Chapter 6 Molecular Structure & Bonding
Rules for constructing MOs.
- The number of MO’s equals the number
of AO’s used to construct them (N).
- The energies of the MO’s increase with t
he number of nodal planes they contain. The
lowest energy MO contains no nodal planes,
the next highest contai
ns one nodal plane, the
next has two nodal planes, and so on to the highest energy MO, which contains (N-1) nodal planes (one between each pair of atoms).
- The nodal planes are placed symmetrically
even if it means placing them on an atom. The
atom that lies on the nodal plane has
no electron density on it in that MO.
- Recall that the phase of the AOs must change at a nodal
plane, so nodal planes cannot be
placed on adjacent atoms.
Bonding interactions increase the bonding character of an MO, while antibonding
interactions decrease the bonding character. T
hus, the bonding character of an MO spread
over several atoms depends upon the
relative number of bonding and antibonding
interactions
. Bonding interactions arise when the AO’s of two adjacent atoms have the
same phase, while antibonding interactions
arise when the AO’s have opposite phase,
i.e
.,
when there is a nodal plane between the atoms. In
addition, there is a third type of MO, the
nonbonding MO, which is occupied by lone pairs. The following rules can be used to determine the bonding character of an MO: •
Antibonding MOs
are produced when the number of
bonding interactions < antibonding
interactions. The energy of antibonding MOs is gr
eater than the energy of the AO’s used to
construct them, so antibonding MO
s lie at the highest energies.
(^) •
Nonbonding MOs
are formed when the number of bonding and antibonding interactions is
the same or there are no interactions betw
een adjacent atoms. The energy of nonbonding
MOs is close to that of the AO’s used to co
nstruct them, so they lie above the bonding MOs
and below antibonding MOs.
(^) •
Bonding MOs
result when the number of bonding inte
ractions > antibonding interactions. The
energy of bonding MOs is lower than the energy of the AO’s used to construct them, so they are at the lowest of t
he three types of MOs.
We now use MO theory to better understand the delocalized bonds first introduced in
our discussion of the resonance structures of SO
in Chapter 5. The two resonance 2
structures, which are shown at the top of Figure 6.25, differ in both the position of the
(^) π
bond, which is shared between both S-O bonds, an
d the location of one of the lone pairs,
which is shared by both oxygen atoms. We be
gin by determining the number of MO’s that
must be produced and the number of electrons that will occupy them. As is frequently the case, delocalization occurs only in the
system, which involves one p orbital from each π
atom (the one perpendicular to the molecular plane). If only three atomic orbitals are used
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