Hello,
I am having trouble identifying molecules which will have a center of inversion and which ones will not. Water ( H2O) has all its vibrations appear in IR spectroscopy, I am not sure if this molecule has a center of inversion or not.
One of my lecturers said, if it has a axis of symmetry ( so cut it in half with a line vertical down the middle of the molecule. and the two halves should be the same but opposite) then it has a center of inversion, so then I assume that water has no Raman signals but I do not think that is the case.
now using the definition, An inversion occurs through a centre of symmetry, denoted i. (This operation involves taking each point in the object in a straight line to the inversion centre and then moving it an equal distance out the other side. i.e. if we consider the inversion centre to lie at (0,0,0) , then this operation turns a general point (x,y,z) into (-x,-y,-z). Spheres and cubes both have centres of inversion, as does a benzene molecule (a regular hexagon). Molecules such as water, ammonia and methane do not.
I do not see why water and ammonia do not have a center of inversion ( please refer to image drawn)
Why does CH2I2 have a center of inversion?