Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopyfranzen/public_html/CH331/lecture/Lecture_3.pdf ·...

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Spectroscopy Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopy NC State University

Transcript of Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopyfranzen/public_html/CH331/lecture/Lecture_3.pdf ·...

Page 1: Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopyfranzen/public_html/CH331/lecture/Lecture_3.pdf · Energy level spacing ... This can be seen for hydrogen atom: l = 0 l = 1 ... 1 for

Spectroscopy

Lecture 3

Hydrogen Atom

Rotational Spectroscopy

NC State University

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Experimental observation of

hydrogen atom

• Hydrogen atom emission is “quantized”. It

occurs at discrete wavelengths (and therefore

at discrete energies).

• The Balmer series results from four visible

lines at 410 nm, 434 nm, 496 nm and 656 nm.

• The relationship between these lines was

shown to follow the Rydberg relation.

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The Solar Spectrum

• There are gaps in the solar emission

called Frauenhofer lines.

• The gaps arise from specific atoms in the sun that absorb radiation.

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Atomic spectra

• Atomic spectra consist of series of narrow lines.

• Empirically it has been shown that the

wavenumber of the spectral lines can be fit by

where R is the Rydberg constant, and n1 and n2 are

integers. Note that n2 > n1.

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Schrödinger equation for hydrogen:

The kinetic energy operator

The Schrö dinger equation in three dimensions is:

– h2

2 2 + V = E

The operator del-squared is:

The procedure uses a spherical polar coordinate system.

Instead of x, y and z the coordiantes are q, f and r.

2=

2

x2

+ 2

y2

+ 2

z2

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The Bohr radius

The quantity a0 = 4pe0h2/me2 is known as the Bohr

radius. The Bohr radius is a0 = 0.529 Å . Since it

emerges from the calculation of the wave functions and

energies of the hydrogen atom it is a fundamental unit.

In so-called atomic units the unit of length is the Bohr

radius. So 1 Å is approximately 2 Bohr radii.

You should do a dimensional (unit) analysis and verify

that a0 has units of length!

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Energy levels of hydrogen atom

• The energy levels of the hydrogen atom are

specified by the principal quantum number n:

• All states with the same quantum number n

have the same energy.

• All states of negative energy are bound states,

states of positive energy are unbound and are

part of the continuum.

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The Rydberg Constant

• The energy levels calculated using the

Schrö dinger equation permit calculation of the

Rydberg constant.

• One major issue is units. Spectroscopists often

use units of wavenumber or cm-1. At first this

seems odd, but hn = hc/l = hcn where n is the

value of the transition in wavenumbers.

~ ~

in cm-1

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The simple form

• Using the Rydberg constant the energy of the

hydrogen atom can be written as:

E = – Rn2

~

~ where R = 109,636 cm-1

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Shells and subshells

• All of the orbitals of a given value of n for a shell.

• n = 1, 2, 3, 4 .. correspond to shells K, L, M, N…

• Orbitals with the same value of n and different

values of l form subshells.

• l = 0, 1, 2, ... correspond to subshells s, p, d …

• Using the quantum numbers that emerge from

solution of the Schrö dinger equation the

subshells can be described as orbitals.

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Spherical harmonics

These are the spherical harmonics , which

are solutions of the angular Schrodinger equation.

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Hydrogen 1 s radial

wavefunction

• The 1s orbital has no

nodes and decays

exponentially.

• R1s = 2(1/a0)3/2e-r/2

r = r/a0

• n = 1 and l = 0 are

the quantum numbers

for this orbital.

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5R

1,0

1086420r

Y1s

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The Radial Distribution in

Hydrogen 2s and 2p orbitals

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

Rn,

1086420r

Y2s

Y2p

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The Dipole Moment Expansion

The permanent dipole moment of a molecule

oscillates about an equilibrium value as the

molecule vibrates. Thus, the dipole moment

depends on the nuclear coordinate Q.

where is the dipole operator.

Q = 0 +

QQ + ...

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Rotational Transitions

Rotational transitions arise from the rotation

of the permanent dipole moment that can

interact with an electromagnetic field in the

microwave region of the spectrum.

Q = 0 +

QQ + ...

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z

x

r

q

r sin(q) sin(f)

r cos(q)

y

f

r sin(q) cos(f)

Spherical Polar Coordinates

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Rotation in two dimensions

Our first approach is classical.

The angular momentum is Jz = pr.

Using the deBroglie relation p = h/l we also

have a condition for quantization of angular

motion Jz = hr/l.

r

Jz

p m

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Classical Rotation

In a circular trajectory Jz = pr and E = Jz2/2I.

I is the moment of inertia.

Mass in a circle I = mr2. Diatomic I = r2

=m1m2

m1 + m2

m

m2

m1

Reduced mass

r r

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The 2-D rotational hamiltonian

• The wavelength must be a whole number

fraction of the circumference for the ends to

match after each circuit.

