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Lecture 5: Spectroscopy and Photochemistry I Required Reading: FP Chapter 3 Suggested Reading: SP Chapter 3 Atmospheric Chemistry CHEM-5151 / ATOC-5151 Spring 2005 Maggie Tolbert & Jose-Luis Jimenez Outline of Next Two Lectures • Today – Importance of spectroscopy & photochemistry – Nature of light, EM spectrum – Molecular spectroscopy • Thursday – The Sun as a radiation source – Light absorption – Atmospheric photochemistry 1 Importance of Spectroscopy and Photochemistry I • Most chemical processes in the atmosphere are initiated by photons – Photolysis of O3 generates OH – the most important atmospheric oxidizer: O3 + hv → O2 + O(1D) O(1D) + H2O → 2 OH – Solar photodissociation of many atmospheric molecules is often much faster than any other chemical reactions involving them: CF2Cl2 + hv → CF2Cl + Cl (photolysis of CFCs in the stratosphere) HONO + hv → OH + NO (source of OH in the troposphere) (source of O3 in the troposphere) NO2 + hv → O + NO NO3 + hv → O2 + NO or O + NO2 (removal of NO3 generated at night) Cl2 + hv → Cl + Cl (source of Cl atoms) H2CO + hv → H2 + CO or H + HCO (important step of hydrocarbon oxidation) etc. Importance of Spectroscopy and Photochemistry II • Absorption of solar and earth radiation by atmospheric molecules directly influences the energy balance of the planet – Greenhouse effect (CO2, H2O, N2O, CFCs) – Stratospheric temperature inversion (O3 photochemistry) • Spectroscopy of atmospheric molecules is used to detect them in situ – OH is detected via its electronic transition at 310 nm – NH3 is detected via its fundamental vibrational transition at 1065 cm-1, etc. 2 Solar Radiation: Initiator of Atmos. Reactions Average thermal energy of collisions: ~ RT = 8.3 J mol-1 K-1 x T RT = 2.5 kJ mol-1 @ 300 K Energy of photons (E = hv): 300 nm photon = 380 kJ mol-1 600 nm photon = 190 kJ mol-1 Typical bond strengths: D0(O2) = 495 kJ mol-1 D0(Cl2) = 243 kJ mol-1 C-H, O-H, C-O ~ 400 kJ mol-1 Atmospheric chemistry on Earth is driven by photolysis, not by thermal excitation!!! From S. Nidkorodov What is light? • Dual nature – Photon: as particle • Energy but no mass – As wave: electric and magnetic fields oscillating in space and time From F-P&P • Wavelength, frequency • c ~ 3 x 109 m/s Discuss in class: at a fundamental physical level, why are molecules capable of absorbing light? 3 The Electromagnetic Spectrum • Units used for photon energies and wavelengths: – 1 eV = 8065.54 cm-1 = 96.4853 kJ/mol = 23.0605 kcal/mol = 11604.4 K – 1 Å = 0.1 nm = 10-10 m; micron = 10-6 m = 1000 nm • Solve in class: Calculate the energy, frequency, and wavenumber of a green photon (λ = 530 nm). c λ= ν E = hν v= 1 λ (wavenumber) Types of radiation important in lower atmosphere • Ultraviolet and visible radiation (λ = 100-800 nm) – Excites bonding electrons in molecules – Capable of breaking bonds in molecules (⇒ photodissociation) – Ultraviolet photons (λ = 100-300 nm) have most energy, can break more and stronger bonds. We will pay special attention to them. • Infrared radiation (λ = 0.8 - 300 µm) – Excites vibrational motions in molecules – With a very few exceptions, infrared radiation is not energetic enough to break molecules or initiate photochemical processes • Microwave radiation (λ = 0.5 - 300 mm) – Excites rotational motions in molecules 4 Fundamentals of Spectroscopy • Molecules have energy in translation, vibration, rotation, and electronic state – Translation (= T) cannot be changed directly with light – We will focus on the other 3 energy types – The photon energy matches the energy spacing between molecule’s quantum levels – Optical transition between these quantum levels is allowed by “selection rules” – “Forbidden” transitions can occur but are weaker Ephoton • Molecule can absorb radiation efficiently if: v', J', … v", J", … Vibrational Energy & Transitions • Bonds can be viewed as “springs” • Energy levels are quantized, – Ev = hvvib(v+1/2) – vvib is constant dependent on molecule – v = 0, 1, 2… is vibrational quantum number From F-P&P 5 Vibrational Energy Levels • Ideally: Harmonic Oscillator – Restoration force of “spring” follows Hooke’s law: F= k ∆x – Ev = hvvib(v+1/2), v = 0, 1, 2… – Energy levels are equally spaced • Really: Anharmonic oscillator – Restauration force rises sharply at small r, bond breaks at large r ( ) ( ) 2 ( ) 3 Evib = hν v + 1 − hνxe v + 1 + hνye v + 1 + ... 