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Electronic Spectroscopy: Types of Electronic Transitions

Electronic spectroscopy involves using light absorption to change the charge distribution of electrons around a molecule. There are several types of electronic transitions including those involving π, σ, and n electrons in organic molecules, and transitions between d orbitals or charge transfer transitions in inorganic molecules. When a molecule is electronically excited, it transitions to a higher electronic state accompanied by changes in vibrational and rotational states. The shape of potential energy curves provide quantitative information about excited states, which can be bound, unbound, or lead to dissociation. According to the Franck-Condon principle, electronic transitions occur without changes to nuclear geometry. Selection rules and Franck-Condon factors determine transition intensities and probabilities. Electronically excited

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
197 views

Electronic Spectroscopy: Types of Electronic Transitions

Electronic spectroscopy involves using light absorption to change the charge distribution of electrons around a molecule. There are several types of electronic transitions including those involving π, σ, and n electrons in organic molecules, and transitions between d orbitals or charge transfer transitions in inorganic molecules. When a molecule is electronically excited, it transitions to a higher electronic state accompanied by changes in vibrational and rotational states. The shape of potential energy curves provide quantitative information about excited states, which can be bound, unbound, or lead to dissociation. According to the Franck-Condon principle, electronic transitions occur without changes to nuclear geometry. Selection rules and Franck-Condon factors determine transition intensities and probabilities. Electronically excited

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Zhaihui Gao
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Electronic Spectroscopy

Using light absorption to change charge distribution of electrons about molecule This is a lot of energy often can break bonds.

Types of electronic transitions: Organics: Involving , , n electrons


Saturated compounds
(<150 nm), n (<250 nm): deep UV Double bonds/unsaturated systems less energy to
+

C
+

C
+

, n transitions : UV and visible (200-700 nm)

O
+

Inorganics: Additionally, transitions between d orbitals split by presence of ligand field. Usually in visible. d-d transition Charge transfer transition: Electron moves between ligand and metal. One must act as donor and other as acceptor
MnO 4

Electronic Spectra

(We will work with examples from diatomics)

At equilibrium, molecule is in ground electronic state lowest energy electronic state and typically in v=0. Transitions to higher lying electronic states are accompanied by changes in v, J. Excitation is accompanied by vibrational excitation, feels restoring force in excited state.

Quantitative information is in the shape of potential energy curves.

Excited state surfaces:

1) Unbound or repulsive state (antibonding) dissociates into atoms (A state of H2) 2) Bound statebonding orbitalshas stable minimum Excitation to bound state
(usually leads to large nuclear
displacement) (B state of H2)

Eelec
B

H(1s)+H(2p)

80,000 cm

-1

1 + u

A
3+ u

32,000 cm-1

H(1s)+H(1s)

1 + g

r e
(For diatomics: ground state = X; excited states = A, B, C . . .)

Franck-Condon principle (vertical transitions):

Electrons respond much faster than nuclear motion, therefore an excitation

proceeds without a change to the nuclear geometry.


Light will be resonant with electronic energy gap at equilibrium nuclear geometry.

Selection Rules Even for diatomics, this gets complicated.

Conservation of nuclear/spin/total angular momentum makes it tough to predict


precisely for larger molecules.
Again absorption requires
0 q

change of parity: u g .

5.33 Lecture Notes: Electronic Spectroscopy

Page 2

For transitions between initial and final vibrational states, the probability of excitation is given by the Franck-Condon overlap integral Pif = * initia dR final
2

* = * * " final e v

initial = e v "

R specifies the electronic and nuclear coordinates.

If doesnt depend much on nuclear geometry, then


Pif ( r ) v ( r ) dr v
2

Franck-Condon Factor

Eelec

I2 I + I*
1 v'=0 2 D 0

Eatomic

X
0
2 1 v''=0
=0 / 2

I+I
Te

0-0
D0

r" e

r'e

Excited state is anharmonic. Vibrational spacing v will decrease for higher excitation. The electronic spectrum will be a converging series of lines:

5.33 Lecture Notes: Electronic Spectroscopy

Page 3

B X

3 2 1 v'=0

From 0-0 transition and convergence limit get D0 Since

v''=0

Te + D0 = D0 + Eatomic

Te

Te+D0'

if you know Eatomic , you can get D0

Intensities: Dictated by Franck-Condon factor.

Most probably excitation is to classical turning point.


So the intensities tell us about re re
: the displacement.

small displacement

large displacement

Position of peak absorption related to displacement

0-0

0-0

Page 4

5.33 Lecture Notes: Electronic Spectroscopy

Relaxation of Electronic States

Typically when we electronically excite a molecule, there is a displacement of charge and a new equilibrium nuclear separation. Leads to vibrational excitation also. The system vibrationally relaxes nonradiatively. The energy dissipated is (reorganization energy). Now, there is a huge amount of energy to release out to the ground state Most probable way is fluorescence.
re

vibrational relaxation

absorption fluorescence

=a

=f
=0 0

In gas phase:

vibrational relaxation (1) ~10-12 1011 s fluorescence (1) ~1-10 ns

1 10ps for large molecules

In solutions:

dephasing, T2 fast ~10-14s 10 20 fs fluctuations of solvent vibrational relaxation ~1-10 ps fluorescence ~1-10 ns

Fluorescence is always red-shifted relative to absorption.


Stokes Sh ift, 2

fluorescence

absorption

f
5.33 Lecture Notes: Electronic Spectroscopy

a
0-0

Page 5

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