Je. Bertie et Sll. Zhang, INFRARED INTENSITIES OF LIQUIDS .2. INTEGRATED ABSORPTION INTENSITIESOF CH3OH, CH3OD, CD3OH AND CD3OD AND DIPOLE-MOMENT DERIVATIVES OF METHANOL, Journal of molecular structure, 413, 1997, pp. 333-363
This paper presents the analysis of the complete set of vibrational in
tensities of four isotopomers of methanol, The absolute infrared absor
ption intensities of liquid methanol in four isotopic forms have been
reported recently. In that work, spectral intensities were separated i
nto the integrated intensities of different transitions by comparing t
he spectra of different isotopomers, and dipole moment derivatives wit
h respect to valence displacements were calculated under the simplest
approximations. For many bands it was not possible to determine the in
tegrated intensity in this way because of overlap of several bands, an
d for others it was clear that the determination was too subjective. T
his paper first describes an attempt to improve this situation by usin
g a more objective separation of the contributions to the intensity fr
om different bands, by fitting the imaginary molar polarizability spec
tra with classical damped harmonic oscillator bands or Gaussian bands
and calculating the entire area under each component Sand. The integra
ted intensities so obtained are compared with those reported previousl
y, and a set of accepted integrated intensities for all vibrations is
presented. These accepted intensities are then converted to transition
moments and analyzed to obtain the dipole moment derivatives with res
pect to symmetry coordinates, partial derivative mu/partial derivative
S. The analysis uses the eigenvectors from a normal coordinate calcul
ation that fits the reliably known fundamental wavenumbers of CH3OH, C
H3OD, CD3OH and CD3OD, corrected for anharmonicity where possible, to
better than +/- 1.5 cm(-1) on average, and that also fits the experime
ntal near-identity of the wavenumbers and intensities of the CO stretc
hing bands of CM3OH and CH3OD. These calculations were guided by liter
ature ab initio calculations on isolated CH3OH, but an empirical norma
l coordinate calculation was preferred because the experimental data s
how clearly that some of the vibrations are not properties of isolated
molecules. For lack of other evidence, the directions of the dipole m
oment derivatives of the A' modes were taken from Torii and Tasumi's r
ecent ab initio calculation. Dipole moment derivatives with respect to
internal coordinates, partial derivative mu/partial derivative R, wer
e calculated from the partial derivative mu/partial derivative S. The
resulting values for liquid methanol are compared with values for the
isolated molecule calculated with an MP2/6-31G err basis set by Torii
and Tasumi. For the stronger fundamentals the agreement is good except
for the OH and OD stretching vibrations. This suggests that the only
hydrogen vibration whose intensity is strongly affected by the hydroge
n bonding is the stretching vibration. This in turn implies that it is
the charge flux, not the effective charge on the hydrogen atom, that
is sensitive to hydrogen bonding. The results of this and other work f
rom this laboratory suggest that most vibrational intensities may not
be strongly dependent on phase. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.