• The condition 2pr = Ml combined with the

deBroglie relation leads to a quantized

expression,Jz = Mh where M is a quantum

number for rotation in two dimensions.

• The hamiltonian is:

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Energy level spacing

Energy levels

Energy Differences

of DJ = ± 1

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Quantization of rotational motion:

solution of the f equation

The corresponding wavefunctions are:

with the constraint that:

Since the energy is constrained to values Jz2/2I we

find that

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The wavefunctions of a rigid rotor are

called spherical harmonics

The solutions to the q and f equation (angular part) are the spherical harmonics Y(q,f )= Q(q)F(f) Separation of variables using the functions Q(q) and F(f) allows solution of the rotational wave equation.

– h2

2I1

sin2q

2Y

2+ 1

sinq

qsinqY

q= EY

We can obtain a q and f equation from the above equation.

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Rotational Wavefunctions

J = 0 J = 1 J = 2

These are the spherical harmonics YJM, which

are solutions of the angular Schrodinger equation.

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The form of the spherical harmonics

Y00 = 1

4p

Y10 = 3

4pcosq

Y1±1 = 3

8psinqe±if

Including normalization the spherical harmonics are

Y2

0= 5

16p3cos

2q – 1

Y2

±1= 15

8psinqcosqe±if

Y2

2= 15

32psin

2qe±2if

The form commonly used to represent p and d orbitals are linear combinations of these functions

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Euler relation

e±if = cosq ±isinq

sinq e if – e–if

2i

cosq e if + e–if

2

Linear combinations are formed using the Euler relation

Projection along the z-axis is usually taken using z = rcosq. Projection in the x,y plane is taken using x = rsinqcosf and y = rsinqsinf

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Solutions to the 3-D rotational

hamiltonian • There are two quantum numbers

J is the total angular momentum quantum number

M is the z-component of the angular momentum

• The spherical harmonics called YJM are functions whose probability |YJM|2 has the well known shape of the s, p and d orbitals etc.

J = 0 is s , M = 0

J = 1 is p , M = -1, 0 , 1

J = 2 is d , M = -2 , -1, 0 , 1, 2

J = 3 is f , M = -3 , -2 , -1, 0 , 1, 2, 3

etc.

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The degeneracy of the solutions

• The solutions form a set of 2J + 1 functions at each

energy (the energies are

• A set of levels that are equal in energy is called a

degenerate set.

J = 0

J = 1

J = 2

J = 3

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Orthogonality of wavefunctions

• The rotational wavefunctions can be represented as the product of sines and cosines.

• Ignoring normalization we have:

• s 1

• p cosq, sinqcosf, sinqsinf

• d 1/2(3cos2q - 1), cos2qcos2f , cos2qsin2f ,

cosqsinqcosf , cosqsinqsinf

• The differential angular element is sinqdqdf/4p over

• the limits q = 0 to p and f = 0 to 2p.

• The angular wavefunctions are orthogonal.

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Orthogonality of wavefunctions

• For the theta (q) integrals we can use the substitution

• x = cosq and dx = sinqdq

• For example, for s and p-type rotational wave functions,

for the theta integral we have

• Using these substitutions we can turn all of these integrals

into polynomials.

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The moment of inertia The kinetic energy of a rotating body is 1/2Iw2.

The moment of inertia is given by:

The rigid rotor approximation assumes that

molecules do not distort under rotation. The types

or rotor are (with moments Ia , Ib , Ic)

- Spherical: Three equal moments (CH4, SF6)

(Note: No dipole moment)

- Symmetric: Two equal moments (NH3, CH3CN)

- Linear: One moment (CO2, HCl, HCN)

(Note: Dipole moment depends on asymmetry)

- Asymmetric: Three unequal moments (H2O)

I = miri2

i = 1

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Polyatomic Molecules

• There are 3N total degrees of freedom in a

molecule that contains N atoms.

• There are three translational degrees of freedom.

These correspond to motion of the center of mass

of the molecule.

• In a linear molecule there are two rotational

degrees of freedom. In a non-linear molecule there

are 3 rotational degrees of freedom.

• The remaining degrees of freedom are vibrational.

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Spectroscopy of atomic hydrogen

• Spectra reported in wavenumbers (cm-1)

• Rydberg fit all of the series of hydrogen spectra

with a single equation,

• Absorption or emission of a photon of frequency

n occurs in resonance with an energy change,

DE = hn (Bohr frequency condition).

• Solutions of Schrö dinger equation result in

further selection rules.

n = R 1n1

2 – 1n2

2

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Spectroscopic transitions

• A transition requires a transfer from one state

with its quantum numbers (n1, l1, m1) to another

state (n2, l2, m2).

• Not all transitions are possible: there are

selection rules, Dl = 1, m = 0, 1

• These rules demand conservation of angular

momentum. Since a photon carries an intrinsic

angular momentum of 1.

