⚛️ Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance (NQR) Spectroscopy
NQR spectroscopy is a radiofrequency technique used to study the local electric environment in solids. It is often described as "Zero-Field NMR" because it does not require an external magnetic field to lift the degeneracy of the nuclear spin states.
I. Principles and Requirements
NQR is based on the interaction between an intrinsic nuclear property and the electric field created by the surrounding charge distribution. A quadrupole moment measures the departure of a charge distribution (like a nucleus or molecule) from perfect spherical symmetry, indicating its shape; a zero value means spherical, positive means elongated (prolate), and negative means flattened (oblate).
🔍 The Two Core Requirements for NQR
-
Nuclear Quadrupole Moment ($eQ$)
- Requirement: The nucleus must have a spin quantum number $\mathbf{I > 1/2}$ ($\text{e.g., } \mathbf{^{14}\text{N}, ^{35}\text{Cl}, ^{79}\text{Br}}$).
- Mechanism: Nuclei with $\mathbf{I > 1/2}$ possess a non-spherical charge distribution (quadrupole moment, $eQ$).
-
Electric Field Gradient (EFG)
- Requirement: The quadrupolar nucleus must be situated in an unsymmetrical electronic environment within the crystal lattice ($\mathbf{\text{EFG} \neq 0}$).
- State of Matter: Since molecular motion in liquids or gases averages the EFG to zero, NQR can only be observed in solid samples.
Interaction and Splitting
The interaction between the nuclear quadrupole moment ($eQ$) and the Electric Field Gradient ($eq$) splits the nuclear spin states ($m_I$) into discrete quadrupole energy levels. Transitions between these levels are monitored using radiofrequency (RF) pulses.
II. Key NQR Parameters
NQR spectra yield two critical parameters that provide detailed insight into the electronic structure of the solid material.
A. Quadrupole Coupling Constant (QCC)
The QCC quantifies the strength of the interaction, which dictates the observed NQR frequency ($\nu$).
- $e^2 Q$: Nuclear property (constant for a given isotope).
- $q$: The maximum component of the Electric Field Gradient ($V_{zz}$), which is dependent on the chemical environment.
- Information: A higher QCC indicates a larger EFG, which is often associated with a more covalent bond and less spherical symmetry around the nucleus.
B. Asymmetry Parameter ($\eta$)
The asymmetry parameter quantifies the deviation of the EFG from perfect axial symmetry.
- $\mathbf{\eta = 0}$: Implies Axial Symmetry (EFG has rotational symmetry, e.g., in linear C-Cl bond).
- $\mathbf{\eta > 0}$: Implies Non-Axial Symmetry (EFG is asymmetrical, e.g., in distorted geometry or highly bent bonds).
III. Applications of NQR Spectroscopy
Due to its high sensitivity to the local electric environment, NQR is a powerful tool in solid-state chemistry and materials science.
| Application Area | NQR Capability | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical Analysis | Chemical Fingerprinting | Every crystalline compound has a unique set of NQR frequencies, allowing for highly specific compound identification. |
| Bond Character | Quantifying Covalency | QCC is directly related to the p-orbital electron density; higher QCC often means increased covalent character of the bond (e.g., M-Cl bond). |
| Solid State | Detecting Polymorphism | NQR can distinguish between different crystal structures (polymorphs) of the same molecule, crucial for drug development and quality control. |
| Forensics/Security | Explosives Detection | NQR is used to non-invasively detect compounds like RDX and TNT by probing the distinct NQR frequencies of the $\mathbf{^{14}\text{N}}$ nucleus within their solid structures. |
NQR Summary: A technique for studying solids ($\mathbf{\text{EFG} \neq 0}$) that provides the Quadrupole Coupling Constant (QCC) (related to EFG magnitude/covalency) and the Asymmetry Parameter ($\eta$) (related to EFG shape/symmetry).
📝 To solve $\text{NQR}$ problems for competitive exams, you must combine two pieces of knowledge: The solid-state structure (to determine unique environments) and the isotopic properties (to determine the multiplier for observed lines). Here is a summary table of the key halogen isotopes for $\text{NQR}$ that are essential to memorize.
