General Raman
Definitions
SERS
Scattering
Resonance Raman
100

Is Raman Qualitative or Quantitative?

Both!

100

How easily an atom or molecule's electron cloud can be distorted by an external electric field, creating a temporary dipole

Polarizability

100

What does SERS stand for?

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering

100

When does scattering occur?

When a monochromatic laser beam interacts with a sample.

100

What must molecules possess for resonance raman?

Chromophore 

200

Raman is usually used complimentary to what technique?

IR

200

Regions on a metal surface where the electromagnetic field is highly intensified

Hot Spots 

200

Most widely used substrates in SERS due to their plasmonic properties

Silver and Gold

200

This scattered radiation has the same radiation as the source radiation and occurs as a result of elastic collisions between the photons and the molecules in the sample 

Rayleigh Scattering

200

Is a normal Raman spectra or a resonance spectra simpler?

Resonance

300

Why is Raman good for wet samples and aqueous solutions in comparison to IR?

Water is a weak Raman scatterer but a strong absorber of IR radiation

300

The name of a technique that increases the intensity of Raman by 103 - 106

Resonance Raman 

300

Name 3 applications for SERS

disease biomarkers, drug development, corrosion, catalysis, explosive detection, food safety, environmental analysis, forensic science, and archaeology

300

Occurs when the scattered photon loses energy to the molecule, resulting in a lower frequency and longer wavelength.

Stokes scattering

300

What can resonance Raman be used to study?

Very low concentrations of biologically important molecules

400

How does Raman complement IR absorption spectroscopy? Name 3 Reasons

  • Some vibrations are not absorbed in the IR region

  • Vibrations are only seen if there is a change in the dipole moment during it

  • A change in polarizability is necessary

  • Some vibrations are active in IR and not in Raman

  • In general, symmetric vibrations give rise to intense Raman lines; nonsymmetric ones are usually weak and sometimes unobserved.

400

Monochromatic light from a laser that illuminates a sample to initiate the Raman scattering process

Incident Light

400

The amplification of Raman signals can be enhanced by what two different mechanisms?

Electromagnetic enhancement and charge transfer.

400

Happens when the scattered photon gains energy from a molecule that is already in an excited vibrational state, leading to a higher frequency and shorter wavelength

Anti-stokes scattering

400

What wavelengths are used for resonance Raman?

UV and visible

500

Name 3 major advantages for using Raman

  • Few concerns with sample thickness

  • Little interference from ambient atmosphere

  • Vacuums and purge gases not necessary

  • Glass, water, and plastic packaging have weak spectra, so they can be measured directly inside their package (minimizing contamination)

  • Aqueous samples are readily analyzed 

  • No 2 compounds have the same Raman spectra

  • The intensity of the scattered light is proportional to the amount of material present

  • Raman is qualitative and quantitative!

500

When electrons are disturbed from equilibrium they produce a quantum of plasma oscillation or a "sea of electrons"

Plasmons

500

Name the 5 metals used as surfaces in SERS 

Gold, silver, copper, platinum, and palladium

                                   


    

500

What type of light interferes with stokes lines and why?

Fluorescent light is much stronger than Raman, and can produce an intense background that overlaps with the stokes region and drowns it out

500

This type of laser uses an organic dye solution to change its output wavelength

Tunable dye laser