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Spin isomers of hydrogen

Molecular hydrogen occurs in two isomeric forms, one with its two proton nuclear spins aligned parallel (orthohydrogen), the other with its two proton spins aligned antiparallel (parahydrogen).[1] These two forms are often referred to as spin isomers[2] or as nuclear spin isomers.[3]

Spin isomers of molecular hydrogen

Parahydrogen is in a lower energy state than is orthohydrogen. At room temperature and thermal equilibrium, thermal excitation causes hydrogen to consist of approximately 75% orthohydrogen and 25% parahydrogen. When hydrogen is liquified at low temperature, there is a slow spontaneous transition to a predominantly para ratio, with the released energy having implications for storage. Essentially pure parahydrogen form can be obtained at very low temperatures, but it is not possible to obtain a sample containing more than 75% orthohydrogen by heating.

A mixture or 50:50 mixture of ortho- and parahydrogen can be made in the laboratory by passing it over an iron(III) oxide catalyst at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K)[4] or by storing hydrogen at 77 K for 2–3 hours in the presence of activated charcoal.[5] In the absence of a catalyst, gas phase parahydrogen takes days to relax to normal hydrogen at room temperature while it takes hours to do so in organic solvents.[5]

Nuclear spin states of H2 edit

Each hydrogen molecule (H
2
) consists of two hydrogen atoms linked by a covalent bond. If we neglect the small proportion of deuterium and tritium which may be present, each hydrogen atom consists of one proton and one electron. Each proton has an associated magnetic moment, which is associated with the proton's spin of 12. In the H
2
molecule, the spins of the two hydrogen nuclei (protons) couple to form a triplet state known as orthohydrogen, and a singlet state known as parahydrogen.

The triplet orthohydrogen state has total nuclear spin I = 1 so that the component along a defined axis can have the three values MI = 1, 0, or −1. The corresponding nuclear spin wavefunctions are  ,   and  . This formalism uses standard bra–ket notation; the symbol ↑ represents the spin-up wavefunction and the symbol ↓ the spin-down wavefunction for a nucleus, so ↑↓ means that the first nucleus is up and the second down. Each orthohydrogen energy level then has a (nuclear) spin degeneracy of three, meaning that it corresponds to three states of the same energy (in the absence of a magnetic field).[1] The singlet parahydrogen state has nuclear spin quantum numbers I = 0 and MI = 0, with wavefunction  . Since there is only one possibility, each parahydrogen level has a spin degeneracy of one and is said to be non-degenerate.[1]

Allowed rotational energy levels edit

Since protons have spin 12, they are fermions and the permutational antisymmetry of the total H
2
wavefunction imposes restrictions on the possible rotational states of the two forms of H
2
.[1] Orthohydrogen, with symmetric nuclear spin functions, can only have rotational wavefunctions that are antisymmetric with respect to permutation of the two protons, corresponding to odd values of the rotational quantum number J; conversely, parahydrogen with an antisymmetric nuclear spin function, can only have rotational wavefunctions that are symmetric with respect to permutation of the two protons, corresponding to even J.[1]

The para form whose lowest level is J = 0 is more stable by 1.455 kJ/mol[6][7] than the ortho form whose lowest level is J = 1. The ratio between numbers of ortho and para molecules is about 3:1 at standard temperature where many rotational energy levels are populated, favoring the ortho form as a result of thermal energy. However, at low temperatures only the J = 0 level is appreciably populated, so that the para form dominates at low temperatures (approximately 99.8% at 20 K).[8] The heat of vaporization is only 0.904 kJ/mol. As a result, ortho liquid hydrogen equilibrating to the para form releases enough energy to cause significant loss by boiling.[6]

Thermal properties edit

Applying the rigid rotor approximation, the energies and degeneracies of the rotational states are given by:[9][page needed]

 .

The rotational partition function is conventionally written as:[citation needed]

 .

However, as long as the two spin isomers are not in equilibrium, it is more useful to write separate partition functions for each:[citation needed]

 

The factor of 3 in the partition function for orthohydrogen accounts for the spin degeneracy associated with the +1 spin state; when equilibrium between the spin isomers is possible, then a general partition function incorporating this degeneracy difference can be written as:[citation needed]

 

The molar rotational energies and heat capacities are derived for any of these cases from:[citation needed]

 

Plots shown here are molar rotational energies and heat capacities for ortho- and parahydrogen, and the "normal" ortho:para ratio (3:1) and equilibrium mixtures:[citation needed]

 
Molar rotational energy ER/R in kelvins, or equivalently mean molecular rotational energy εrot/kB in kelvins
 
Molar heat capacities; only rotational and spin contribution is shown. Total value is 1.5R higher due to translational degrees of freedom (rotational degrees were included in the rigid rotor approximation itself).

Because of the antisymmetry-imposed restriction on possible rotational states, orthohydrogen has residual rotational energy at low temperature wherein nearly all the molecules are in the J = 1 state (molecules in the symmetric spin-triplet state cannot fall into the lowest, symmetric rotational state) and possesses nuclear-spin entropy due to the triplet state's threefold degeneracy.[citation needed] The residual energy is significant because the rotational energy levels are relatively widely spaced in H
2
; the gap between the first two levels when expressed in temperature units is twice the characteristic rotational temperature for H
2
:[citation needed]

 .

