Abstract

This paper presents the investigation results of the polarized IR spectra of the hydrogen bond in crystals of 3- and 4-methylthioacetanilide. The spectra were measured at 293 and 77 K by a transmission method, with the use of polarized light. The main spectral properties of the crystals can be interpreted satisfactorily in terms of the "strong-coupling" theory, on the basis of the hydrogen bond centrosymmetric dimer model. The spectra revealed that the strongest vibrational exciton coupling involved the closely spaced hydrogen bonds, each belonging to a different chain of associated 3- and 4-methylthioacetanilide molecules. A weaker exciton coupling involved the adjacent hydrogen bonds in each individual chain. It was proven that a nonrandom distribution of the protons and deuterons took place in the lattices of isotopically diluted crystalline samples of 3- and 4-methylthioacetanilide. In each case, the H/D isotopic "self-organization" mechanism involved all four hydrogen bonds from each unit cell.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call