Light Scattering from Optically Active Fluids
- 1 May 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 52 (9) , 4379-4384
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1673660
Abstract
A rigorous theory for the light scattered from a solution of an optically active species is presented. The theory is based on the quantum‐mechanical time displaced correlation function for the suceptibility tensors. This formalism leads to the correct form of the Kronig–Kramers relations. Otherwise, the procedure follows the usual theory of light scattered from inactive solutions. The result shows that the parameters usually associated with the optical rotatory power and the ellipticity are linear combinations of two rotational invariants of the fourth‐rank tensor formed by the direct product of the dielectricpolarizabilitytensor and the pseudotensor that gives the optical activity. Only for isotropic molecules do we recover the classical result. The depolarization of the light (or ellipticity) is due both to the dielectricpolarizability and to the optical activity pseudotensor. If the scattering experiment is done at an angle different from zero, then information about the anisotropy of the molecular susceptibility tensor be obtained. Also, when the system is opalescent, it could be more convenient to look at the scattered light instead of the “transmitted” one.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Optical ActivityAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1969
- Brillouin Light Scattering from Crystals in the Hydrodynamic RegionReviews of Modern Physics, 1968
- Doppler Shifts in Light Scattering from Pure Liquids and Polymer SolutionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1964
- Theory of resonance optical rotationAnnals of Physics, 1964
- Theoretical Aspects of Optical Activity Part One: Small MoleculesAdvances in Chemical Physics, 1962
- Chemical Topology1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1961
- The Influence of an External Electric Field on the Optical Activity of FluidsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1956
- Theoretical Studies of the Kerr Effect I: Deviations from a Linear Polarization LawProceedings of the Physical Society. Section A, 1955
- Correlations in Space and Time and Born Approximation Scattering in Systems of Interacting ParticlesPhysical Review B, 1954
- Theories of Optical Rotatory PowerReviews of Modern Physics, 1937