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2) Infra-red spectroscopy

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Presentation on theme: "2) Infra-red spectroscopy"— Presentation transcript:

1 2) Infra-red spectroscopy
The Energy of molecular vibrations. To be IR active, a molecule must undergo a change in dipole.

2 E=hf (E=h) Meaning the electromagnetic spectrum covers ALL energy ranges.
IR spec

3

4 IR spec ……Zooming in on the IR range… the energy of molecular bends and stretches

5 IR spec NOT ON SYLLABUS:
What’s a degree of freedom? A way in which molecule can undergo a vibration (bend or stretch)

6 I.R. – degrees of freedom E.g. CO2 (a linear molecule)
n=3 (the number of atoms) 3n-5 = 4 “modes” of vibration

7 IR spec Vibrations (bends and stretches) of CO2

8 IR spec

9 IR spec

10 IR spec Can also bend in and out of the plane of the paper. This is the second way of bending

11 IR spectrum of CO2 3n-5 (linear) = 4
science.widener.edu/svb/ftir/ir_co2.html

12 IR spec CHART of IR absorbancies Various IR

13 IR spec

14 IR spec A sample IR spectrum of octane (nujol)

15 IR spec Alkanes , Alkenes, Alcohols Halogen, Aldehydes,
Ketones, Esters, Carboxylic acids, Aromatics, Amines. Chemguides: propan-1-ol, (2-ol next page) D:\Users\user\Documents\--- A-Level and Science\Mike

16 IR spec


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