Vibrational frequency of diatomic molecule

bull0sees
Messages
3
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Using specific heat data for a nitrogen molecule, estimate then vibrational frequency of the diatomic molecule



Homework Equations


C= 3N_a k = 3R


The Attempt at a Solution


unable to attempt a solution
 
Physics news on Phys.org
This question interests me. However I am no help with the solution. I would love if someone could answer this question
 
thank you for your input shamone. I would also love to find out the answer
 
I am surprised no one has answered. It looks like a straightforward answer but I just cannot come up with a solution, i wish i was smarter
 
bull0sees said:

Homework Statement


Using specific heat data for a nitrogen molecule, estimate then vibrational frequency of the diatomic molecule

Homework Equations


C= 3N_a k = 3R

The Attempt at a Solution


unable to attempt a solution
You could start by treating the diatomic molecule as two masses joined by a spring with a certain spring constant. (this may be correct only for small vibrations). You can express the frequency of vibration using the "spring constant", which is a function of the bond strength, and the mass of the N atom. The trick is to find the "spring constant" from the specific heat. I'll have to think about that one.

AM
 
Last edited:
I think I understand the problem. The N2 molecule acts as a harmonic oscillator at a frequency determined by the strength of the bond between the two N atoms and the mass of the N atom. But due to quantum effects, it cannot vibrate at any energy. Its modes of vibration are quantized:

E_{vib} = (n + 1/2)h\nu

At low energies (low temperature < 500K) the energy of vibration is h\nu/2 (n=0). The addition of thermal energy is not sufficient to allow many molecules to reach the next energy level (n=1) which is 3h\nu/2 (ie the number of molecules in the Boltzmann distribution for that temperature with that amount of energy).

However, as T increases the number of molecules able to acquire additional vibrational energy ie. to jump from h\nu/2 \text{ to } 3h\nu/2 increases so the specific heat starts increasing. At about 6000 K the specific heat, Cv reaches 3.5R. This means that the addition of any amount of thermal energy adds vibrational energy to the molecules which, I think, means many of the higher n levels are excited.

That should help you figure out the frequency \nu. From that you could figure out the force holding the atoms together, too.

AM
 
Thread 'Need help understanding this figure on energy levels'
This figure is from "Introduction to Quantum Mechanics" by Griffiths (3rd edition). It is available to download. It is from page 142. I am hoping the usual people on this site will give me a hand understanding what is going on in the figure. After the equation (4.50) it says "It is customary to introduce the principal quantum number, ##n##, which simply orders the allowed energies, starting with 1 for the ground state. (see the figure)" I still don't understand the figure :( Here is...
Thread 'Understanding how to "tack on" the time wiggle factor'
The last problem I posted on QM made it into advanced homework help, that is why I am putting it here. I am sorry for any hassle imposed on the moderators by myself. Part (a) is quite easy. We get $$\sigma_1 = 2\lambda, \mathbf{v}_1 = \begin{pmatrix} 0 \\ 0 \\ 1 \end{pmatrix} \sigma_2 = \lambda, \mathbf{v}_2 = \begin{pmatrix} 1/\sqrt{2} \\ 1/\sqrt{2} \\ 0 \end{pmatrix} \sigma_3 = -\lambda, \mathbf{v}_3 = \begin{pmatrix} 1/\sqrt{2} \\ -1/\sqrt{2} \\ 0 \end{pmatrix} $$ There are two ways...
Back
Top