| Halogen | Active Isotopes | Spin ($I$) | $\text{NQR}$-Active? | Result in $\text{NQR}$ | Key Property |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorine ($\text{Cl}$) | $\mathbf{^{35}\text{Cl}, ^{37}\text{Cl}}$ | $\mathbf{3/2}$ | Yes (Both) | 2 lines per unique environment | $\nu_{35}/\nu_{37} \approx 1.26$ |
| Bromine ($\text{Br}$) | $\mathbf{^{79}\text{Br}, ^{81}\text{Br}}$ | $\mathbf{3/2}$ | Yes (Both) | 2 lines per unique environment | $\nu_{79}/\nu_{81} \approx 1.20$ |
| Iodine ($\text{I}$) | $\mathbf{^{127}\text{I}}$ | $\mathbf{5/2}$ | Yes (Only one) | $\mathbf{2 \text{ or } 4 \text{ lines}}$ per unique environment | $I=5/2$ means $2$ transitions, leading to $2$ or $4$ lines depending on EFG symmetry ($\eta \ne 0$). |
🔑 Exam Strategy: Two-Step Logic
For any question asking for the number of $\text{NQR}$ lines of a halogen compound in the solid state, you must apply this systematic approach:
Step 1: Determine Unique Environments ($N_{\text{env}}$)
- Identify the solid-state structure (e.g., ionic $[\text{PCl}_4]^+ [\text{PCl}_6]^-$).
- Count the number of chemically non-equivalent sets of halogen atoms ($N_{\text{env}}$).
Step 2: Apply the Isotopic Multiplier
Multiply the number of unique environments ($N_{\text{env}}$) by the number of $\text{NQR}$-active isotopes for that halogen to get the total number of lines observed:
$$\text{Total Lines} = N_{\text{env}} \times (\text{Number of Active Isotopes})$$| Compound (Solid) | $N_{\text{env}}$ (Unique Environments) | Halogen | $\times$ Isotope Multiplier | Total Lines Observed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $\text{K}_2\text{OsCl}_6$ | 1 ($\text{OsCl}_6^{2-}$ is octahedral) | $\text{Cl}$ | $\times 2$ | 2 |
| $\text{K}_2\text{TeBr}_6$ | 1 ($\text{TeBr}_6^{2-}$ is octahedral) | $\text{Br}$ | $\times 2$ | 2 |
| $\text{PCl}_5$ | 2 (One set in $\text{PCl}_4^+$, one in $\text{PCl}_6^-$) | $\text{Cl}$ | $\times 2$ | 4 |
$\text{NQR}$ Analysis for $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$ (Solid State)
The analysis relies on the non-molecular, dimeric structure of $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$ and the isotopic properties of Chlorine.
1. Structural Analysis: Determining Unique Environments ($N_{\text{env}}$)
In the solid state, $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$ exists as a planar dimer ($\text{Cl}_2\text{I}(\mu-\text{Cl})_2\text{ICl}_2$). This structure breaks the symmetry of the Chlorine atoms into two non-equivalent sets:
- Terminal Chlorine ($\text{Cl}_{\text{t}}$): Four $\text{Cl}$ atoms attached to only one Iodine atom.
- Bridging Chlorine ($\text{Cl}_{\text{b}}$): Two $\text{Cl}$ atoms shared between the two Iodine atoms ($\mu$-ligands).
Since these two sets experience drastically different bond lengths and Electric Field Gradients (EFGs), the number of unique chlorine environments is $N_{\text{env}} = \mathbf{2}$.
2. Isotopic Analysis: Determining the Multiplier
The NQR spectrum is for the element Chlorine ($\text{Cl}$), which has two $\text{NQR}$-active isotopes: $^{35}\text{Cl}$ and $^{37}\text{Cl}$.
| Isotope | Natural Abundance | Spin ($I$) | Quadrupole Moment (eQ) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $^{35}\text{Cl}$ | $\approx 75.8\%$ | $3/2$ | Larger |
| $^{37}\text{Cl}$ | $\approx 24.2\%$ | $3/2$ | Smaller |
Since the $eQ$ values are different, one line must be observed for each isotope.$$\text{Isotope Multiplier} = \mathbf{2}$$
3. Final Line Count for $\text{Cl}$ NQR
The total number of observed lines is the product of the environments and the isotopic multiplier:
$$\text{Total Lines} = N_{\text{env}} \times (\text{Isotope Multiplier}) = 2 \times 2 = \mathbf{4}$$The spectrum consists of four lines: two higher-frequency lines for the terminal $\text{Cl}$ environment, and two lower-frequency lines for the bridging $\text{Cl}$ environment.
