Why Symmetry Matters in Chemistry
Symmetry is not merely an aesthetic quality — in chemistry, it is a powerful mathematical tool that predicts molecular properties, simplifies quantum mechanical calculations, determines which spectroscopic transitions are allowed, and explains the shapes of molecular orbitals. Group theory provides the rigorous mathematical framework for analyzing symmetry.
At its heart, group theory asks: "What symmetry operations can be performed on this molecule that leave it looking identical?" The set of all such operations forms a mathematical group, and the language developed to describe these groups — character tables, representations, and direct products — enables chemists to solve problems that would otherwise require enormous calculations.
Symmetry Elements and Operations
A symmetry element is a geometric entity (a point, line, or plane) with respect to which a symmetry operation is performed. The key symmetry elements are:
The Identity (E)
The identity operation (E, from the German Einheit, "unity") leaves every atom in its original position. Every molecule possesses E — it is required for the mathematical closure of any group.
Proper Rotation Axes (Cₙ)
A Cₙ axis is an axis about which rotation by 360°/n gives a configuration indistinguishable from the original. The subscript n is called the order of the axis.
- C₂: 180° rotation (e.g., H₂O has a C₂ axis through oxygen)
- C₃: 120° rotation (e.g., NH₃, BF₃)
- C₄: 90° rotation (e.g., XeF₄)
- C₆: 60° rotation (benzene has a C₆ axis)
The principal axis is the Cₙ axis of highest order. In BF₃, the C₃ axis perpendicular to the molecular plane is the principal axis.
Mirror Planes (σ)
A mirror plane (σ) reflects all atoms through a plane. Three types exist: - σₕ (horizontal): perpendicular to the principal axis - σᵥ (vertical): contains the principal axis, bisects the molecule - σd (dihedral): contains the principal axis, bisects two C₂ axes
Inversion Center (i)
A molecule has an inversion center if every atom at position (x, y, z) has an identical atom at (−x, −y, −z). Examples: SF₆, benzene, centrosymmetric metal complexes.
Inversion is crucial for spectroscopy: the rule of mutual exclusion states that molecules with an inversion center cannot have bands that are both IR-active and Raman-active.
Improper Rotation Axes (Sₙ)
An Sₙ axis involves rotation by 360°/n followed by reflection through a plane perpendicular to the axis. S₁ = σ; S₂ = i. The S₄ axis in CH₄ (methane) is not immediately obvious but exists.
Point Groups
The complete set of symmetry operations for a molecule defines its point group. All symmetry elements in a point group intersect at a single point (hence "point group"). The most important point groups in chemistry are:
| Point Group | Key Features | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| C₁ | No symmetry | CHFClBr |
| Cₛ | Only σ | NHF₂ |
| Cᵢ | Only i | meso-tartaric acid |
| C₂ᵥ | C₂, 2σᵥ | H₂O, SO₂, H₂CO |
| C₃ᵥ | C₃, 3σᵥ | NH₃, PCl₃ |
| C₂ₕ | C₂, σₕ, i | trans-N₂F₂ |
| D₂ₕ | 3C₂, 3σ, i | ethylene, benzene-like |
| D₃ₕ | C₃, 3C₂, σₕ, 3σᵥ | BF₃, CO₃²⁻, eclipsed ferrocene |
| D₄ₕ | C₄, 4C₂, σₕ, 4σᵥ, i | XeF₄, square planar [PtCl₄]²⁻ |
| D₆ₕ | C₆, 6C₂, σₕ, 6σᵥ, i | Benzene |
| Td | 4C₃, 3C₂, 3S₄, 6σd | CH₄, SiCl₄, [NiCl₄]²⁻ |
| Oh | 3C₄, 4C₃, 6C₂, i, 3S₄, 4S₆, 3σₕ, 6σd | SF₆, [Co(NH₃)₆]³⁺ |
Determining the point group of a molecule follows a systematic flowchart: check for special groups (Td, Oh, Ih), then identify the principal axis, then check for perpendicular C₂ axes, σₕ, and σᵥ planes.
Character Tables
Each point group has an associated character table — a compact tabulation that encodes all the symmetry information of that group. The character table for C₂ᵥ (the point group of water):
| C₂ᵥ | E | C₂ | σᵥ(xz) | σᵥ'(yz) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A₁ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | z |
| A₂ | 1 | 1 | −1 | −1 | Rz |
| B₁ | 1 | −1 | 1 | −1 | x, Ry |
| B₂ | 1 | −1 | −1 | 1 | y, Rx |
The rows are called irreducible representations (symmetry species). The numbers are characters — the trace of the transformation matrix for each operation. A₁ and A₂ are symmetric with respect to C₂; B₁ and B₂ are antisymmetric. The rightmost columns list what functions (translations, rotations, atomic orbitals) transform as each representation.
Applications in Spectroscopy
Group theory is indispensable for predicting IR and Raman spectra.
Selection Rules
- IR-active: a vibration is IR-active if it belongs to the same symmetry species as a translation (x, y, or z). In C₂ᵥ, vibrations of A₁, B₁, or B₂ symmetry are IR-active.
- Raman-active: a vibration is Raman-active if it belongs to the symmetry species of a quadratic function (x², y², z², xy, xz, yz).
For CO₂ (D∞ₕ point group): the symmetric stretch (Σg⁺) is Raman-active but IR-inactive; the antisymmetric stretch (Σu⁺) is IR-active but Raman-inactive. This directly follows from the mutual exclusion rule.
Normal Mode Analysis
Group theory predicts how many IR and Raman active bands a molecule will have without solving the full vibrational problem. For a molecule with N atoms, there are 3N − 6 vibrational modes (3N − 5 for linear molecules). By reducing the reducible representation of all 3N motions, one obtains the symmetry species of every normal mode.
Applications in MO Theory
In molecular orbital theory, group theory determines which atomic orbitals on different atoms can overlap to form bonding molecular orbitals — they must belong to the same symmetry species.
For example, in an octahedral ML₆ complex, the six metal-ligand σ bonds transform as A₁g + Eg + T₁u. Only metal orbitals of these symmetry species (s for A₁g, d_z²/d_x²-y² for Eg, px/py/pz for T₁u) can participate in σ bonding. This is the foundation of ligand field theory and the MO description of coordination complexes.
Group theory thus connects molecular geometry to observable spectroscopic and electronic properties through the unifying language of symmetry.