Molecular geometry
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Molecular geometry
Geometry of the water molecule Molecular geometry or molecular structure is the three-dimensional arrangement of the atoms that constitute a molecule. It determines several properties of a substance including its reactivity, polarity, phase of matter, color, magnetism, and biological activity.[1] [2]
Molecular geometry determinationThe mole geometry References for NMR and FRET distances --> [3][4][5] dihedral angles, 0.089; ?E = 1000 cm-1 --> 0.008; ?E = 1500 cm-1 --> 7 10-4. That is, if the excitation energy is 500 cm-1, then about 9% of the molecules are thermally excited at room temperature. The lowest excitation vibrational energy in water is the bending mode (about 1600 cm-1). Thus, at room temperature less than 0.07% of all the molecules of a given amount of water will vibrate faster than at absolute zero. As stated above, rotation hardly influences the molecular geometry. But, as a quantum mechanical motion, it is thermally excited at relatively (as compared to vibration) low temperatures. From a classical point of view it can be stated that more molecules rotate faster at higher temperatures, i.e., they have larger angular velocity and angular momentum. In quantum mechanically language: more eigenstates of higher angular momentum become thermally populated with rising temperatures. Typical rotational excitation energies are on the order of a few cm-1. The results of many spectroscopic experiments are broadened because they involve an averaging over rotational states. It is often difficult to extract geometries from spectra at high temperatures, because the number of rotational states probed in the experimental averaging increases with increasing temperature. Thus, many spectroscopic observations can only be expected to yield reliable molecular geometries at temperatures close to absolute zero, because at higher temperatures too many higher rotational states are thermally populated. BondingMolecules, by definition, are most often held together with covalent bonds involving single, double, and/or triple bonds, where a "bond" is a shared pair of electrons (the other method of bonding between atoms is called ionic bonding and involves a positive cation and a negative anion). Molecular geometries can be specified in terms of bond lengths, bond angles and torsional angles. The bond length is defined to be the average distance between the centers of two atoms bonded together in any given molecule. A bond angle is the angle formed between three atoms across at least two bonds. For four atoms bonded together in a straight chain, the torsional angle is the angle between the plane formed by the first three atoms and the plane formed by the last three atoms. Molecular geometry is determined by the quantum mechanical behavior of the electrons. Using the valence bond approximation this can be understood by the type of bonds between the atoms that make up the molecule. When atoms interact to form a chemical bond, the atomic orbitals are said to mix in a process called orbital hybridisation. The two most common types of bonds are Sigma bonds and Pi bonds. The geometry can also be understood by molecular orbital theory where the electrons are delocalised. An understanding of the wavelike behavior of electrons in atoms and molecules is the subject of quantum chemistry. IsomersIsomers are types of molecules that share a chemical formula but have different geometries, resulting in very different properties:
Types of molecular structureThere are six basic shape types for molecules
VSEPR Table
3-D Specification
3-D Representations
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|- | | | | |} See alsoReferencesar:????? ?????? de:Molekülstruktur es:Geometría molecular ja:???? pl:VSEPR pt:Geometria molecular sr:?????????? ???????? sv:Molekylär geometri zh:???? Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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