Infrared or Raman Spectroscopy?

Infrared or Raman Spectroscopy?

Key points  

  • Raman and infrared spectroscopy are complimentary vibrational spectroscopy techniques   
  • They have different selection rules meaning they produce different spectra   
  • To be Raman active there must be a change in polarisability 
  • To be IR active vibrations there must be a change in dipole moment   

Vibrational Spectroscopy   

Vibrational spectroscopy is an umbrella term used to describe Raman and infrared (IR) spectroscopy.

The two techniques collect information about how molecular bonds vibrate when interacting with light.  In IR spectroscopy, infrared light is absorbed by the molecule, and the molecule is excited directly to a higher vibrational energy level. Whereas in Raman spectroscopy, the molecule is irradiated and excited to a virtual energy state, it then relaxes to a different vibrational state, emitting a photon at a shifted wavelength from the incident photon, Figure 1.  

Raman and IR Jablonski Figure 1. Jablonski diagram showing the energy transitions in Raman and IR spectroscopy. 

Selection Rules – Infrared and Raman Spectroscopy   

To be IR active there must be change in dipole moment, to be Raman active there must be a change in polarisability.   

What is dipole moment? The dipole moment of a molecule refers to the separation of positive and negative charges within the molecule. A molecule with a non-zero dipole moment has an asymmetric charge distribution, resulting in a permanent dipole. The vibration causing a change in the dipole moment makes a specific mode IR active 

What is polarisability? Polarisability refers to the ability of a molecule’s electron cloud to be distorted by an external electric field. When a molecule is subjected to an incident photon, the electric field associated with the photon induces an oscillation in the molecule’s electron cloud. When the molecule undergoes a vibrational or rotational transition, the distribution of electron density within the molecule changes, resulting in a change in polarisability. The vibration causing a change in the polarisability makes a specific mode Raman active 

stretching vibrations

Figure 2. CO2 stretching vibrations for IR active vibrations (left) and Raman active vibrations (right) 

CO2 has 3 atoms, and it is a linear molecule, therefore, there are 3N-5 = 4 vibrational modes. Figure 2 shows the two of these vibrations, termed asymmetric and symmetric stretching, respectively.   

There is another form of vibration termed bending, here the bond angle changes during the vibration. There are four types of bending possible: wagging, twisting, scissoring, and rocking. An IR or Raman spectrum will be composed of bands caused by both stretching and bending vibrations. CO2 also has two bending vibrations; they have the same frequency and only differ in the direction they move, making them degenerate. These vibrations are IR active but since they are degenerate, they produce one peak in the IR spectrum of CO2 

Which is better? Advantages & Limitations  

It’s not always obvious whether to use IR or Raman spectroscopy, especially when looking at complex samples, however, there are some general approaches that can be applied.

Water Content 

An advantage of Raman spectroscopy is when investigating samples containing water. H2O is a very weak Raman scatterer meaning there is no influence on the Raman spectrum from water. In contrast, hydroxyl groups absorb IR radiation strongly and can cause substantial issues when trying to analyse aqueous samples with IR spectroscopy.   

Fluorescence Interference  

Whilst Raman spectroscopy does not suffer from water interference, it can suffer significantly from fluorescence interference. Raman scattering is an inherently weak phenomenon, fluorescence is orders of magnitude stronger and can be induced in the sample, substrate, or optical elements from the Raman laser which can then obscure Raman bands. IR radiation will not induce fluorescence because it does not allow for electronic excitation.    

Sensitivity  

Sensitivity is always important when analysing samples, and of the two technique IR spectroscopy is generally more sensitive. However, both offer significant individual advantages in terms of sensitivity to specific functional groups. For example, Raman spectroscopy is especially sensitive to lattice vibrations in crystals for studying polymorphism, whilst IR spectroscopy is particularly sensitive to studying reaction intermediates in low concentrations.   

Simplicity  

Practically, an IR spectrometer is a simpler instrument. Raman measurements often require some testing to ascertain the best parameters for a sample, such as excitation source and grating selection. This is why IR spectrometers are commonly used in undergraduate chemistry laboratories whilst Raman spectrometers tend to be used in research settings. However, the advances of both instruments and their components over the past 20 years have increased the popularity and ease of use of the techniques. 

Conclusion

Raman and IR spectroscopy are both powerful techniques and offer rapid and non-destructive analysis in all application areas. Whilst there are some general recommendations that can be made over which technique to pick, in reality, samples are complex, and both can offer advantages. Their different selection rules make them truly complimentary techniques and when used together they provide full sample characterisation.  

Contact Us
Related Products
Blank_200_140
RMS1000 Raman Microscope
Blank_200_140
RM5 Raman Microscope
Blank_200_140
IR5 FTIR Spectrometer