Table of Contents
References & Edit History Quick Facts & Related Topics

Fields of molecular spectroscopy

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://mainten.top/science/spectroscopy
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: spectral analysis

Microwave spectroscopy

For diatomic molecules the rotational constants for all but the very lightest ones lie in the range of 1–200 gigahertz (GHz). The frequency of a rotational transition is given approximately by ν = 2B(J + 1), and so molecular rotational spectra will exhibit absorption lines in the 2–800-gigahertz region. For polyatomic molecules three moments of inertia are required to describe the rotational motion. They produce much more complex spectra, but basic relationships, analogous to those for a diatomic molecule, exist between their moments and the observed absorption lines. The 1–1,000-gigahertz range is referred to as the microwave region (airport and police radar operate in this region) of the electromagnetic spectrum. Microwave radiation is generated by one of two methods: (1) special electronic tubes such as klystrons or backward-wave oscillators and solid-state oscillators such as Gunn diodes, which can be stabilized to produce highly monochromatic radiation and are tunable over specific regions, and (2) frequency synthesizers, whose output is produced by the successive multiplication and addition of highly monochromatic, low-frequency signals and consists of a series of discrete frequencies with small separations that effectively provide a continuous wave signal (e.g., 6 hertz separations at 25 gigahertz).

Types of microwave spectrometer

There are two types of microwave spectrometer in use. In the conventional Stark-modulated spectrometer, the sample is contained in a long (1- to 3-metre, or 3.3- to 9.8-foot) section of a rectangular waveguide, sealed at each end with a microwave transmitting window (e.g., mica or Mylar), and connected to a vacuum line for evacuation and sample introduction. The radiation from the source passes through a gaseous sample and is detected by a crystal diode detector that is followed by an amplifier and display system (chart recorder). In order to increase the sensitivity of the instrument, signal modulation by application of a high-voltage square wave across the sample is used. The second type is the Fourier-transform spectrometer, in which the radiation is confined in an evacuated cavity between a pair of spherical mirrors and the sample is introduced by a pulsed nozzle that lowers the temperature of the sample to less than 10 K. The sample is subjected to rotational energy excitation by application of a pulsed microwave signal, and the resulting emission signal is detected and Fourier-transformed to an absorption versus frequency spectrum. In both instruments the energy absorbed or emitted as the molecules undergo transitions from one quantized rotational state to another is observed. The Fourier-transform instrument has the advantage of providing higher resolution (1 kilohertz [kHz] relative to 30 kHz) and of exhibiting a much simpler spectrum due to the low sample temperature that insures that the majority of the molecules are in the few lowest energy states.

For observation of its rotational spectrum, a molecule must possess a permanent electric dipole moment and have a vapour pressure such that it can be introduced into a sample cell at extremely low pressures (5–50 millitorr; one millitorr equals 1 × 10−3 millimetre of mercury or 1.93 × 10−5 pound per square inch). The spectra of molecules with structures containing up to 15 atoms can be routinely analyzed, but the density and overlapping of spectral lines in the spectra of larger molecules severely restricts analysis.

Molecular applications

The relationship between the observed microwave transition frequency and the rotational constant of a diatomic molecule can provide a value for the internuclear distance. The quantitative geometric structures of molecules can also be obtained from the measured transitions in its microwave spectrum. In addition to geometric structures, other properties related to molecular structure can be investigated, including electric dipole moments, energy barriers to internal rotation, centrifugal distortion parameters, magnetic moments, nuclear electric quadrupole moments, vibration-rotation interaction parameters, low-frequency vibrational transitions, molecular electric quadrupole moments, and information relative to electron distribution and bonding. Microwave spectroscopy has provided the detailed structure and associated parameters for several thousand molecules.

The use of Fourier-transform spectrometers has provided a method for studying many short-lived species such as free radicals (i.e., OH, CN, NO, CF, CCH), molecular ions (i.e., CO+, HCO+, HCS+), and Van der Waals complexes (i.e., C6H6―HCl, H2O―H2O, Kr―HF, SO2―SO2). There is a special relationship between microwave spectroscopy and radio astronomy. Much of the impetus for the investigation of the microwave spectra of radical and molecular ions stems from the need for identifying the microwave emission signals emanating from extraterrestrial sources. This collaboration has resulted in the identification in outer space of nearly 200 species, including the hydroxyl radical, methanol, formaldehyde, ammonia, and methyl cyanide.

For a polyatomic molecule, which is characterized by three moments of inertia, the microwave spectrum of a single molecular species provides insufficient information for making a complete structure assignment and calculating the magnitude of all bond angles and interatomic distances in the molecule. For example, the values of the three moments of inertia of the 12CH281Br12C14N molecule will depend on eight bond parameters (four angles and four distances), hence it is not possible to obtain discrete values of these eight unknowns from three moments. This problem can be circumvented by introducing the assumption that the structure of the molecule will not significantly change if one or more atoms are substituted with a different isotopic species. The three moments of an isotopically substituted molecule are then derived from its microwave spectrum and, since they depend on the same set of molecular parameters, provide three additional pieces of data from which to obtain the eight bond parameters. By determining the moments of inertia of a sufficient number of isotopically substituted species, it is possible to obtain sufficient data from which to completely determine the structure. The best structural information is obtained when an isotopic species resulting from substitution at each atom site in the molecule can be studied.