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Bond length dependence on quantum states as shown by spectroscopy

journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Kieran LimKieran Lim
Undergraduate students often have the misconception that molecules have fixed, unchanging bond lengths. This article discusses how linear-molecule rotational band spacings in infrared spectroscopy can be used as a qualitative, visual demonstration of the elongation of average bond lengths on vibrational excitation. The method does not depend on a detailed mathematical analysis of the spectra. In UV–vis spectroscopy, the rotational band spacings give rise to distinctive linear-molecule rotational contours, which easily show whether the average bond length has increased or decreased. The method is based on a spreadsheet simulation of the vibration–rotation or rovibronic (electronic–vibration–rotation) spectrum and is applied to hydrogen chloride IR, iodine UV–vis, and nitrogen UV–vis spectra in this article.

History

Journal

Journal of chemical education

Volume

82

Issue

1

Pagination

145 - 149

Publisher

Division of Chemical Education, American Chemical Society

Location

Bellmawr, N.J.

ISSN

0021-9584

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Division of Chemical Education, American Chemical Society