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Spectroscopy for Materials Characterization


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the potential energy changes and also the nuclear configuration adapts itself to a novel equilibrium position. By finding the minima of (1.83) and (1.85), it is demonstrated that the difference in the abscissa of minima is

      (1.86)equation

      In the linear electron–phonon approximation, the oscillation frequency ω of nuclei is the same in the ground and in the excited state. This is described by parabolic potentials with the same concavity in both states. As reported in Figure 1.5, this also implies that moving by ΔQ far from the minima, the same energy change ΔU is found in both states. By the scheme reported in the above figure, it is found that

      where E abs and E em are the absorption and emission energies and the energy difference (E absE em) between the maximum of the absorption profile and that of the emission is called Stokes shift. Usually, it is considered that the electronic transition occurs in a much shorter time than the nuclear motion, so the nuclear configuration coordinate is unchanged during both the absorption and emission processes [5]. This statement is known as Franck–Condon principle [5]. From (1.83), it is found that for Q = Q e the configuration energy change of the ground state is

      (1.88)equation

      (1.89)equation

      where φ, ϑ refer to the electronic and nuclear wavefunctions, respectively, the first being parametrically dependent on Q, the nuclear coordinate, and the latter being independent on the electronic coordinate r. Furthermore, the electrons’ wavefunction, on the basis of the Condon approximation, depends on the average value of the nuclear coordinate [5, 15]

      To evaluate the probability of transition between the two states reported in Figure 1.5, the dipole matrix element introduced in (1.41) should be considered. In particular, the value

      (1.91)equation

      where the indices 1 and 2 refer to the lower and higher electronic energy levels and the indices n and m refer to the vibrational levels of the nuclei. It is worth underlining that the overall energy of the considered molecular system is the combination of the electrons’ and nuclei’s interactions. The latter is determined by the vibrational state marked by the quantum numbers reported in Figure 1.5. Overall, the transition involves electronic states and nuclear vibrational quantum states; so, the transition is called vibronic transition [5]. Equation (1.92) shows that the first factor gives the amplitude of the probability, being linked to the oscillator strength, and the second factor, |M nm |2, is responsible for the shape of the band for the given transition of absorption or emission. This is known as the Franck–Condon factor [5, 15]. In particular, since it is related to the harmonic oscillator solutions of the Schrodinger equation, this factor is null if nm for a given oscillator [9]. But because the solutions considered pertain to different equilibrium configuration of oscillators, with the same frequency, the orthonormal wavefunctions of the harmonic oscillators images are eigenstates of the “same” oscillator but are referred to the different equilibrium (central) positions Q = 0, Q = Q e, respectively; so their integrals M nm could in general differ from zero. Furthermore, once a wavefunction images is chosen, with fixed n, it can be decomposed by the full set of images considering all possible values of m, because the latter set is a basis for the space of wavefunctions [5]. It is then found that the overall transition probability from a starting state images to any of the excited vibronic states images is given by

      (1.93)equation