The analogous procedure, beginning with Eq.4.45and differentiating with
respect toc 2 leads to
ðH 12 "ES 12 Þc 1 þðH 22 "ES 22 Þc 2 ¼ 0 (4.47)Equation4.47can be written as Eq.4.48ðH 21 "ES 21 Þc 1 þðH 22 "ES 22 Þc 2 ¼ 0 (4.48)since as shown in Eqs.4.44H 12 ¼H 21 andS 12 ¼S 21 , and the form used in Eq.4.48
is preferable because it makes it easy to remember the pattern for the two-basis
+++- MO 2
antibonding MOMO 1AO 1 AO 2
++bonding MOTwo p AOstwo pi-type MOs++Three p AOs
AO 1 AO 2
+AO 3MO 1bonding MOMO 3antibonding MOMO 2nonbonding MOenergy+
f 1 f 2f 1 f 2f 1 f 2 f 3C 11 f 1 + C 21 f 2C 12 f 2 + C 22 f 2C 11 f 1 + C 21 f 2C 13 f 1 + C 23 f 2 + C 33 f 3C 12 f 1 + C 22 f 2 + C 32 f 3C 11 f 1 + C 21 f 2 + C 31 f 3C 12 f 1 + C 22 f 2
y 2y 1y 2y 1y 3y 2y 1++ ++ –energy
Two s AOscoefficient of basis
function 1 in MO 1coefficient of basis
function 2 in MO 1MO 1AO 1 AO 2 MO 2bonding MOantibonding MOtwo sigma-type MOsa node (AOs change sign here)+++++ –++three pi-type MOsenergynodeC 22 = 0nodesFig. 4.11 Linear combination ofnatomic orbitals (or, more generally, basis functions) givesn
MOs. The coefficientscare weighting factors that determine the magnitude and the sign of the
contribution from each basis function. The functions contributing to the MO change sign at a node
(actually anodal plane) and the energy of the MOs increases with the number of nodes
122 4 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics in Computational Chemistry