5.04 Principles of Inorganic Chemistry Ii : Mit Opencourseware
5.04 Principles of Inorganic Chemistry Ii : Mit Opencourseware
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5.04, Principles of Inorganic Chemistry II Prof. Daniel G. Nocera Lecture 1: Symmetry Elements and Operations Consider the symmetry properties of an object (e.g. atoms of a molecule, set of orbitals, vibrations). The collection of objects is commonly referred to as a basis set J classify objects of the basis set into symmetry operations J symmetry operations form a group J group mathematically defined and manipulated by group theory A symmetry operation moves an object into an indistinguishable orientation A symmetry element is a point, line or plane about which a symmetry operation is performed There are five symmetry elements, which will be defined relative to point with coordinate (x1, y1, z1 ) :
1) identity, E
Lecture 1 Page 1 of 5
3) inversion, i
i (x1,y1,z1 ) = ( x1,y1,z1 )
4) proper rotation axis, Cn (where =
2 ) n
C2 (z)(x1,y1,z1 ) = ( x1,y1,z1 )
Note: rotation of pt is clockwise; Corollary is that axes rotate counterclockwise relative to fixed point In the example above, we took the direct product of two operators:
h Cn = Sn
= Cn = Cn
2n
h h
2n
= E E = h = Cn
m
= Cn
= Cn
h = Sn
Lecture 1 Page 2 of 5
x
1 1) identity: E
y1 =
z1
x x1
1
y1 =
y1 z1
z1
1 0 0
matrix satisfying this condition is: 0 1 0
0 0 1
1 0 0
E
=
0 1 0
E is always the unit matrix 0 0 1
x
1
x1
2) reflection:
(xy) y1 =
y1 z1
z1
0 0
1 similarly (xz) =
0 1 0
0 0 1
1 0
0
(xy) =
0 1
0 0 0
1
1 0 0
(yz) =
0 1 0 0 0 1
and
x
1
x1 3) inversion: i y1 =
y1 z1
z1
0
0 1 i =
0 1
0 0 0
1
Lecture 1 Page 3 of 5
v v v x2 = v cos ( ) = v cos cos + v sin sin = x1 cos + y1 sin v v v y2 = v sin ( ) = [v sin cos v cos sin ] = x1 sin + y1 cos
Reformulating in terms of matrix representation:
x
1
x1 cos + y1 sin
Cn( )
y1 =
x1 sin +
y1 cos z1 z1
cos
Cn( ) =
sin 0
0 cos
0 0 1
sin 2
n
where
=
Note the rotation above is clockwise, as discussed by HB (pg 39). Cotton on pg. 73 solves for the counterclockwise rotation and presents the clockwise result derived above. To be consistent with HB (and math classes) we will rotate clockwise as the convention.
Lecture 1 Page 4 of 5
0
0
1
h
1 0 0 0
Cn ( )
Sn ( )
0
cos
0
0
1 sin
0
cos 1 0
sin 0
1 0
sin
0
cos cos
0
=
sin 0 0 1
Like operators themselves, matrix operations may be manipulated with simple matrix algebraabove direct product yields matrix representation for Sn. Another example:
0
1 0 0
1 0 0
1 0
0
0 1 0
=
0
1 0 0 1 0 0
1 0 0 1 0 0
1
xy ( h )
C2 (z)
Lecture 1 Page 5 of 5