecular axis does not involve movement of any atomic nucleus, so there are only 2 rotational degrees of freedom which can vary the atomic coordinates.
An equivalent argument is that the rotation of a linear molecule changes the direction of the molecular axis in space, which can be described by 2 coordinates corresponding to latitude and longitude. For a nonlinear molecule, the direction of one axis is described by these two coordinates, and the orientation of the molecule about this axis provides a third rotational coordinate.
The number of vibrational modes is therefore 3 minus the number of translational and rotational degrees of freedom, or for linear and for nonlinear molecules.
In a rocking, wagging or twisting coordinate the bond lengths within the groups involved do not change. The angles do. Rocking is distinguished from wagging by the fact that the atoms in the group stay in the same plane.
In ethylene there are 12 internal coordinates: 4 C–H stretching, 1 C–C stretching, 2 H–C–H bending, 2 CH2 rocking, 2 CH2 wagging, 1 twisting. Note that the H–C–C angles cannot be used as internal coordinates as well as the H–C–H angle because the angles at each carbon atom cannot all increase at the same time.
Note that these coordinates do not correspond to normal modes (see ). In other words, they do not correspond to particular frequencies or vibrational transitions.
Illustrations of symmetry–adapted coordinates for most small molecules can be found in Nakamoto.
When two or more normal coordinates belong to the same irreducible representation of the molecular point group (colloquially, have the same symmetry) there is "mixing" and the coefficients of the combination cannot be determined a priori. For example, in the linear molecule hydrogen cyanide, HCN, The two stretching vibrations are
When two or more normal vibrations have the same symmetry a full normal coordinate analysis must be performed (see GF method). The vibration frequencies, ν i, are obtained from the eigenvalues, λ i, of the matrix product GF. G is a matrix of numbers derived from the masses of the atoms and the geometry of the molecule. F is a matrix derived from force-constant values. Details concerning the determination of the eigenvalues can be found in.
The difference in energy when n (or v) changes by 1 is therefore equal to , the product of the Planck constant and the vibration frequency derived using classical mechanics. For a transition from level n to level n+1 due to absorption of a photon, the frequency of the photon is equal to the classical vibration frequency (in the harmonic oscillator approximation).
See quantum harmonic oscillator for graphs of the first 5 wave functions, which allow certain selection rules to be formulated. For example, for a harmonic oscillator transitions are allowed only when the quantum number n changes by one,
but this does not apply to an anharmonic oscillator; the observation of overtones is only possible because vibrations are Anharmonicity. Another consequence of anharmonicity is that transitions such as between states and have slightly less energy than transitions between the ground state and first excited state. Such a transition gives rise to a hot transition. To describe vibrational levels of an anharmonic oscillator, Dunham expansion is used.
When it comes to polyatomic molecules, it is common to solve the Schrödinger Equation using Watson's nuclear motion Hamiltonian. Similar as for diatomics, this can be done within the harmonic approximation as stated above. For the anharmonic calculation of vibrational spectra of polyatomic molecules, more sophisticated approaches are used. Prominent examples in computational chemistry are 2nd order vibrational perturbation theory (VPT2) or vibrational configuration interaction theory (VCI).
Vibrational coordinates
Internal coordinates
Vibrations of a methylene group (−CH2−) in a molecule for illustration
(These figures do not represent the "recoil" of the C atoms, which, though necessarily present to balance the overall movements of the molecule, are much smaller than the movements of the lighter H atoms).
Symmetry-adapted coordinates
Normal coordinates
The coefficients a and b are found by performing a full normal coordinate analysis by means of the Wilson GF method.
Newtonian mechanics
Quantum mechanics
Intensities
See also
Further reading
External links
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