This is the T = 0 intercept seen in the molar energy of orthohydrogen. Since "normal" room-temperature hydrogen is a 3:1 ortho:para mixture, its molar residual rotational energy at low temperature is (3/4) × 2rot ≈ 1091 J/mol,[citation needed] which is somewhat larger than the enthalpy of vaporization of normal hydrogen, 904 J/mol at the boiling point, Tb ≈ 20.369 K.[10] Notably, the boiling points of parahydrogen and normal (3:1) hydrogen are nearly equal; for parahydrogen ∆Hvap ≈ 898 J/mol at Tb ≈ 20.277 K, and it follows that nearly all the residual rotational energy of orthohydrogen is retained in the liquid state.[citation needed]

However, orthohydrogen is thermodynamically unstable at low temperatures and spontaneously converts into parahydrogen.[11] This process lacks any natural de-excitation radiation mode, so it is slow in the absence of a catalyst which can facilitate interconversion of the singlet and triplet spin states.[11] At room temperature, hydrogen contains 75% orthohydrogen, a proportion which the liquefaction process preserves if carried out in the absence of a catalyst like ferric oxide, activated carbon, platinized asbestos, rare earth metals, uranium compounds, chromic oxide, or some nickel compounds to accelerate the conversion of the liquid hydrogen into parahydrogen. Alternatively, additional refrigeration equipment can be used to slowly absorb the heat that the orthohydrogen fraction will (more slowly) release as it spontaneously converts into parahydrogen.[citation needed] If orthohydrogen is not removed from rapidly liquified hydrogen, without a catalyst, the heat released during its decay can boil off as much as 50% of the original liquid.

History edit

The unusual heat capacity of hydrogen was discovered in 1912 by Arnold Eucken.[12] The two forms of molecular hydrogen were first proposed by Werner Heisenberg and Friedrich Hund in 1927. Taking into account this theoretical framework, pure parahydrogen was first synthesized by Paul Harteck and Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer in 1929 at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry.[13][14] When Heisenberg was awarded the 1932 Nobel prize in physics for the creation of quantum mechanics, this discovery of the "allotropic forms of hydrogen" was singled out as its most noteworthy application.[15] Further work on the properties and chemical reactivity of parahydrogen was carried out in the following decade by Elly Schwab-Agallidis and Georg-Maria Schwab.[16]

Modern isolation of pure parahydrogen has since been achieved using rapid in-vacuum deposition of millimeters thick solid parahydrogen (p–H
2
) samples which are notable for their excellent optical qualities.[17]

Use in NMR and MRI edit

When an excess of parahydrogen is used during hydrogenation reactions (instead of the normal mixture of orthohydrogen to parahydrogen of 3:1), the resultant product exhibits hyperpolarized signals in proton NMR spectra, an effect termed PHIP (Parahydrogen Induced Polarisation) or, equivalently, PASADENA (Parahydrogen And Synthesis Allow Dramatically Enhanced Nuclear Alignment; named for first recognition of the effect by Bowers and Weitekamp of Caltech),[18][citation needed] a phenomenon that has been used to study the mechanism of hydrogenation reactions.[19][20]

Signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) is a technique to hyperpolarize samples without chemically modifying them. Compared to orthohydrogen or organic molecules, a much greater fraction of the hydrogen nuclei in parahydrogen align with an applied magnetic field. In SABRE, a metal center reversibly binds to both the test molecule and a parahydrogen molecule facilitating the target molecule to pick up the polarization of the parahydrogen.[21][22][23] This technique can be improved and utilized for a wide range of organic molecules by using an intermediate "relay" molecule like ammonia. The ammonia efficiently binds to the metal center and picks up the polarization from the parahydrogen. The ammonia then transfers the polarization to other molecules that don't bind as well to the metal catalyst.[24] This enhanced NMR signal allows the rapid analysis of very small amounts of material and has great potential for applications in magnetic resonance imaging.

Deuterium edit

Diatomic deuterium (D
2
) has nuclear spin isomers like diatomic hydrogen, but with different populations of the two forms because the deuterium nucleus (deuteron) is a boson with nuclear spin equal to one.[25] There are six possible nuclear spin wave functions which are ortho or symmetric to exchange of the two nuclei, and three which are para or antisymmetric.[25] Ortho states correspond to even rotational levels with symmetric rotational functions so that the total wavefunction is symmetric as required for the exchange of two bosons, and para states correspond to odd rotational levels.[25] The ground state (J = 0) populated at low temperature is ortho, and at standard temperature the ortho:para ratio is 2:1.[25]

Other substances with spin isomers edit

Other molecules and functional groups containing two hydrogen atoms, such as water[26] and methylene (CH2),[27] also have ortho- and para- forms (e.g. orthowater and parawater), but this is of little significance for their thermal properties.[27] Their ortho:para ratios differ from that of dihydrogen. The ortho and para forms of water have recently been isolated. Para water was found to be 25% more reactive for a proton-transfer reaction.[28][29]

