Why might a #"KBr"# pellet be used in IR spectroscopy?
1 Answer
Consider the main point of IR.
What you're doing in IR spectroscopy is disturbing the motion of molecules with resonant frequencies to make them stretch and bend more intensely. Do ionic bonds stretch and bend?
FREQUENCY VS FORCE CONSTANT
We have this equation relating the frequency
#tildenu = 1/(2pic)sqrt(k/mu)# where:
#c# is the speed of light in#"m/s"# #k# is the force constant in#"kg/s"^2# #mu# is the reduced mass, with#mu = (m_1m_2)/(m_1+m_2)# , and#m# being the mass in#"kg"# .
We can see that here:
https://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/virttxtjml/spectrpy/infrared/irspec1.htm
The
Oxygen is smaller than carbon, so the atoms are closer together, stiffening the "spring" and strengthening the bond. Therefore,
IONIC BONDS... DON'T STRETCH. OR BEND.
But how strong is an ionic bond? The anion is pretty much completely hogging the electrons from the cation. So is there any stretching or bending possible? Not much.
So, we wouldn't expect to see significant peaks from
That's great, because we already have to subtract the solvent background from the IR spectrum. We'd have a harder time if we also had to deal with interfering spectral peaks coming from the analytical surface.
The peaks we might actually see are due to its absorption of moisture in the air, and they should be near about
(Personally, if you can use NaCl plates or nujol mull, that works about as fine; KBr pellets can be expensive; the two I used were about $2000 apiece.)