Ramen Spectroscopy Flashcards

1
Q

What is Raman Spectroscopy

A

Raman spectroscopy is a spectroscopic technique typically used to determine vibrational modes of molecules

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2
Q

How does Raman scattering arise ?

A
  • Raman scattering arises as a result of exchange of energy between light and matter.
    - Light from an incident laser source is inelastically scattered and shows up
    as a shift in frequency.
    - The energy associated with this shift in frequency is that of a molecular
    vibration.
    - A spectrum of intensity against wavelength difference shows peaks for
    each mode of vibration (similar to an infrared spectrum).
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3
Q

Describe the Raman experiment steps (3)

A
  • A sample is irradiated with monochromatic light (much like a laser pointer)
  • The inelastically scattered light is collected (the small proportion which has changed wavelength, or energy)
  • The intensity collected as a function of frequency difference gives a vibrational spectrum.
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4
Q

The Raman experiment explained

A
  • Most of the radiation has the same frequency as the incident radiation & is called Rayleigh radiation.
  • A small fraction of the light sets molecules into vibration. The energy needed to do this comes from the incident radiation, thus its frequency (energy) changes.
  • Bands will be observed at the different energies associated with the different modes of vibration of molecules in the sample.
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5
Q

What does Raman spectra show

A
  • Raman spectra can be very complex – some features such as C=C, CH3 or CH2 stretching may be identified, but frequently the spectrum is used as a fingerprint.
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6
Q

How are mixtures observed in Raman Spectra

A
  • Mixtures are observed as the sum of the spectra of contributing (non-interacting) components, in proportion with their relative concentrations.
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7
Q

Mixture vs pure spectra

A
  • Changes as a result of component interactions will also be distinguishable when compared to spectra of the pure components.
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8
Q

Advantages of Raman spectroscopy

A
  • Minimal sample preparation
  • Very general
  • Rich in information
  • Aqueous samples
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9
Q

Disadvantages of Raman Spectroscopy

A
  • Effect is weak
  • Interference from fluorescence
  • Expensive
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10
Q

Applications of Raman Spectra

A
  • Compound identification (drugs, excipients, mixtures)
  • Reaction monitoring (organic reactions, enzyme inhibitor activity)
  • Identification of crystalline polymorphs
  • Polymer analysis (e.g. backbone conformation)
  • Molecular (and polymer) interactions
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