1 / 13

Scattering of Light: Raman Spectroscopy

Scattering of Light: Raman Spectroscopy. Deanna O’Donnell Informal P-Chem Review June 4 th , 2009. A review of light. Electromagnetic wave Oscillating electric and magnetic fields Classical Interactions of light and matter Absorption Reflection Refraction Scattering Scattering

Download Presentation

Scattering of Light: Raman Spectroscopy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scattering of Light: Raman Spectroscopy Deanna O’Donnell Informal P-Chem Review June 4th, 2009

  2. A review of light • Electromagnetic wave • Oscillating electric and magnetic fields • Classical Interactions of light and matter • Absorption • Reflection • Refraction • Scattering • Scattering • Elastic(Rayleigh scattering) • Inelastic (Raman scattering)

  3. Cross section (s) • Measure of the likelihood a molecule will absorb a photon • Beer’s Law A = OD = e c l • Conversion s(cm2)= 2303 e(M-1cm-1) Na • s units of cm2 • Typical s values ~10-15 cm2 • Raman s values ~10-30 cm2

  4. History • Sir. C.V. Raman discovered light scattering in 1928 • Awarded Nobel Prize in physics in 1930 • Experiment composed of light source (sunlight), a sample, and detector (eye) • His nephew, Dr. S. Chandrasekhar, of the University of Chicago won the Nobel prize in physics in 1983 Sir. C.V. Raman

  5. Raman Basics • Raman spectroscopy studies the frequency change of light due to the interaction with matter • The energy of a vibrational mode (nm) depends on molecular structure and environment. • Atomic mass, Bond order, Molecular substituents, Molecular geometry and Hydrogen bonding all contribute • Raman signal is 10-6 time weaker than incident light (no) • Photons are not absorbed • To observe Raman scattering the molecule must be polarizable

  6. Selection Rules

  7. More Raman Basics • Raman shifts can be expressed as no ± nm Stokes and Anti-stokes produce same spectrum, differing in intensity. Intensity is governed by the Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution law. • Raman shifts are measured in wavenumbers (cm2) Stokes and Anti-stokes Raman Spectrum of CCl4

  8. virtual states n0- nm n0 n0+ nm E1 E0 Stokes Scattering Rayleigh Scattering Anti-Stokes Scattering Raman Basics • Raman shifts can be expressed as no ± nm • Stokes and Anti-stokes produce same spectrum, differing in intensity. Intensity is governed by the Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution law. • Raman shifts are measured in wavenumbers (cm-1) Stokes and Anti-stokes Raman Spectrum of CCl4

  9. More Raman Basics Spectra simplified, only totally symmetric modes enhanced – why? S1 So So Energy no = 334nm no = 500nm Resonance Raman e≥103 Normal Raman e≤100

  10. Signal Enhancement • Common method to enhance the Raman scattering is • Resonance Raman • Resonance Raman • Occurs when no nem • Enhancement is on the order of 103 to 108 mi = aij Ej Imn = Io(no-nmn)4S|(aij)mn|2 mi = induced electric dipole aij = polarizability E = electric field of the iiiiiiiiiielectromagnetic radiation (aij)mn  (nem-no)-1 http://www.personal.dundee.ac.uk/~tjdines/Raman/RR3.HTM

  11. Two commonly used methods to enhance the Raman scattering are Resonance Raman Surface Enhanced Raman Resonance Raman Occurs when no nem Enhancement is on the order of 103 to 108 How do you enhance the signal? mi = aij Ej Imn = Io(no-nmn)4S|(aij)mn|2 m = induced electric dipole aij = polarizability E = electric field of the iiiiiiiiiielectromagnetic radiation (aij)mn  (nem-no)-1

  12. Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) • Discovery • Experimentally discovered by Fleischmann et al. (1974) • Later explained by Van Duyne and Creighton (1977) • Produces 105 to 106 enhancement • Metal surfaces utilized include • Ag, Au, Cu, Li, Na, K, In, Pt, Rh • SERS is possible due to Electromagnetic and Chemical enhancement • Other factors contribute to further enhancement • NaCl, “hot spots”, concentration, orientation m = induced electric dipole aij = polarizability E = electric field of the electromagnetic radiation mi = aij Ej

  13. Good References Vibrational Spectroscopy Wilson, E.B.; Decius, J.C.; Cross, P.C.; Molecular Vibrations, ISBN:0-486-63941-X Harris, D.C.; Bertolucci, M.D.; Symmetry and Spectroscopy, ISBN: 0-486-66144-X Raman Spectroscopy Ferraro, J.R.; Nakamoto, K.; Brown, C.W.; Introductory Raman Spectroscopy, ISBN: 978-0-12-254105-6 Radiation Chemistry Rates (use index, search engine not reliable)

More Related