Molecular oxygen (O
2
) also exists in three lower-energy triplet states and one singlet state, as ground-state paramagnetic triplet oxygen and energized highly reactive diamagnetic singlet oxygen. These states arise from the spins of their unpaired electrons, not their protons or nuclei.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e P. Atkins and J. de Paula, Atkins' Physical Chemistry, 8th edition (W.H.Freeman 2006), p. 451–2 ISBN 0-7167-8759-8
  2. ^ Matthews, M.J.; Petitpas, G.; Aceves, S.M. (2011). "A study of spin isomer conversion kinetics in supercritical fluid hydrogen for cryogenic fuel storage technologies". Appl. Phys. Lett. 99 (8): 081906. Bibcode:2011ApPhL..99h1906M. doi:10.1063/1.3628453.
  3. ^ Chen, Judy Y.-C.; Li, Yongjun; Frunzi, Michael; Lei, Xuegong; Murata, Yasujiro; Lawler, Ronald G.; Turro, Nicholas (13 September 2013). "Nuclear spin isomers of guest molecules in H2@C60, H2O@C60 and other endofullerenes". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A. 371 (1998). Bibcode:2013RSPTA.37110628C. doi:10.1098/rsta.2011.0628. PMID 23918710. S2CID 20443766.
  4. ^ Matsumoto, Mitsuru; Espenson, James H. (2005). "Kinetics of the Interconversion of Parahydrogen and Orthohydrogen Catalyzed by Paramagnetic Complex Ions". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 127 (32): 11447–11453. doi:10.1021/ja0524292. ISSN 0002-7863. PMID 16089474.
  5. ^ a b Aroulanda, Christie; Starovoytova, Larisa; Canet, Daniel (2007). "Longitudinal Nuclear Spin Relaxation ofOrtho- andPara-Hydrogen Dissolved in Organic Solvents". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 111 (42): 10615–10624. Bibcode:2007JPCA..11110615A. doi:10.1021/jp073162r. ISSN 1089-5639. PMID 17914761.
  6. ^ a b . Max-Planck-Institut für Biophysikalische Chemie (in German). Archived from the original on 16 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  7. ^ Reeves, Robert B.; Harteck, Paul (1979). "Ortho and Parahydrogen in Interstellar Material". Zeitschrift für Naturforschung A. 34a (2): 163–166. Bibcode:1979ZNatA..34..163R. doi:10.1515/zna-1979-0206. S2CID 10149772. Retrieved 9 November 2020. This source says 0.34 kcal/mol (= 1.4 kJ/mol)
  8. ^ Rock, Peter A., Chemical thermodynamics; principles and applications (Macmillan 1969) Table p. 478 shows (No/Np)H2 = 0.002 at 20 K ISBN 1-891389-32-7
  9. ^ F. T. Wall (1974). Chemical Thermodynamics, 3rd Edition. W. H. Freeman and Company
  10. ^ "Thermophysical Properties of Fluid Systems". Webbook.nist.gov. Retrieved 2015-05-14.
  11. ^ a b Milenko, Yu. Ya.; Sibileva, R. M.; Strzhemechny, M. A. (1997-04-01). "Natural ortho–para conversion rate in liquid and gaseous hydrogen". Journal of Low Temperature Physics. 107 (1): 77–92. Bibcode:1997JLTP..107...77M. doi:10.1007/BF02396837. ISSN 1573-7357. S2CID 120832814.
  12. ^ A. Eucken, "Die Molekularwärme des Wasserstoffs bei tiefen Temperaturen." Königlich Preußische Akademie der Wissenschaften (Berlin). Sitzungsberichte (1912): S. 141–151
  13. ^ Bonhoeffer, K. F.; Harteck, P. (1929). "Experimente über Para- und Orthowasserstoff". Die Naturwissenschaften (in German). 17 (11): 182. Bibcode:1929NW.....17..182B. doi:10.1007/BF01506559. ISSN 0028-1042. S2CID 20704671.
  14. ^ Michael Polanyi and His Generation: Origins of the Social Construction of Science Mary Jo Nye, University of Chicago Press (2011) p. 119 ISBN 0-226-61065-9
  15. ^ Werner Heisenberg – Facts Nobelprize.org
  16. ^ "Elly Schwab-Agallidis". Laboratory of Physical Chemistry (in Greek). University of Athens, Department of Chemistry. Retrieved 11 Apr 2021.
  17. ^
  18. ^ Bowers, C. R.; Weitekamp, D. P. (1986). "Transformation of symmetrization order to nuclear-spin magnetization by chemical reaction and nuclear magnetic resonance" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 57 (21): 2645–2648. Bibcode:1986PhRvL..57.2645B. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.57.2645. PMID 10033824.
  19. ^ Duckett, S. B.; Mewis (2013). Improving NMR and MRI Sensitivity With Parahydrogen. Topics in Current Chemistry. Vol. 338. pp. 75–103. doi:10.1007/128_2012_388. ISBN 978-3-642-39727-1. PMID 23138689. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  20. ^ Adams, R. W.; Aguilar, J. A.; Atkinson, K. D.; Cowley, M. J.; Elliott, P. I.; Duckett, S. B.; Green, G. G.; Khazal, I. G.; López-Serrano, J; Williamson, D. C. (2009). "Reversible interactions with para-hydrogen enhance NMR sensitivity by polarization transfer" (PDF). Science. 323 (5922): 1708–11. Bibcode:2009Sci...323.1708A. doi:10.1126/science.1168877. hdl:20.500.11820/e1a90be9-4d10-466c-8535-1653cd039cbd. PMID 19325111. S2CID 3158148.
  21. ^ Eshuis, Nan; Aspers, Ruud L.E.G.; van Weerdenburg, Bram J.A.; Feiters, Martin C.; Rutjes, Floris P.J.T.; Wijmenga, Sybren S.; Tessari, Marco (2016). "Determination of long-range scalar 1 H– 1 H coupling constants responsible for polarization transfer in SABRE". Journal of Magnetic Resonance. 265: 59–66. Bibcode:2016JMagR.265...59E. doi:10.1016/j.jmr.2016.01.012. hdl:2066/161984. ISSN 1090-7807. PMID 26859865.
  22. ^ Ratajczyk, Tomasz; Gutmann, Torsten; Bernatowicz, Piotr; Buntkowsky, Gerd; Frydel, Jaroslaw; Fedorczyk, Bartlomiej (2015). "NMR Signal Enhancement by Effective SABRE Labeling of Oligopeptides". Chemistry – A European Journal. 21 (36): 12616–12619. doi:10.1002/chem.201501552. ISSN 1521-3765. PMID 26189499.
  23. ^ Ratajczyk, Tomasz; Buntkowsky, Gerd; Gutmann, Torsten; Fedorczyk, Bartłomiej; Mames, Adam; Pietrzak, Mariusz; Puzio, Zuzanna; Szkudlarek, Piotr Grzegorz (2021). "Magnetic Resonance Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange of Selective PyFALGEA Oligopeptide Ligands Towards Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors". ChemBioChem. 22 (5): 855–860. doi:10.1002/cbic.202000711. ISSN 1439-7633. PMID 33063920. S2CID 222819924.
  24. ^ Iali, Wissam; Rayner, Peter J.; Duckett, Simon B. (2018). "Using para hydrogen to hyperpolarize amines, amides, carboxylic acids, alcohols, phosphates, and carbonates". Science Advances. 4 (1): eaao6250. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aao6250. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 5756661. PMID 29326984.
  25. ^ a b c d Hollas, J. Michael (1996). Modern Spectroscopy (3rd ed.). John Wiley and Sons. p. 115. ISBN 0-471-96523-5.
  26. ^ Tikhonov, Vladimir I.; Volkov, Alexander A. (28 June 2002). "Separation of water into its ortho and para isomers". Science. 296 (5577): 2363. doi:10.1126/science.1069513. PMID 12089435. S2CID 26190863. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  27. ^ a b Shinitzky, Meir; Elitzur, Avshalom C. (2006). "Ortho–para spin isomers of the protons in the methylene group". Chirality. 18 (9): 754–756. doi:10.1002/chir.20319. PMID 16856167.
  28. ^ "Two different forms of water isolated for first time". BBC News - Science. 30 May 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2021. If the nuclear spins of the two hydrogen atoms in water are oriented in the same direction, it is called ortho-water. If they are arranged in different directions, it is known as para-water.
  29. ^ Kilaj, Ardita; Gao, Hong; Rosch, Daniel; Rivero, Uxia; Kupper, Jochen; Willitsch, Stefan (29 May 2018). "Observation of different reactivities of para and ortho-water towards trapped diazenylium ions" (PDF). Nature Communications. 9 (Article 2096): 2096. arXiv:1804.05925. Bibcode:2018NatCo...9.2096K. doi:10.1038/s41467-018-04483-3. PMC 5974139. PMID 29844308. Retrieved 16 July 2021. As an example, we investigate the proton-transfer reaction of water with ionic diazenylium (N2H+)

