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Molecular Orbitals An overview

Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

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Page 1: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Molecular Orbitals

An overview

Page 2: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

MO Theory

Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory.

This theory describes the electrons in orbitals belonging to the entire molecule.

Page 3: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Molecular Orbitals

A molecular orbital (MO) can hold a maximum of two electrons.

A MO has a definite energy. We can represent an MO with an electron-

density cloud.

Page 4: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

LCAO

Linear Combination of Atomic Orbitals Whenever two atomic orbitals overlap, two

molecular orbitals form. # in = # out

Energy is conserved, so… One orbital will be lower in energy One orbital will be higher in energy

Page 5: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

The Hydrogen Molecule

Page 6: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

The Two Orbitals

* Antibonding orbital Very little electron density between the nuclei Higher in energy Destabilizes bond formation

Bonding orbital Promotes bond formation Electron density is between the nuclei Lower in energy

Page 7: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Bonding and Antibonding Orbitals

Page 8: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

MO Diagrams

Page 9: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

H2 and He2

Page 10: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Complex MO Diagrams

Page 11: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Bond Order

In MO theory, bond stability of a covalent bond is related to its bond order.

Bond order = ½(# bonding electrons - # antibonding electrons)

Bond order can be an integer or a fraction

Bond Order

# of bonds

0 No bond exists

1 Single bond

2 Double bond

3 Triple bond

Page 12: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Calculate Bond Order for He2+

Page 13: Molecular Orbitals An overview. MO Theory Robert Mullikan won the Nobel Prize in 1966 for developing this theory. This theory describes the electrons

Compare bond orders

Which would be more stable: He2 or He2+?

Justify your answer.