Cdlecture Lecture3
Cdlecture Lecture3
with
𝑬 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜑 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜑
𝑬 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜑 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜑
respectively
𝑬 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜑 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜑
x, y: unit vectors perpendicular to propagation direction
𝑬 𝑬 𝑬 with
𝑬 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜑 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜑
𝜑 𝜔𝑡 𝜆
𝝀 ⋅
𝜑 𝜔𝑡 𝑛𝜔𝑧/𝑐
𝜔𝑡 Δ𝑛 1
𝜑 𝜑∓ 𝑛 𝑛 𝑛
2𝑐 2
Δ𝑛 𝑛 𝑛
𝑬 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜑 𝐸 ⋅ 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜑
z 𝜔 Δ𝑛 z 𝜔 Δ𝑛
𝑬 2𝐸 𝒙 cos 𝒚 sin cos 𝜑
2𝑐 2𝑐
The exiting ray is still linearly polarized, but its plane is now
rotated by the angle :
z 𝜔 Δ𝑛
𝜃
2𝑐
Ok, then:
How does the dielectric constant depend on molecular properties?
𝜀 1 2𝛼𝒩 ⁄ 3𝜀 𝒩𝛼
𝑛 𝜀 1
𝜀 1 𝛼𝒩 ⁄ 3𝜀 2𝜀
We assumed 𝑷 𝛼𝒩𝑬
polarizability electric field
𝑷 𝛼𝒩𝑬 𝛽𝒩𝑩
with being another molecular characteristic and not to be mixed up with the hyperpolarizability!
From this definition of the polarization P, we get after solving a few equations again
𝒩𝛼 𝒩𝜔𝛽
𝑛 1
2𝜀 2𝑐𝜀
𝒩𝜔𝛽
Δn
𝑐𝜀
For the optical rotation angle, it follows that after passing through a sample of length l,
and taking into account that 0µv = c2 with µv being the vacuum permeability:
z 𝜔 Δ𝑛 𝒩𝑙𝜔 𝛽 1
Δ𝜃 𝒩𝑙 𝜇 𝜔 𝛽
2𝑐 2𝑐 𝜀 2
𝑁
𝑃 𝜇 ⋅ 𝜇 ⋅𝒩
𝑉
𝐻𝜓 𝜏⃗ E𝜓 𝜏⃗
Ω Ψ ∗ ΩΨ d𝜏 Ψ|Ω|Ψ
𝐻 𝑡 𝐻 𝐻 𝑡
e.g. perturbation by electric field
𝐻 𝑡 2µ 𝐸 cos 𝜔𝑡
Ψ 𝑡 𝜓 ⋅𝑒 ℏ 𝑎 𝑡 ⋅𝜓 ⋅ 𝑒 ℏ
1
𝑎 𝑡 𝐻 𝑡 ⋅𝑒 d𝑡
𝑖ℏ
with ℏ𝝎𝒏𝟎 𝑬𝒏 𝑬𝟎
Chiroptical spectroscopy | Prof. Dr. C. Merten 76
Evaluating 𝝁
The expectation value for the average dipole moment (its z-component) is
𝜇 Ψ|𝜇 |Ψ
𝜇 0|𝜇 |0 0 𝜇 𝑛 ⋅𝑎 𝑡 ⋅𝑒 𝑛 𝜇 0 ⋅ 𝑎∗ 𝑡 ⋅ 𝑒
𝜇 𝜇 , ⋅𝑎 𝑡 ⋅𝑒 𝜇 , ⋅ 𝑎∗ 𝑡 ⋅ 𝑒
More precisely, we also need to take into account the circular polarization states of the
electric and magnetic field:
𝐻 𝑡 𝜇̂ ⋅ 𝑬 𝑚⋅𝑩
with
𝑬 𝑡 𝐸 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡 and 𝑩 𝑡 𝐵 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡
𝑬 𝑡 𝐸 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡
𝑩 𝑡 𝐵 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡
𝐻 𝑡 𝜇̂ ⋅ 𝑬 𝑚⋅𝑩
𝜇̂ ⋅ 𝐸 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡 𝑚⋅𝐵 𝒙 ⋅ cos 𝜔𝑡 𝒚 ⋅ sin 𝜔𝑡
1 𝑖
cos 𝛼 𝑒 𝑒 sin 𝛼 𝑒 𝑒
2 2
𝐸 𝜇 ⋅ 𝑒 𝑒 ∓ i𝜇 𝑒 𝑒
𝐵 ∓𝑚 ⋅ 𝑒 𝑒 𝑚 𝑒 𝑒
Chiroptical spectroscopy | Prof. Dr. C. Merten 79
Perturbation theory: Magnetically induced polarization
Based on this perturbation Hamiltonian, the coefficients of the perturbed wavefunctions can
be determined:
1
𝑎 𝑡 𝐻 , 𝑡 ⋅𝑒 d𝑡
𝑖ℏ
with
𝐻 , 𝑡 𝐸 𝜇 ⋅ 𝑒 𝑒 ∓ i𝜇 𝑒 𝑒
𝐵 ∓𝑚 ⋅ 𝑒 𝑒 𝑚 𝑒 𝑒
Then, the induced electric dipole moment is the expectation value of the operator using the
perturbed wavefunctions:
∗
𝜇 Ψ ∗ |𝜇 |Ψ 𝜇 𝜇 ⋅𝑎 𝑡 ⋅𝑒 𝜇 ⋅𝑎 𝑡 ⋅𝑒
2 𝜔 2 𝜔
𝜇 Re ⋅𝜇 ⋅𝜇 ⋅𝑬 𝑡 Im ⋅𝜇 ⋅𝑚 ⋅𝑩 𝑡
ℏ 𝜔 𝜔 ℏ 𝜔 𝜔
𝑷 𝛼𝒩𝑬 𝛽𝒩𝑩
shows that
2 𝜇 ⋅𝑚
𝛽 𝐼𝑚
ℏ 𝜔 𝜔
2 𝝁 ⋅𝒎
𝛽 𝐼𝑚
3ℏ 𝜔 𝜔
we get
𝒩l𝜇 𝜔 𝑅
Δ𝜃
3ℏ 𝜔 𝜔
If a molecule has a mirror plane, reflection changes sign of EDTM but not of MDTM.
OR is close to zero far away from absorption bands, but becomes very large
when approaching them: 𝜔 𝜔 →0
𝒩
Δ𝜃
ℏ
Dates topics
Monday Introduction
Polarization of light