Further reading edit

  • Aline Léon, Ed. 2008, Hydrogen Technology: Mobile and Portable Applications, pp. 93–101, New York, NY:Springer Science & Business, ISBN 3-540-69925-2, see [1], accessed 10 May 2015.
  • Tikhonov V. I., Volkov A. A. (2002). "Separation of water into its ortho and para isomers". Science. 296 (5577): 2363. doi:10.1126/science.1069513. PMID 12089435. S2CID 26190863.
  • Mario E. Fajardo; Simon Tam (1997). Rapid Vapor Deposition of Millimeters Thick Optically Transparent Solid Parahydrogen Samples for Matrix Isolation Spectroscopy. Edwards AFB (Propulsion Directorate West):USAF Research Lab.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[page needed]
  • Bowers, C. R.; Weitekamp, D. P. (1986). "Transformation of symmetrization order to nuclear-spin magnetization by chemical reaction and nuclear magnetic resonance" (PDF). Phys. Rev. Lett. 57 (21): 2645–2648. Bibcode:1986PhRvL..57.2645B. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.57.2645. PMID 10033824.
  • A. Farkas (1935). Orthohydrogen, parahydrogen and heavy hydrogen. The Cambridge series of physical chemistry. Cambridge, U.K.:CUP.[page needed]
  • Bonhoeffer KF, Harteck P (1929). "Para- and ortho hydrogen". Zeitschrift für Physikalische Chemie B. 4 (1–2): 113–141.
  • Oxford Instruments, Date Unknown, "Boosting the Sensitivity of NMR Spectroscopy using Parahydrogen"

