Chapter 6 Molecular Structure & Bonding
the Pauli Exclusion Principle and Hund’s rule. The result of adding 12 electrons in the diagram is shown in the figure. Many of the properties of a molecule are dictated by the nature of its
H
ighest
O
ccupied
M
olecular
O
rbital
or
HOMO
and its
Lowest
Unoccupied
M
olecular
Orbital
or
LUMO
. Three important predictions
can be made based on this
diagram:
- There are a total of eight bonding elec
trons and four antibonding electrons, so the O-O
bond order is
1 /^2
(8 - 4) = 2, which is the same prediction made from valence bond theory.
- Unpaired electrons in the
π* orbitals account for the paramagnetism of O
. This prediction 2
was a major success for MO theory.
sX sX sX
sC
sXB s
sXA XC
Energy
sA
X
B
X
A
X
C
sB
(a) (b) (c)
DE
AX
DE
XB
DE
XC^
Figure 6.24 Mixing AOs of different energy The relative sizes of the spheres
represent the contributions of
the AOs in each MO. The cont
ribution of each AO in the
bonding MO increases relative to that of X as t
he energy of the
AO gets lower. (a) A is higher in energy than X, so the contribution of X (sphere size) to the bonding MO is greater. (b) B is lower in energy than X, so
the contribution of B to the
bonding MO is greater. (c) C is lowest in energy, so the contribution of s
is the greatest. C
- The HOMO is the
π*(2p) and the LUMO is the
σ*(2p).
The two nuclei in
heteronuclear diatomic molecules
are nuclei of different elements,
so the AOs that mix to form the bonding MO
are at different energies. Whereas the two
atoms of a homonuclear diatomic molecule make equal contributions to each MO in the molecule, the energy difference between the AOs in a heteronuclear diatomic molecule results in MOs that are not composed of equal amounts of the AOs. Instead, the AOs mix in the ratio that achieves th
e lowest energy possible for
the bonding MO. The lowest
energy MO is produced when the AO at lower energy contributes more to the MO than does the AO at higher energy. Consider the
bonding between of atom X to atoms A, B,
and C as described in Figure 6.24. •
Figure 6.24a: The energy of s
(the s orbital atom X) is less than that of sX
by an amount A
EΔ
. sXA
is the lower energy AO, so it contributes more to the bonding MO (X
σXA
) than does
SA
, which is shown by the relative sizes of t
he spheres describing the MO. The larger sphere
on X means that there is more electron densit
y on atom X in the bond, so the XA bond is
polar with atom X carrying the negative charge.
-^
Figure 6.24b: s
is lower in energy than sB
by an amount X
ΔE
. sXB
is the lower energy orbital, B
so it contributes more to the bonding MO (
σXB
). The XB bond is polar with atom B carrying the
negative charge.
(^) •
Figure 6.24c: s
is lower in energy than sC
by an amount X
EΔ
. XC
EΔ
> XC
EΔ
, so sXB
contributes C
even more to the XC bond than did s
to the XB bond. The small sphere representing the B
contribution of s
to the X
σXC
MO indicates that only a small
amount of the electron density in
the bond resides on atom X. The
result is that the XC bond is
more polar than the XB bond.
Recall that electronegativity is a measure of how well an atom attracts the bonding
electrons, but, as shown in the preceding paragraph, the electron density in a bond is greater around the atom with the lower energy orbital;
i.e.,
the atom with the lower energy
orbital attracts the electrons more, so it is the more electronegative atom. This is why we
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