The refractive index of colorless liquids in the visible and infrared: Contributions from the absorption of infrared and ultraviolet radiation and the electronic molar polarizability below 20 500 cm−1
- 15 December 1995
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 103 (23) , 10152-10161
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.469917
Abstract
This paper addresses the separation of the contributions to the visible refractive index of colorless liquids from electronic (ultraviolet) and vibrational (infrared) absorption. The goal is to find the most accurate infrared values of nel(ν̃), the refractive index that results solely from electronic absorption, by fitting and extrapolating currently available visible refractive index data. These values are needed, interalia, to improve the accuracy of infrared real refractive index spectra calculated by the Kramers–Kronig transform of infrared imaginary refractive-index spectra. The electronic molar polarizability αel(ν̃) is calculated from the values of nel(ν̃) at wave numbers between 20 500 and 0 cm−1. The methods are applied to ten liquids: H2O, D2O, CH3OH, CH3COOH, CH3CN (CH3)2CO, CH2Cl2, C6H6, C6H5Cl, and C6H5CH3. The visible refractive indices are expressed as power series in wave number, by expansion of the Kramers–Kronig integral. Terms in ν̃+2m, m=1,2, are due to the electronic contribution and terms in ν̃−2m are due to the vibrational contribution. The vibrational contribution to the visible refractive index is also calculated from experiment by Kramers–Kronig transformation of the known infrared imaginary refractive index spectrum of the liquid. It is shown that the vibrational absorption contributes ≥0.001 to the visible refractive index only for the four hydrogen-bonded liquids, and that, for all ten liquids, at least 25% of the vibrational contribution arises from absorption below 2000 cm−1. If the vibrational intensities are not known, the available visible refractive indices yield the most accurate infrared values of nel for all liquids except H2O if they are fitted to the equation n=a0+a2ν̃2+a4ν̃4. A similar equation, with the additional term a2ν̃−2, is theoretically superior because the latter term adequately describes the vibrational contribution to the visible refractive indices, but only for H2O are the currently available visible refractive indices sufficiently accurate and sufficiently extensive to allow the four coefficients in the equation to be determined with useful accuracy. For H2O, D2O, CH3OH, CH2Cl2, C6H6, C6H5Cl, and C6H5CH3, corrections are given to slightly improve the accuracy of the previously published infrared real refractive-index spectra.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids XVIII: Accurate Optical Constants and Molar Absorption Coefficients between 6500 and 800 cm−1 of Dichloromethane at 25°C, from Spectra Recorded in Several LaboratoriesApplied Spectroscopy, 1995
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids XIV: Accurate Optical Constants and Molar Absorption Coefficients between 4800 and 450 cm−1 of Chlorobenzene at 25°C from Spectra Recorded in Several LaboratoriesApplied Spectroscopy, 1994
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids XIII: Accurate Optical Constants and Molar Absorption Coefficients between 6500 and 435 cm−1 of Toluene at 25°C, from Spectra Recorded in Several LaboratoriesApplied Spectroscopy, 1994
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids XII: Accurate Optical Constants and Molar Absorption Coefficients between 6225 and 500 cm−1 of Benzene at 25°C, from Spectra Recorded in Several LaboratoriesApplied Spectroscopy, 1993
- Evaluation and Analysis of Attenuated Total Reflectance FT-IR Spectra Using Kramers-Kronig TransformsApplied Spectroscopy, 1992
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids X: Accuracy of Current Methods of Obtaining Optical Constants from Multiple Attenuated Total Reflection Measurements Using the CIRCLE CellApplied Spectroscopy, 1992
- Infrared intensities of liquids. IX. The Kramers–Kronig transform, and its approximation by the finite Hilbert transform via fast Fourier transformsCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1992
- Infrared Intensities of Liquids I: Determination of Infrared Optical and Dielectric Constants by FT-IR Using the CIRCLE ATR CellApplied Spectroscopy, 1985
- Infrared Intensities in Liquids II: Accuracy of FT-IR Transmission MeasurementsApplied Spectroscopy, 1985
- Absolute Absorption Intensity and Dispersion Measurements on Some Organic Liquids in the InfraredApplied Spectroscopy, 1980