spin, isomers, hydrogen, molecular, hydrogen, occurs, isomeric, forms, with, proton, nuclear, spins, aligned, parallel, orthohydrogen, other, with, proton, spins, aligned, antiparallel, parahydrogen, these, forms, often, referred, spin, isomers, nuclear, spin,. Molecular hydrogen occurs in two isomeric forms one with its two proton nuclear spins aligned parallel orthohydrogen the other with its two proton spins aligned antiparallel parahydrogen 1 These two forms are often referred to as spin isomers 2 or as nuclear spin isomers 3 Spin isomers of molecular hydrogen Parahydrogen is in a lower energy state than is orthohydrogen At room temperature and thermal equilibrium thermal excitation causes hydrogen to consist of approximately 75 orthohydrogen and 25 parahydrogen When hydrogen is liquified at low temperature there is a slow spontaneous transition to a predominantly para ratio with the released energy having implications for storage Essentially pure parahydrogen form can be obtained at very low temperatures but it is not possible to obtain a sample containing more than 75 orthohydrogen by heating A mixture or 50 50 mixture of ortho and parahydrogen can be made in the laboratory by passing it over an iron III oxide catalyst at liquid nitrogen temperature 77 K 4 or by storing hydrogen at 77 K for 2 3 hours in the presence of activated charcoal 5 In the absence of a catalyst gas phase parahydrogen takes days to relax to normal hydrogen at room temperature while it takes hours to do so in organic solvents 5 Contents 1 Nuclear spin states of H2 2 Allowed rotational energy levels 3 Thermal properties 4 History 5 Use in NMR and MRI 6 Deuterium 7 Other substances with spin isomers 8 References 9 Further readingNuclear spin states of H2 editThis section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Each hydrogen molecule H2 consists of two hydrogen atoms linked by a covalent bond If we neglect the small proportion of deuterium and tritium which may be present each hydrogen atom consists of one proton and one electron Each proton has an associated magnetic moment which is associated with the proton s spin of 1 2 In the H2 molecule the spins of the two hydrogen nuclei protons couple to form a triplet state known as orthohydrogen and a singlet state known as parahydrogen The triplet orthohydrogen state has total nuclear spin I 1 so that the component along a defined axis can have the three values MI 1 0 or 1 The corresponding nuclear spin wavefunctions are displaystyle left uparrow uparrow right rangle nbsp 1 2 displaystyle textstyle frac 1 sqrt 2 left uparrow downarrow right rangle left downarrow uparrow right rangle nbsp and displaystyle left downarrow downarrow right rangle nbsp This formalism uses standard bra ket notation the symbol represents the spin up wavefunction and the symbol the spin down wavefunction for a nucleus so means that the first nucleus is up and the second down Each orthohydrogen energy level then has a nuclear spin degeneracy of three meaning that it corresponds to three states of the same energy in the absence of a magnetic field 1 The singlet parahydrogen state has nuclear spin quantum numbers I 0 and MI 0 with wavefunction 1 2 displaystyle textstyle frac 1 sqrt 2 left uparrow downarrow right rangle left downarrow uparrow right rangle nbsp Since there is only one possibility each parahydrogen level has a spin degeneracy of one and is said to be non degenerate 1 Allowed rotational energy levels editSince protons have spin 1 2 they are fermions and the permutational antisymmetry of the total H2 wavefunction imposes restrictions on the possible rotational states of the two forms of H2 1 Orthohydrogen with symmetric nuclear spin functions can only have rotational wavefunctions that are antisymmetric with respect to permutation of the two protons corresponding to odd values of the rotational quantum number J conversely parahydrogen with an antisymmetric nuclear spin function can only have rotational wavefunctions that are symmetric with respect to permutation of the two protons corresponding to even J 1 The para form whose lowest level is J 0 is more stable by 1 455 kJ mol 6 7 than the ortho form whose lowest level is J 1 The ratio between numbers of ortho and para molecules is about 3 1 at standard temperature where many rotational energy levels are populated favoring the ortho form as a result of thermal energy However at low temperatures only the J 0 level is appreciably populated so that the para form dominates at low temperatures approximately 99 8 at 20 K 8 The heat of vaporization is only 0 904 kJ mol As a result ortho liquid hydrogen equilibrating to the para form releases enough energy to cause significant loss by boiling 6 Thermal properties editThis section needs additional citations to secondary or tertiary sources Help add sources such as review articles monographs or textbooks Please also establish the relevance for any primary research articles cited Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Applying the rigid rotor approximation the energies and degeneracies of the rotational states are given by 9 page needed E J J J 1 ℏ 2 2 I g J 2 J 1 displaystyle E J frac J J 1 hbar 2 2I quad g J 2J 1 nbsp The rotational partition function is conventionally written as citation needed Z rot J 0 g J e E J k B T displaystyle Z text rot sum limits J 0 infty g J e E J k