Title: Molecular orbitals of
1Lecture 6
2Molecular orbitals of heteronuclear diatomic
molecules
3 The general principle of molecular orbital
theory Interactions of orbitals (or groups of
orbitals) occur when the interacting orbitals
overlap. the energy of the orbitals must be
similar the interatomic distance must be short
enough but not too short A bonding interaction
takes place when regions of the same sign
overlap An antibonding interaction takes place
when regions of opposite sign overlap
4Combinations of two s orbitals in a homonuclear
molecule (e.g. H2)
In this case, the energies of the A.O.s are
identical
5More generally Y NcaY(1sa) cbY (1sb)
n A.O.s
n M.O.s
The same principle is applied to heteronuclear
diatomic molecules But the atomic energy levels
are lower for the heavier atom
6Orbital potential energies (see also Table 5-1 in
p. 134 of textbook)
Average energies for all electrons in the same
level, e.g., 3p (use to estimate which orbitals
may interact)
7The molecular orbitals of carbon monoxide
Y NccY(C) coY (O)
E(eV)
2s 2p
C -19.43 -10.66
O -32.38 -15.85
Each MO receives unequal contributions from C and
O (cc ? co)
8Group theory is used in building molecular
orbitals
9Bond order 3
10A related example HF
s (A1) 2p(A1, B1, B2)
H -13.61 (1s)
F -40.17 (2s) -18.65
No s-s int. (DE gt 13 eV)
11Extreme cases ionic compounds (LiF)
12Molecular orbitals for larger molecules
1. Determine point group of molecule (if linear,
use D2h and C2v instead of D8h or C8v)
2. Assign x, y, z coordinates (z axis is
higher rotation axis if non-linear y axis in
outer atoms point to central atom)
3. Find the characters of the representation for
the combination of 2s orbitals on the outer
atoms, then for px, py, pz. (as for vibrations,
orbitals that change position 0, orbitals
that do not change 1 and orbitals that remain
in the same position but change sign -1)
4. Find the reducible representations (they
correspond to the symmetry of group orbitals,
also called Symmetry Adapted Linear
Combinations SALCs of the orbitals).
5. Find AOs in central atom with the same
symmetry
6. Combine AOs from central atom with those
group orbitals of same symmetry and similar E
13F-H-F- D8h, use D2h
1st consider combinations of 2s and 2p orbitals
from F atoms
8 GROUP ORBITALS DEFINED
14Group orbitals can now be treated as atomic
orbitals and combined with appropriate AOs from H
1s(H) is Ag so it matches two group orbitals 1
and 3
Both interactions are symmetry allowed, how about
energies?
15-13.6 eV
-13.6 eV
-40.2 eV
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17CO2 D8h, use D2h
(O O) group orbitals the same as for F F
But C has more AOs to be considered than H !
18CO2 D8h, use D2h
Carbon orbitals
19All four are symmetry allowed
20Group orbitals 3(Ag) -4 (B1u)
Group orbitals 1(Ag) and 2 (B1u)
2s(C) (Ag) and Groups 1 3 (Ag)
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23LUMO
The frontier orbitals of CO2
HOMO
24Molecular orbitals for larger molecules H2O
252
0
0
2
For H H group orbitals
G A1 B1
E two orbitals unchanged
C2 two orbitals interchanged
sv two orbitals unchanged
sv two orbitals interchanged
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28Molecular orbitals for NH3
Find reducible representation for 3Hs
G
1
0
3
Irreducible representations G A1 E
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31Projection Operator
Algorithm of creating an object forming a basis
for an irreducible rep from an arbitrary function.
Where the projection operator sums the results of
using the symmetry operations multiplied by
characters of the irreducible rep. j indicates
the desired symmetry. lj is the dimension of the
irreducible rep. h the order order of the group.
Starting with the 1sA create a function of A1 sym
¼(E1sA C21sA sv1sA sv1sA) ¼ (1sA
1sB 1sB 1sA)
32Consider the bonding in NF3
GA 3 0 -1
GA A2 E
GB 3 0 1
GB GC GD A1 E
GC 3 0 1
GD 3 0 1
2
3
1
A B
C D
33Now construct SALC
GA A2 E
PA2(p1)
1/6 (p1 p2 p3 (-1)(-p)1
(-1)(-1p3) (-1)(-p2)
No AO on N is A2
34E
Apply projection operator to p1
PA2(p1) 2/6 (2p1 - p2 - p3) E1
But since it is two dimensional, E, there should
be another SALC
PA2(p2) 2/6 (2p2 - p3 - p1) E
But E1 and E should be orthogonal want sum of
products of coefficients to be zero. E2 E k
E1. (-1 k2) p1 (2 k(-1)) p2 (-1
k(-1)) 0 Have to choose k such that they are
orthogonal. 0 (2/6)2 (2(-1 k2) -1 (2
k(-1)) -1 (-1 k(-1)) k ½ E2 2/6 (3/2 p2
- 3/2 p3)
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36Molecular shapes When we discussed VSEPR theory
Can this be described in terms of MOs?
37Hybrid orbitals