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The interaction of electromagnetic

radiation with a transition moment

The electromagnetic wave has an angular

momentum of 1. Therefore, an atom or

molecule must have a change of 1 in its

orbital angular momentum to conserve this

quantity. This can be seen for hydrogen atom:

l = 0 l = 1

Electric vector

of radiation

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A propagating wave of electromagnetic radiation

of wavelength l has an oscillating electric dipole, E

(magnetic dipole not shown)

l

E

Page 36: Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopyfranzen/public_html/CH331/lecture/Lecture_3.pdf · Energy level spacing ... This can be seen for hydrogen atom: l = 0 l = 1 ... 1 for
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Page 46: Lecture 3 Hydrogen Atom Rotational Spectroscopyfranzen/public_html/CH331/lecture/Lecture_3.pdf · Energy level spacing ... This can be seen for hydrogen atom: l = 0 l = 1 ... 1 for

The oscillating electric dipole, E, can induce an oscillating dipole

in a molecule as the radiation

passes through the sample

l

E

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The oscillating electric dipole, E, can induce an oscillating dipole

in a molecule as the radiation passes through the sample

l

The type of induced oscillating dipole depends on l.

If l corresponds to an electronic energy gap, then radiation will be

absorbed, and a molecular electronic transition will result

n=0

n=1

∆E = hc/l

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The oscillating electric dipole, E, can induce an oscillating dipole

in a molecule as the radiation passes through the sample

l

If l corresponds to a electronic energy gap, then radiation will be

absorbed, and an electron will be promoted to an unfilled MO

HOMO

LUMO

∆E = hc/l

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The oscillating electric dipole, E, can induce an oscillating dipole

in a molecule as the radiation passes through the sample

l

The type of induced oscillating dipole depends on l.

If l corresponds to a vibrational energy gap, then radiation will

be absorbed, and a molecular vibrational transition will result

v=0

v=1

∆E = hc/l

O

R

R

O

R

R

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Rotational spectroscopy

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Rotational Transitions

• Electromagnetic radiation can interact with a molecule to

change the rotational state.

• Typical rotational transitions occur in the microwave

region of the electromagnetic spectrum.

• There is a selection rule that states that the quantum

number can change only by + or - 1 for an allowed

rotational transition (DJ = 1).

J = 0

J = 1

J = 2

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Rotational Transitions

• Treat the electromagnetic wave as having a polarization

along x, y, or z.

• The transition integral is not zero in this case since the z-

polarized transition is matched to the pz rotational orbital.

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The total wave function in

calculation of transition moment

The total wave function can be factored into

an electronic, a vibrational and a rotational

wave function.

= elvYJM

Mrot = v* YJM el

* eldel vYJMdnuc

= v* YJM0vYJMdnuc

= v* vdQ YJM0YJMsinqdqdf

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The rotational transition moment

The transition moment is a dipolar term that

connects two states. Here we are considering

rotational states that have quantum numbers

J, M in the initial state and J’,M’ in the final

State

The electronic integral gives 0, the permanent

dipole moment. The vibrational wave functions

are normalized and the integral is 1.

Mrot = 0 YJMYJMsinqdqdf

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Interaction with radiation

For example, if an oscillating electromagnetic

field enters as E0cos(wt)cos(q) such that

hw is equal to a rotational energy level

difference, the interaction of the electric field

with the transition moment is

Mrot = 0 YJ+1,M

*cos q YJMsin q dqdf

0

p

0

2p

Mrot= E0

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Interaction with radiation

The choice of cos(q) means that we consider

z-polarized microwave light. In general

we could consider x- or y-polarized as well.

x sin(q)cos(f)

y sin(q)sin(f)

z cos(q)

0 = Xi + Y j + Zk

0 = 0 sinqcosfi + sinqsinf j +cosqk

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Pure rotational spectra

• A pure rotational spectrum is obtained by

microwave absorption.

• The range in wavenumbers is from 0-200 cm-1.

• Rotational selection rules dictate that the

change in quantum number must be

DJ = ± 1

• A molecule must possess a ground state dipole

moment in order to have a pure rotational

spectrum.

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Energy level spacing

Energy levels

Energy Differences

of DJ = ± 1

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The rotational constant The spacing of rotational levels in spectra is given

by DE = EJ+1- EJ according to the selection rule

The line spacing is proportional to the rotational

constant B

In units of wavenumbers (cm-1) this is:

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A pure rotational spectrum

A pure rotational spectrum is observed in the

microwave range of electromagnetic spectrum.

2B ~

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Key Points • The vibrational energy levels are given by:

The energy levels have a degeneracy of 2J + 1

• The wave functions are the spherical harmonics.

Transition energies are given by:

• B is the rotational constant

• Rotational spectra consist of a series lines

separated by 2B.