2 2 2 – Vibrational quantum levels are more closely spaced as v increases From F-P&P Vibrational Selection Rules • For ideal harmonic oscillator – ∆v = ±1 • For anharmonic oscillator – ∆v = ±2, ±3 weaker “overtone” transitions can occur • At room T most molecules at v = 0 – Energy spacing of levels is large (~1000 cm-1) – v'‘ = 0 → v‘ = 1 is by far strongest • For purely vibrational transition – Absorption of light can occur if dipole moment changes during vibration. E.g. HCl, CO, NO – Homonuclear diatomics, e.g. O2, N2 don’t have v.t. 6 Infrared Active and Inactive Modes • Only vibrational modes that change the dipole moment can interact with light and lead to absorption • CO2 is infrared active, but not all of its modes are Rotational Energy and Transitions • If molecule has permanent dipole – Rotation in space produces oscillating electric field – Can interact with light’s fields and result in absorption – Only heteronuclear molecules • Rigid rotor – No simultaneous vibration – Allowed energy levels: Erot = BJ ( J + 1) cm -1 B= h2 8π I 2 where I = m1m2 R2 m1 + m2 • Nonrigid rotor Erot = BJ ( J + 1) − DJ 2 ( J + 1) 2 + ... • Spacing increases with J • Spacing between levels small, many levels are populated 7 Example: Ground Electronic State of HF Etotal = Erot + Evib Erot ≈ BJ ( J + 1) Evib ≈ hνv Rotational level manifolds for different vibrational quanta overlap with each other HF molecular constants 9 Bv=0 = 20.557 cm-1 (rotational constant) 9 ν = 4138.32 cm-1 (harmonic frequency) 9 νxe = 89.88 cm-1 (anharmonicity) Possible rovibrational transition: v=0 → v=1 J=14 → J=15 From S. Nidkorodov Vibration-rotation of HCl • Molecules vibrate and rotate simultaneously From F-P&P 8 Electronic Energy and Transitions • Several additional quantum numbers – Λ: related to electronic angular momentum – S: spin number • • • • Multiplicity = (2S + 1) Mult = 1, 2, 3 are referred to as singlet, doublet, triplet Most stable molecules have singlet ground states O2 has triplet ground state, important exception From F-P&P – Ω = | Λ+ Σ| • Σ = +S, S-1, …. , -S – “g” or “u” states – “+” or “-” states of Σ • More complex selection rules involving these numbers: Electronic Transitions (ETs) • Molecules can undergo an ET upon absorption of an appropriate photon – Simultaneous vibrational and rotational transitions – No restriction on ∆v, many vib. trans. can occur – ∆J = -1, 0, +1 • P, Q, and R branches • Frank-Condon principle – Time for ET so short (10-15 s) that internuclear distance cannot change – “vertical” transitions From F-P&P 9 Potential Energy Curves for an ET • At room T, v''=0 • Prob of transition proportional to product of vib. wavefucntions – Transition to v'=4 in upper electronic state most intense From F-P&P Repulsive States • No minima in PE vs r curves • Dissociation occurs immediately after absorption of light From F-P&P 10 More complex case & Predissociation From F-P&P • Some repulsive and some non-repulsive upper elec. states • Example – Trans. to R causes immediate dissociation – Trans. to E can lead to dissociation if cross over to state R occurs • “Predissociation” – If high enough energy, trans. to E can yield A + B* From S. Nidkorodov Polyatomic Molecules 1. Number of vibrations increases to s = 3N-6 (s = 3N-5 for linear molecules), where N is the number of atoms in the molecule: H2O: C6H6: C60: N=3 N = 12 N = 60 ⇒s=3 ⇒ s = 30 ⇒ s = 174 2. Three independent axes of rotation, each characterized by its own rotational constant (A, B, C): Asymmetric tops A ≠ B ≠ C H2O molecule, meat grinder Prolate symmetric tops A < B = C CH3F molecule; a pencil b a c Oblate symmetric tops A = B < C CH3 radical, planet Earth c b c a a b 3. Complexity of the absorption spectrum increases very quickly with N. New types of bands become possible: 9 Sequence bands: one vibration excited while maintaining excitation in another vibration (allowed) 9 Combination bands: two different vibrations excited simultaneously (forbidden in harmonic approximation) 9 Overtone bands are also possible, just like for diatomic molecules (forbidden in harmonic approximation) 11 Example: Vibrational Spectrum of H2O • Water has s = 3 vibrations: v1 = 1595 cm-1 v2 = 3652 cm-1 v3 = 3756 cm-1 • It is a strongly asymmetric top: A = 27.9 cm-1 B = 14.5 cm-1 C = 9.3 cm-1 • Overtone and combination bands are relatively intense (only selected bands shown in the graph) From S. Nidkorodov Sample Near-IR Spectrum of H2O • v1+v3 combination band shown – a pure vibrational transition. • No obvious pattern in the spectrum (this is very typical for asymmetric tops). From S. Nidkorodov 12 Pathways for Loss of e- Excitation From Wayne • Photophysical processes – Lead to emission of radiation – Energy converted to heat – Read details in book • Photochemical processes – Dissociation, ionization, reaction, isomerization Photochemical processes • Can produce new chemical species • Photodissociation – most important by far – E.g. sole source of O3 in troposphere: NO2(X2A1) + hv (290 < λ < 430 nm) → NO(X2P) + O(3P) • Others: intramolecular rearrangments, photoisomerization, photodimerization, H-atom abstraction, and photosensitized reactions • Reminder: photochemistry drives the chemistry of the atmosphere 13 Quantum Yields (φ) • Relative efficiency of various photophysical and photochemical processes: φi = • E.g.: Number of excited molecules proceeding by process i Total number of photons absorbed NO3 + hv → NO3* (3) NO3 → NO2 + O (4a) → NO + O2 (4b) → NO3 + hv (4c) * φ4a = • Number of NO 2 molecules formed Total number of photons absorbed and so on φi Are wavelength dependent, all important at different λ Quantum Yields II From F-P&P 14