text B T nbsp However as long as the two spin isomers are not in equilibrium it is more useful to write separate partition functions for each citation needed Z para even J 2 J 1 e J J 1 ℏ 2 2 I k B T Z ortho 3 odd J 2 J 1 e J J 1 ℏ 2 2 I k B T displaystyle begin aligned Z text para amp sum limits text even J 2J 1 e J J 1 hbar 2 2Ik text B T Z text ortho amp 3 sum limits text odd J 2J 1 e J J 1 hbar 2 2Ik text B T end aligned nbsp The factor of 3 in the partition function for orthohydrogen accounts for the spin degeneracy associated with the 1 spin state when equilibrium between the spin isomers is possible then a general partition function incorporating this degeneracy difference can be written as citation needed Z equil J 0 2 1 J 2 J 1 e J J 1 ℏ 2 2 I k B T displaystyle Z text equil sum limits J 0 infty left 2 1 J right 2J 1 e J J 1 hbar 2 2Ik text B T nbsp The molar rotational energies and heat capacities are derived for any of these cases from citation needed U rot R T 2 ln Z rot T C v rot U rot T displaystyle begin aligned U text rot amp RT 2 left frac partial ln Z text rot partial T right C v text rot amp frac partial U text rot partial T end aligned nbsp Plots shown here are molar rotational energies and heat capacities for ortho and parahydrogen and the normal ortho para ratio 3 1 and equilibrium mixtures citation needed nbsp Molar rotational energy ER R in kelvins or equivalently mean molecular rotational energy erot kB in kelvins nbsp Molar heat capacities only rotational and spin contribution is shown Total value is 1 5R higher due to translational degrees of freedom rotational degrees were included in the rigid rotor approximation itself Because of the antisymmetry imposed restriction on possible rotational states orthohydrogen has residual rotational energy at low temperature wherein nearly all the molecules are in the J 1 state molecules in the symmetric spin triplet state cannot fall into the lowest symmetric rotational state and possesses nuclear spin entropy due to the triplet state s threefold degeneracy citation needed The residual energy is significant because the rotational energy levels are relatively widely spaced in H2 the gap between the first two levels when expressed in temperature units is twice the characteristic rotational temperature for H2 citation needed E J 1 E J 0 k B 2 8 rot ℏ 2 k B I 174 98 K displaystyle frac E J 1 E J 0 k text B 2 theta text rot frac hbar 2 k text B I approx 174 98 text K nbsp This is the T 0 intercept seen in the molar energy of orthohydrogen Since normal room temperature hydrogen is a 3 1 ortho para mixture its molar residual rotational energy at low temperature is 3 4 2R8rot 1091 J mol citation needed which is somewhat larger than the enthalpy of vaporization of normal hydrogen 904 J mol at the boiling point Tb 20 369 K 10 Notably the boiling points of parahydrogen and normal 3 1 hydrogen are nearly equal for parahydrogen Hvap 898 J mol at Tb 20 277 K and it follows that nearly all the residual rotational energy of orthohydrogen is retained in the liquid state citation needed However orthohydrogen is thermodynamically unstable at low temperatures and spontaneously converts into parahydrogen 11 This process lacks any natural de excitation radiation mode so it is slow in the absence of a catalyst which can facilitate interconversion of the singlet and triplet spin states 11 At room temperature hydrogen contains 75 orthohydrogen a proportion which the liquefaction process preserves if carried out in the absence of a catalyst like ferric oxide activated carbon platinized asbestos rare earth metals uranium compounds chromic oxide or some nickel compounds to accelerate the conversion of the liquid hydrogen into parahydrogen Alternatively additional refrigeration equipment can be used to slowly absorb the heat that the orthohydrogen fraction will more slowly release as it spontaneously converts into parahydrogen citation needed If orthohydrogen is not removed from rapidly liquified hydrogen without a catalyst the heat released during its decay can boil off as much as 50 of the original liquid History editThe unusual heat capacity of hydrogen was discovered in 1912 by Arnold Eucken 12 The two forms of molecular hydrogen were first proposed by Werner Heisenberg and Friedrich Hund in 1927 Taking into account this theoretical framework pure parahydrogen was first synthesized by Paul Harteck and Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer in 1929 at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry 13 14 When Heisenberg was awarded the 1932 Nobel prize in physics for the creation of quantum mechanics this discovery of the allotropic forms of hydrogen was singled out as its most noteworthy application 15 Further work on the properties and chemical reactivity of parahydrogen was carried out in the following decade by Elly Schwab Agallidis and Georg Maria Schwab 16 Modern isolation of pure parahydrogen has since been achieved using rapid in vacuum deposition of millimeters thick solid parahydrogen p H2 samples which are notable for their excellent optical qualities 17 Use in NMR and MRI editWhen an excess of parahydrogen is used during hydrogenation reactions instead of the normal mixture of orthohydrogen to parahydrogen of 3 1 the resultant product exhibits hyperpolarized signals in proton NMR spectra an effect termed PHIP Parahydrogen