The effect of isotopic substitution on an
equilibrium constant is referred to as a thermodynamic (or equilibrium)
isotope effect. For example, the effect of isotopic substitution in reactant A that participates
in the equilibrium:
is the ratio
of the
equilibrium
constant for the reaction in which A contains the light isotope to that in which it contains
the heavy isotope. The ratio can be expressed as the
equilibrium constant for the isotopic exchange reaction:
in which reactants such as B that are not
isotopically substituted do not appear. The potential energy surfaces of isotopic molecules are identical
to a high degree of approximation, so thermodynamic isotope effects can only arise
from the effect of isotopic mass on the nuclear motions of the reactants and products,
and can be expressed quantitatively in terms of
partition function ratios for nuclear motion:
Although the nuclear
partition function is a product of the translational, rotational and vibrational
partition functions, the
isotope effect is determined almost entirely by the last named, specifically by vibrational modes
involving motion of isotopically different atoms. In the case of light atoms (i.e.
protium vs.
deuterium or
tritium) at moderate temperatures, the
isotope effect is dominated by zero-point energy differences.
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 1077
(Glossary of terms used in physical organic chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1994))
on page 1131