Symmetry (Vallance)

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You will already be familiar with the concept of symmetry in an everyday sense. If we say something is ‘symmetrical’, we usually mean it has mirror symmetry, or ‘left-right’ symmetry, and would look the same if viewed in a mirror. Symmetry is also very important in chemistry. Some molecules are clearly ‘more symmetrical’ than others, but what consequences does this have, if any?

The aim of this course is to provide a systematic treatment of symmetry in chemical systems within the mathematical framework known as group theory (the reason for the name will become apparent later on). Once we have classified the symmetry of a molecule, group theory provides a powerful set of tools that provide us with considerable insight into many of its chemical and physical properties.

Some applications of group theory that will be covered in this course include:

  1. Predicting whether a given molecule will be chiral, or polar.
  2. Examining chemical bonding and visualising molecular orbitals.
  3. Predicting whether a molecule may absorb light of a given polarisation, and which spectroscopic transitions may be excited if it does.
  4. Investigating the vibrational motions of the molecule.

You may well meet some of these topics again, possibly in more detail, in later courses. However, they will be introduced here to give you a fairly broad introduction to the capabilities and applications of group theory once we have worked through the basic principles and ‘machinery’ of the theory.

1.2: Symmetry Operations and Symmetry Elements

A symmetry operation is an action that leaves an object looking the same after it has been carried out. For example, if we take a molecule of water and rotate it by 180° about an axis passing through the central O atom (between the two H atoms) it will look the same as before. It will also look the same if we reflect it through either of two mirror planes, as shown in the figure below.

Each symmetry operation has a corresponding symmetry element, which is the axis, plane, line or point with respect to which the symmetry operation is carried out. The symmetry element consists of all the points that stay in the same place when the symmetry operation is performed. In a rotation, the line of points that stay in the same place constitute a symmetry axis; in a reflection the points that remain unchanged make up a plane of symmetry.

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“Book: Symmetry (Vallance)” by Claire Vallance, LibreTexts is licensed under CC BY .

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