Sign In

When electromagnetic radiation passes through a material, atoms or molecules transition from a lower to a higher energy state by absorbing radiation corresponding to the energy difference between the two states. The absorption of infrared (IR) radiation causes transitions between vibrational energy levels in a molecule. Therefore, IR spectroscopy is a useful analytical tool for determining the molecular structure of molecules.

Different compounds display unique properties due to their functional groups, which allows IR spectroscopy to be used to determine the present functional groups. Vibrational IR spectroscopy is performed in the 2.5 to 25 µm wavelength range. A molecule is considered IR active if it exhibits a change in dipole moment during vibration when absorbing IR radiation. For a molecule to absorb IR radiation effectively, its vibrations must fluctuate its dipole moments, allowing it to interact with the electromagnetic field of the IR light.

Since different functional groups absorb IR radiation at varying frequencies, the IR spectrum is similar to the "fingerprint"for each molecule. IR spectroscopy is primarily employed in qualitative analysis to identify the functional groups in organic and inorganic compounds by comparing their vibrational frequencies with known compounds. Additionally, It can determine the concentration of a substance by applying the Beer-Lambert law, where absorbance is proportional to concentration.

From Chapter 13:

article

Now Playing

13.1 : Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy: Overview

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

738 Views

article

13.2 : IR Spectroscopy: Molecular Vibration Overview

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

1.2K Views

article

13.3 : IR Spectroscopy: Hooke's Law Approximation of Molecular Vibration

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

644 Views

article

13.4 : IR Spectrometers

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

583 Views

article

13.5 : IR Spectrum

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

548 Views

article

13.6 : IR Absorption Frequency: Hybridization

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

424 Views

article

13.7 : IR Absorption Frequency: Delocalization

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

458 Views

article

13.8 : IR Frequency Region: X–H Stretching

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

699 Views

article

13.9 : IR Frequency Region: Alkyne and Nitrile Stretching

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

503 Views

article

13.10 : IR Frequency Region: Alkene and Carbonyl Stretching

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

469 Views

article

13.11 : IR Frequency Region: Fingerprint Region

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

472 Views

article

13.12 : IR Spectrum Peak Intensity: Amount of IR-Active Bonds

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

436 Views

article

13.13 : IR Spectrum Peak Intensity: Dipole Moment

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

444 Views

article

13.14 : IR Spectrum Peak Broadening: Hydrogen Bonding

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

478 Views

article

13.15 : IR Spectrum Peak Splitting: Symmetric vs Asymmetric Vibrations

Molecular Vibrational Spectroscopy

504 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved