I think I have some flaws (many flaws) in my fundamental understanding of spectrometry, and other topic of Chemistry. This is a bucketload of questions, but I would really appreciate it if you could impart your knowledge and help me improve my understanding. Thank you so much:
Ultraviolet-Visible Spectrometry:
- What produces the absorbance graph in UV-VS: Light is shone through a molecular solution and electrons (in the 3d subshell) will absorb a quantised amount of energy. This will allow them to jump to a higher energy level (because UV radiation has enough energy to cause an electrical change).
I read this statement:The spectrum is the result of electrons falling back from higher to lower energy levels.
Can someone please explain this?
Electrons can only occupy discrete energy levels in atoms and molecules. When an electron falls from a higher energy level E
1 to a lower energy level E
2, an energy change will occur given by ∆E = E
1 - E
2. However, because of the principle of conservation of energy, this energy can't just "disappear" from the universe. It is instead released as a photon of light of a particular frequency corresponding to the magnitude of the energy change ∆E.
Atomic Absorption Spectrometry
- Used for metals
- Light is shone through a solution of metal exposed to a flame. This light is absorbed by the excited atoms which absorb specific wavelengths of light.
I read this statement: The flame is green (copper sulfate solution) due to electron transitions from a higher energy state to a lower energy state. Can you please explain this too?
Same deal as above. The fact that the emitted light is green indicates that the energy change ∆E corresponds to a frequency of light in the green part of the visible spectrum.
What do the graphs for using both of these techniques tell us? Is the only difference between these two techniques that one is for metals/metalloids and the other for molecular solutions?
The fundamental principle of each technique is the same, in that light will be absorbed by the atoms or molecules being analysed. Both techniques can be used qualitatively, to identify substances according to their absorption characteristics over a range of light wavelengths/frequencies. Both techniques can also be used quantitatively to determine concentrations of substances present, using calibration curves constructed from standards of known concentrations. Refer to your textbook for more detail...
There are slight differences in the practical execution of each technique. Furthermore, as you have pointed out AAS is suitable for examination of metals whereas UV-Vis is suited to the examination of things like organic molecules.
Infrared Spectroscopy
- Bonds between atoms have natural vibrations. They can absorb a specific amount of Infrared Radiation (Radio waves) that amplify their natural vibrations. Specific bonds are subject to polarity etc. (what else?) and therefore absorb different amounts of energy.
What is the cause of phenomena such as 'Bond Stretching', 'Bond Contracting' and 'Bond Bending'?
I read this statement: The IR wave number for bond stretching in a C-O bond (1000 - 1300 cm-1) is lower than for a C-H bond (2850 - 3300 cm-1). This is because (out of four options) Oxygen atoms have a greater atomic mass than hydrogen atoms.
How does one discern this?
The proper answers to your questions here are well beyond the scope of the VCE course. In brief, though, light can be modelled as a wave with an oscillating electric field component. For IR radiation, this electric field "pushes" electrons in bonds up and down, causing those bonds to exhibit vibrational/oscillatory motion. Drawing an analogy, consider a small metal ball hanging from a spring. If you grab the spring and wave it up and down, and then let go, you will observe the mass to now be oscillating up and down on the spring.
If we model this oscillatory motion according to the laws of classical physics, it can be shown that the frequency of vibration of two atoms is given by:

...where k = some constant and m = the mass of the lighter atom.
(Strictly speaking we should use something called the "reduced mass", µ, instead of m, but don't worry about that).
From the above relation it should be obvious that the smaller the masses involved in the vibration, the greater the frequency of vibration. A hydrogen atom is much smaller/lighter than an oxygen atom, and so a C-H stretch will occur at a higher frequency of vibration than C=O stretch. (These frequencies of vibration also correspond to the frequencies of light so absorbed).
At VCE level, this isn't really something you can "discern". As far as I am aware, you just sort of need to "know" how mass affects IR absorption frequencies...
Mass Spectrometry
- If we look at a mass spectrometer readout, what is it exactly that the height of each of the peaks tell us? Does the highest peak tell us which fragment is most energetically stable?
The height of each peak describes the relative abundance of the (charged) fragments to which they correspond. More stable fragments are going to be more abundant, so yes I suppose peak height does tell us about relative stabilities of fragments.
NMR - 1H and 13C
Is the C-13 isotope used opposed to the more abundant C-12 isotope due to the odd number of nuclei? Why does this matter?
In order to interact with magnetic fields in the way required for NMR, the nuclei under examination must possess a net "spin", where spin is an intrinsic property of the nucleons in the nuclei (i.e. of the protons and neutrons). Protons and neutrons each have spin 1/2, but these "spins" can be oriented in two different directions - either "upwards" (spin +1/2) or "downwards" (spin -1/2). In nuclei with an even number of nucleons, these spins will typically cancel out - there will be just as many +1/2 spins as -1/2 spins. Hence C-12, which contains 6 protons and 6 neutrons, is invisible to NMR techniques. However, C-13 has an odd number of nucleons. The extra nucleon contributes a 1/2 spin to the nucleus which isn't cancelled out by some other nucleon. Therefore it is visible to NMR techniques.
Amino Acids
Why do they form specific ions based on pH change? What's the chemical reason. And also, will a pH change denature the protein?
For the first question, think about the principles covered in Unit 4 concerning equilibrium. If there is a high concentration of H
+, for example, it is going to be more likely at any given moment in time that a -COO
- or -NH
3 groups on amino acids will be protonated. As a result, the more protonated form will be more abundant at low pHs.
As for the second question, yes - substantial enough pH changes will denature a protein.