Rotational spectrum from a molecule (to first order) requires that the molecule have a dipole moment, that is a difference between the center of charge and the center of mass, or equivalently a separation between two unlike charges. It is this dipole moment that enables the electric field of the light (microwave) to exert a torque on the molecule causing it to rotate more quickly (in excitation) or slowly (in de-excitation). Diatomic molecules such as dioxygen (O2), dihydrogen (H2), etc. do not have a dipole moment and hence no purely rotational spectrum. However, electronic excitations can lead to asymmetric charge distributions and thus provide a net dipole moment to the molecule. Under such circumstances, these molecules will exhibit a rotational spectrum.
Amongst the diatomic molecules, carbon monoxide (CO) has one of the simplest rotational spectra. As for tri-atomic molecules, hydrogen cyanide (HC≡N) has a simple rotational spectrum for a linear molecule and hydrogen isocyanide (HN=C:) for a non-linear molecule. As the number of atoms increases the spectrum becomes more complex as lines due to different transitions start overlapping.
In quantum mechanics the free rotation of a molecule is quantized, that is the rotational energy and the angular momentum can only take certain fixed values; what these values are is simply related to the moment of inertia, , of the molecule. In general for any molecule, there are three moments of inertia: , and about three mutually orthogonal axes A, B, and C with the origin at the center of mass of the system. A linear molecule is a special case in this regard. These molecules are cylindrically symmetric and one of the moment of inertia (, which is the moment of inertia for a rotation taking place along the axis of the molecule) is negligible (i.e. ).
Dealing with each in turn:
These molecules have two degenerate modes of rotation (, ). Since we cannot distinguish between the two modes, we need only one rotational quantum number () to describe the rotational motion of the molecule.
The rotational energy levels () of the molecule based on rigid rotor model can be expressed as,
where is the rotational constant of the molecule and is related to the moment of inertia of the molecule by,
Selection rules dictate that during emission or absorption the rotational quantum number has to change by unity i.e. . Thus the locations of the lines in a rotational spectrum will be given by,
where denotes the lower energy level and denotes higher energy level involved in the transition. The height of the lines is determined by the distribution of the molecules in the different levels and the probability of transition between two energy levels.
We observe that, for a rigid rotor, the transition lines are equally spaced in the wavenumber space. However, this is not always the case, except for the rigid rotor model. For non-rigid rotor model, we need to consider changes in the moment of inertia of the molecule. Two primary reasons for this are,
When a molecule rotates, the centrifugal force pulls the atoms apart. As a result, the moment of inertia of the molecule increases, thus decreasing . To account for this a centrifugal distortion correction term is added to the rotational energy levels of the molecule.
where is the centrifugal distortion constant.
Accordingly the line spacing for the rotational mode changes to,
A molecule is always in vibration. As the molecule vibrates, its moment of inertia changes. Further there is a fictitious force, Coriolis coupling, between the vibrational motion of the nuclei in the rotating (non-inertial) frame. However, as long as the vibrational quantum number does not change (i.e. the molecule is in only one state of vibration), the effect of vibration on rotation are not important, because the time for vibration is much shorter than the time required for rotation. The Coriolis coupling is often negligible, too, if one is interested in low vibrational and rotational quantum numbers only.
The rotational motion of a symmetric top molecule can be described by two independent rotational quantum numbers (since two axes have equal moments of inertia, the rotational motion about these axes requires only one rotational quantum number for complete description). Instead of defining the two rotational quantum numbers for two independent axes, we associate one of the quantum number () with the total angular momentum of the molecule and the other quantum number () with the angular momentum of the axis which has different moment of inertia (i.e. axis for oblate symmetric top and axis for prolate symmetric tops). The rotational energy of such a molecule, based on rigid rotor assumptions can be expressed in terms of the two previously defined rotational quantum numbers as follows,
where and for a prolate symmetric top molecule or for an oblate molecule.
Selection rule for the these molecules provide the guidelines for possible transitions. Accordingly,
This gives the transition wavenumbers of,
which is the same as in the case of a linear molecule.
In case of non-rigid rotors, the first order centrifugal distortion correction is given by,
The suffixes on the centrifugal distortion constant indicate the rotational mode involved and are not a function of the rotational quantum number. The location of the transition lines on a spectrum are given by,
Unlike other molecules, spherical top molecules have no net dipole moment, and hence they do not exhibit a pure rotational spectrum.
The spectrum for these molecules usually involves many lines due to three different rotational modes and their combinations. The following analysis is valid for the general case and collapses to the various special cases described above in the appropriate limit.
From the moments of inertia one can define an asymmetry parameter as
One can define a scaled rotational Hamiltonian dependent on and . The (symmetric) matrix representation of this Hamiltonian is banded, zero everywhere but the main diagonal and the second subdiagonal. The Hamiltonian can be formulated in six different settings, dependent on the mapping of the principal axes to lab axes and handedness. For the most asymmetric, right-handed representation the diagonal elements are, for
Hyperfine interactions:
In addition to the main structure that is observed in microwave spectra due to the rotational motion of the molecules, a whole host of further interactions are responsible for small details in the spectra, and the study of these details provides a very deep understanding of molecular quantum mechanics. The main interactions responsible for small changes in the spectra (additional splittings and shifts of lines) are due to magnetic and electrostatic interactions in the molecule. The particular strength of such interactions differs in different molecules, but in general, the order of these effects (in decreasing significance) is:
These interactions give rise to the characteristic energy levels that are probed in "magnetic resonance" spectroscopy such as NMR and ESR, where they represent the "zero field splittings" which are always present.
Traditionally, microwave spectra were determined using a simple arrangement in which low pressure gas was introduced to a section of waveguide between a microwave source (of variable frequency) and a microwave detector. The spectrum was obtained by sweeping the frequency of the source while detecting the intensity of the transmitted radiation. This experimental arrangement has a major difficulty related to the propagation of microwave radiation through waveguides. The physical size of the waveguide restricts the frequency of the radiation that can be transmitted through it. For a given waveguide size (such as X-band) there is a cutoff frequency, and microwave radiation with smaller frequencies (longer wavelengths) cannot be propagated through the waveguide. Additionally, as the frequency is increased, additional modes of propagation become possible, which correspond to different velocities of the radiation propagating down the waveguide (this can be envisaged as the radiation bouncing down the guide, at different angles of reflection). the net result of these considerations is that each size of waveguide is only useful over a rather narrow range of frequencies and must be physically swapped out for a different size of waveguide once this frequency range is exceeded.
More recently, microwave spectra have often been obtained using Fourier Transform Microwave Spectroscopy - a technique invented by
Within the last two years, a further development of Fourier Transform Microwave Spectroscopy has occurred, which may well introduce a new renaissance into microwave spectroscopy. This is the use of "Chirped Pulses" to provide an eletromagnetic wave that has as its Fourier Transform a very wide range of microwave frequencies. (see university of virginia, chemistry department website).
Microwave spectroscopy is one of the principal means by which the constituents of the universe are determined from the earth. It is particularly useful for detecting molecules in the interstellar medium (ISM). One of the early suprises in interstellar chemistry was the existence in the ISM of long chain carbon molecules. It was in attempting to research such molecules in the laboratory that Harry Kroto was led to the laboratory of Rick Smalley and Robert Curl, where it was possible to vaporize carbon under enormous energy conditions. This collaborative experiment led to the discovery of C60, buckminsterfullerene, which led to the award of the 1996 Nobel prize in chemistry to Kroto, Smalley and Curl.