Induced Polarisation or equivalently PASADENA Parahydrogen And Synthesis Allow Dramatically Enhanced Nuclear Alignment named for first recognition of the effect by Bowers and Weitekamp of Caltech 18 citation needed a phenomenon that has been used to study the mechanism of hydrogenation reactions 19 20 Signal amplification by reversible exchange SABRE is a technique to hyperpolarize samples without chemically modifying them Compared to orthohydrogen or organic molecules a much greater fraction of the hydrogen nuclei in parahydrogen align with an applied magnetic field In SABRE a metal center reversibly binds to both the test molecule and a parahydrogen molecule facilitating the target molecule to pick up the polarization of the parahydrogen 21 22 23 This technique can be improved and utilized for a wide range of organic molecules by using an intermediate relay molecule like ammonia The ammonia efficiently binds to the metal center and picks up the polarization from the parahydrogen The ammonia then transfers the polarization to other molecules that don t bind as well to the metal catalyst 24 This enhanced NMR signal allows the rapid analysis of very small amounts of material and has great potential for applications in magnetic resonance imaging Deuterium editDiatomic deuterium D2 has nuclear spin isomers like diatomic hydrogen but with different populations of the two forms because the deuterium nucleus deuteron is a boson with nuclear spin equal to one 25 There are six possible nuclear spin wave functions which are ortho or symmetric to exchange of the two nuclei and three which are para or antisymmetric 25 Ortho states correspond to even rotational levels with symmetric rotational functions so that the total wavefunction is symmetric as required for the exchange of two bosons and para states correspond to odd rotational levels 25 The ground state J 0 populated at low temperature is ortho and at standard temperature the ortho para ratio is 2 1 25 Other substances with spin isomers editOther molecules and functional groups containing two hydrogen atoms such as water 26 and methylene CH2 27 also have ortho and para forms e g orthowater and parawater but this is of little significance for their thermal properties 27 Their ortho para ratios differ from that of dihydrogen The ortho and para forms of water have recently been isolated Para water was found to be 25 more reactive for a proton transfer reaction 28 29 Molecular oxygen O2 also exists in three lower energy triplet states and one singlet state as ground state paramagnetic triplet oxygen and energized highly reactive diamagnetic singlet oxygen These states arise from the spins of their unpaired electrons not their protons or nuclei References edit a b c d e P Atkins and J de Paula Atkins Physical Chemistry 8th edition W H Freeman 2006 p 451 2 ISBN 0 7167 8759 8 Matthews M J Petitpas G Aceves S M 2011 A study of spin isomer conversion kinetics in supercritical fluid hydrogen for cryogenic fuel storage technologies Appl Phys Lett 99 8 081906 Bibcode 2011ApPhL 99h1906M doi 10 1063 1 3628453 Chen Judy Y C Li Yongjun Frunzi Michael Lei Xuegong Murata Yasujiro Lawler Ronald G Turro Nicholas 13 September 2013 Nuclear spin isomers of guest molecules in H2 C60 H2O C60 and other endofullerenes Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 371 1998 Bibcode 2013RSPTA 37110628C doi 10 1098 rsta 2011 0628 PMID 23918710 S2CID 20443766 Matsumoto Mitsuru Espenson James H 2005 Kinetics of the Interconversion of Parahydrogen and Orthohydrogen Catalyzed by Paramagnetic Complex Ions Journal of the American Chemical Society 127 32 11447 11453 doi 10 1021 ja0524292 ISSN 0002 7863 PMID 16089474 a b Aroulanda Christie Starovoytova Larisa Canet Daniel 2007 Longitudinal Nuclear Spin Relaxation ofOrtho andPara Hydrogen Dissolved in Organic Solvents The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 111 42 10615 10624 Bibcode 2007JPCA 11110615A doi 10 1021 jp073162r ISSN 1089 5639 PMID 17914761 a b Die Entdeckung des para Wasserstoffs The discovery of para hydrogen Max Planck Institut fur Biophysikalische Chemie in German Archived from the original on 16 November 2020 Retrieved 9 November 2020 Reeves Robert B Harteck Paul 1979 Ortho and Parahydrogen in Interstellar Material Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung A 34a 2 163 166 Bibcode 1979ZNatA 34 163R doi 10 1515 zna 1979 0206 S2CID 10149772 Retrieved 9 November 2020 This source says 0 34 kcal mol 1 4 kJ mol Rock Peter A Chemical thermodynamics principles and applications Macmillan 1969 Table p 478 shows No Np H2 0 002 at 20 K ISBN 1 891389 32 7 F T Wall 1974 Chemical Thermodynamics 3rd Edition W H Freeman and Company Thermophysical Properties of Fluid Systems Webbook nist gov Retrieved 2015 05 14 a b Milenko Yu Ya Sibileva R M Strzhemechny M A 1997 04 01 Natural ortho para conversion rate in liquid and gaseous hydrogen Journal of Low Temperature Physics 107 1 77 92 Bibcode 1997JLTP 107 77M doi 10 1007 BF02396837 ISSN 1573 7357 S2CID 120832814 A Eucken Die Molekularwarme des Wasserstoffs bei tiefen Temperaturen Koniglich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften Berlin Sitzungsberichte 1912 S 141 151 Bonhoeffer K F Harteck P 1929 Experimente uber Para und Orthowasserstoff Die Naturwissenschaften in German 17 11 182 Bibcode 1929NW 17 182B doi 10 1007 BF01506559 ISSN 0028 1042 