Iodine ($\text{I}$) NQR Spectrum of $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$
| Analysis Feature | Details | Lines Observed |
|---|---|---|
| Iodine Environment ($N_{\text{env}}$) | Both Iodine atoms in the $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$ dimer are equivalent ($\mathbf{1}$ unique environment). | |
| Iodine Isotope | Only $\mathbf{^{127}\text{I}}$ is stable and $\text{NQR}$-active (Spin $I=5/2$). | |
| Transitions (Splitting) | $I=5/2$ allows for two distinct transitions ($\pm 1/2 \rightarrow \pm 3/2$ and $\pm 3/2 \rightarrow \pm 5/2$). Both are observed due to EFG asymmetry ($\eta \ne 0$). | 2 lines |
The Iodine NQR spectrum of $\text{I}_2\text{Cl}_6$ shows two lines resulting from the two possible transitions of the single active isotope ($^{127}\text{I}$) within its unique environment.
NQR Spectroscopy PYQ Practice
(B) The nuclear spin quantum number $I$ must be $0$.
(C) The nucleus must have an even number of protons and neutrons.
(D) The nuclear spin quantum number $I$ must be $\mathbf{\ge 1}$
Answer
Correct Answer: D.
The nuclear spin quantum number $I$ must be $\ge 1$. (Nuclei with $I \ge 1$ possess an electric quadrupole moment, essential for NQR activity.)
(B) 3 lines
(C) 4 lines
(D) 6 lines
Answer
Correct Answer: C.
4 lines. (Solid $\text{PCl}_5$ is $[\text{PCl}_4]^+[\text{PCl}_6]^-$, giving 2 unique $\text{Cl}$ environments. $\text{Cl}$ has 2 $\text{NQR}$-active isotopes, so $2 \times 2 = 4$ lines.)
(B) 2 lines
(C) 4 lines
(D) 6 lines
Answer
Correct Answer: B.
2 lines. (One unique $\text{Br}$ environment $\times$ two $\text{NQR}$-active $\text{Br}$ isotopes ($^{79}\text{Br}$ and $^{81}\text{Br}$) = 2 lines.)
(B) Make the quadrupole coupling constant ($e^2Qq$) exactly zero.
(C) Shift the single resonance frequency to a lower value.
(D) Introduce new transitions that correspond to the $\pm 3/2 \to \pm 5/2$ levels.
Answer
Correct Answer: C.
Shift the single resonance frequency to a lower value. (For $I=3/2$, $\eta \ne 0$ shifts the single $\pm 1/2 \to \pm 3/2$ transition to a lower frequency but does not split it.)
(B) Potassium Hexachloroplatinate ($\text{K}_2\text{PtCl}_6$)
(C) Carbon Tetrachloride ($\text{CCl}_4$)
(D) Chlorine Gas ($\text{Cl}_2) \text{ solid}$
Answer
Correct Answer: D.
Chlorine Gas ($\text{Cl}_2$) solid. ($\text{Cl}_2$ features a purely covalent $\text{Cl-Cl}$ bond, maximizing the Electric Field Gradient and thus the $e^2Qq$ value.)
(B) Higher frequencies than the terminal chlorine atoms.
(C) Lower frequencies than the terminal chlorine atoms.
(D) Zero frequency, as the $\text{EFG}$ is symmetric.
Answer
Correct Answer: C.
Lower frequencies than the terminal chlorine atoms. (Bridging bonds are typically longer and more ionic than terminal bonds, resulting in a smaller EFG and lower $\text{NQR}$ frequency.)
(B) All three Cl atoms in the crystal lattice occupy chemically equivalent sites.
(C) The compound is predominantly ionic.
(D) The asymmetry parameter $\eta$ is exactly 1.
Answer
Correct Answer: B.
All three $\text{Cl}$ atoms in the crystal lattice occupy chemically equivalent sites. (One unique environment $\times$ two isotopes = one pair of lines. This means the crystal lattice forces equivalence on the three $\text{Cl}$ atoms.)
(B) $^{11}\text{B}$ ($I=3/2$)
(C) $^{17}\text{O}$ ($I=5/2$)
(D) $^{31}\text{P}$ ($I=1/2$)
Answer
Correct Answer: D.
$^{31}\text{P}$ ($I=1/2$). (NQR requires $I \ge 1$.)
(B) $\nu$ is proportional to the square of $e^2Qq$.
(C) $\nu$ is directly proportional to $e^2Qq$.
(D) The two are independent variables.
Answer
Correct Answer: C.
$\nu$ is directly proportional to $e^2Qq$. (The NQR frequency is defined as $\nu \propto e^2Qq$.)
(B) 2 lines
(C) 3 lines
(D) 5 lines
Answer
Correct Answer: B.
2 lines. (For half-integer spins, the number of transitions is $I - 1/2$. For $I=5/2$, this is $5/2 - 1/2 = 2$ transitions, regardless of $\eta$.)