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Vibrational temperature

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The vibrational temperature is commonly used in thermodynamics, to simplify certain equations. It has units of temperature and is defined as

θ vib = h ν ~ c k B = h ν k B {\displaystyle \theta _{\text{vib}}={\frac {h{\tilde {\nu }}c}{k_{\text{B}}}}={\frac {h\nu }{k_{\text{B}}}}}

where k B {\displaystyle k_{\text{B}}} is the Boltzmann constant, c {\displaystyle c} is the speed of light, ν ~ {\displaystyle {\tilde {\nu }}} is the wavenumber, and ν {\displaystyle \nu } (Greek letter nu) is the characteristic frequency of the oscillator.

The vibrational temperature is used commonly when finding the vibrational partition function.

Molecule ν ~ {\displaystyle {\tilde {\nu }}} θ v i b {\displaystyle \theta _{vib}}
N2 2446 cm 3521 K
O2 1568 cm 2256 K
F2 917 cm 1320 K
HF 4138 cm 5957 K
HCl 2991 cm 4303 K

References

See also

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