S2CID 20704671 Michael Polanyi and His Generation Origins of the Social Construction of Science Mary Jo Nye University of Chicago Press 2011 p 119 ISBN 0 226 61065 9 Werner Heisenberg Facts Nobelprize org Elly Schwab Agallidis Laboratory of Physical Chemistry in Greek University of Athens Department of Chemistry Retrieved 11 Apr 2021 Rapid Vapor Deposition of Millimeters Thick Optically Transparent Solid Parahydrogen Samples for Matrix Isolation Spectroscopy Storming Media Bowers C R Weitekamp D P 1986 Transformation of symmetrization order to nuclear spin magnetization by chemical reaction and nuclear magnetic resonance PDF Physical Review Letters 57 21 2645 2648 Bibcode 1986PhRvL 57 2645B doi 10 1103 physrevlett 57 2645 PMID 10033824 Duckett S B Mewis 2013 Improving NMR and MRI Sensitivity With Parahydrogen Topics in Current Chemistry Vol 338 pp 75 103 doi 10 1007 128 2012 388 ISBN 978 3 642 39727 1 PMID 23138689 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Adams R W Aguilar J A Atkinson K D Cowley M J Elliott P I Duckett S B Green G G Khazal I G Lopez Serrano J Williamson D C 2009 Reversible interactions with para hydrogen enhance NMR sensitivity by polarization transfer PDF Science 323 5922 1708 11 Bibcode 2009Sci 323 1708A doi 10 1126 science 1168877 hdl 20 500 11820 e1a90be9 4d10 466c 8535 1653cd039cbd PMID 19325111 S2CID 3158148 Eshuis Nan Aspers Ruud L E G van Weerdenburg Bram J A Feiters Martin C Rutjes Floris P J T Wijmenga Sybren S Tessari Marco 2016 Determination of long range scalar 1 H 1 H coupling constants responsible for polarization transfer in SABRE Journal of Magnetic Resonance 265 59 66 Bibcode 2016JMagR 265 59E doi 10 1016 j jmr 2016 01 012 hdl 2066 161984 ISSN 1090 7807 PMID 26859865 Ratajczyk Tomasz Gutmann Torsten Bernatowicz Piotr Buntkowsky Gerd Frydel Jaroslaw Fedorczyk Bartlomiej 2015 NMR Signal Enhancement by Effective SABRE Labeling of Oligopeptides Chemistry A European Journal 21 36 12616 12619 doi 10 1002 chem 201501552 ISSN 1521 3765 PMID 26189499 Ratajczyk Tomasz Buntkowsky Gerd Gutmann Torsten Fedorczyk Bartlomiej Mames Adam Pietrzak Mariusz Puzio Zuzanna Szkudlarek Piotr Grzegorz 2021 Magnetic Resonance Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange of Selective PyFALGEA Oligopeptide Ligands Towards Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors ChemBioChem 22 5 855 860 doi 10 1002 cbic 202000711 ISSN 1439 7633 PMID 33063920 S2CID 222819924 Iali Wissam Rayner Peter J Duckett Simon B 2018 Using para hydrogen to hyperpolarize amines amides carboxylic acids alcohols phosphates and carbonates Science Advances 4 1 eaao6250 doi 10 1126 sciadv aao6250 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 5756661 PMID 29326984 a b c d Hollas J Michael 1996 Modern Spectroscopy 3rd ed John Wiley and Sons p 115 ISBN 0 471 96523 5 Tikhonov Vladimir I Volkov Alexander A 28 June 2002 Separation of water into its ortho and para isomers Science 296 5577 2363 doi 10 1126 science 1069513 PMID 12089435 S2CID 26190863 Retrieved 16 July 2021 a b Shinitzky Meir Elitzur Avshalom C 2006 Ortho para spin isomers of the protons in the methylene group Chirality 18 9 754 756 doi 10 1002 chir 20319 PMID 16856167 Two different forms of water isolated for first time BBC News Science 30 May 2018 Retrieved 16 July 2021 If the nuclear spins of the two hydrogen atoms in water are oriented in the same direction it is called ortho water If they are arranged in different directions it is known as para water Kilaj Ardita Gao Hong Rosch Daniel Rivero Uxia Kupper Jochen Willitsch Stefan 29 May 2018 Observation of different reactivities of para and ortho water towards trapped diazenylium ions PDF Nature Communications 9 Article 2096 2096 arXiv 1804 05925 Bibcode 2018NatCo 9 2096K doi 10 1038 s41467 018 04483 3 PMC 5974139 PMID 29844308 Retrieved 16 July 2021 As an example we investigate the proton transfer reaction of water with ionic diazenylium N2H Further reading editAline Leon Ed 2008 Hydrogen Technology Mobile and Portable Applications pp 93 101 New York NY Springer Science amp Business ISBN 3 540 69925 2 see 1 accessed 10 May 2015 Tikhonov V I Volkov A A 2002 Separation of water into its ortho and para isomers Science 296 5577 2363 doi 10 1126 science 1069513 PMID 12089435 S2CID 26190863 Mario E Fajardo Simon Tam 1997 Rapid Vapor Deposition of Millimeters Thick Optically Transparent Solid Parahydrogen Samples for Matrix Isolation Spectroscopy Edwards AFB Propulsion Directorate West USAF Research Lab a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link page needed Bowers C R Weitekamp D P 1986 Transformation of symmetrization order to nuclear spin magnetization by chemical reaction and nuclear magnetic resonance PDF Phys Rev Lett 57 21 2645 2648 Bibcode 1986PhRvL 57 2645B doi 10 1103 physrevlett 57 2645 PMID 10033824 A Farkas 1935 Orthohydrogen parahydrogen and heavy hydrogen The Cambridge series of physical chemistry Cambridge U K CUP page needed Bonhoeffer KF Harteck P 1929 Para and ortho hydrogen Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie B 4 1 2 113 141 Oxford Instruments Date Unknown Boosting the Sensitivity of NMR Spectroscopy using Parahydrogen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spin isomers of hydrogen amp oldid 1216839426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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