What is nitrogen inversion?

1 Answer
Jan 4, 2018

It's a quantum tunneling effect where the nitrogen atom protons tunnel through a potential energy barrier that allows the molecule to invert its shape. Examples are "NH"_3, "PH"_3, and "AsH"_3.

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The potential energy double well can be represented as follows:

Elementary Quantum Chemistry, Pilar, Ch. 4, pg. 96

This activation energy is around V_0 ~~ "24.2 kJ/mol", so this inversion can happen readily.

For comparison, a typical reaction activation energy is between "20 kJ/mol" (very fast) and "150 kJ/mol" (fairly slow).