1 / 14

Lecture 13: Diatomic orbitals

Lecture 13: Diatomic orbitals. Hydrogen molecule ion (H 2 + ) Overlap and exchange integrals Bonding/Anti-bonding orbitals Molecular orbitals. Schrödinger equation for hydrogen molecule ion. -. Simplest example of a chemical bond is the hydrogen molecule ion (H 2 + ) .

mildred
Download Presentation

Lecture 13: Diatomic orbitals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 13: Diatomic orbitals • Hydrogen molecule ion (H2+) • Overlap and exchange integrals • Bonding/Anti-bonding orbitals • Molecular orbitals PY3P05

  2. Schrödinger equation for hydrogen molecule ion - • Simplest example of a chemical bond is the hydrogen molecule ion (H2+). • Consists of two protons and a single electron. • If nuclei are distant, electron is localised on one nucleus. Wavefunctions are then those of atomic hydrogen. ra rb + a + b rab • ais the hydrogen atom wavefunction of electron belonging to nucleus a. Must therefore satisfy and correspondingly for other wavefunction, b. The energies are therefore Ea0= Eb0= E0 (1) Ha PY3P05

  3. Schrödinger equation for hydrogen molecule ion • If atoms are brought into close proximity, electron localised on b will now experience an attractive Coulomb force of nucleus a. • Must therefore modify Schrödinger equation to include Coulomb potentials of both nuclei: where • To find the coefficients caand cb, substitute into Eqn. 2: (2) Ha Hb PY3P05

  4. Solving the Schrödinger equation • Can simplify last equation using Eqn. 1 and the corresponding equation for Ha and Hb. • By writing Ea0ain place of Haa gives • Rearranging, • As Ea0 = Eb0by symmetry, we can set Ea0 - E = Eb0 - E = -E, (3) PY3P05

  5. Overlap and exchange integrals • a and bdepend on position, while caand cbdo not. Now we know that for orthogonal wavefunctions but a andbare not orthoganal, so • If we now multiply Eqn. 3 by a and integrate the results, we obtain • As -e|a|2is the charge density of the electron => Eqn. 4 is the Coulomb interaction energy between electron charge density and nuclear charge e of nucleus b. • The -ea bin Eqn. 5 means that electron is partly in state a and partly in state b => an exchange between states occurs. Eqn. 5 therefore called an exchange integral. Normalisation integral Overlap integral (4) (5) PY3P05

  6. Overlap and exchange integrals • Eqn. 4 can be visualised via figure at right. • Represents the Coulomb interaction energy of an electron density cloud in the Coulomb field on the nucleus. • Eqn. 5 can be visualised via figure at right. • Non-vanishing contributions are only possible when the wavefunctions overlap. • See Chapter 24 of Haken & Wolf for further details. PY3P05

  7. Orbital energies • If we mutiply Eqn 3 bya and integrate we get • Collecting terms gives, • Similarly, • Eqns. 6 and 7 can be solved for c1 and c2via the matrix equation: • Non-trivial solutions exist when determinant vanishes: (6) (7) PY3P05

  8. Orbital energies • Therefore (-E + C)2 - (-E·S + D)2 = 0 => C - E = ± (D - E ·S) • This gives two values for E: and • As C and D are negative, Eb < Ea • Ebcorrespond to bonding molecular orbital energies. Eato anti-bonding MOs. • H2+ atomic and molecular orbital energies are shown at right. Energy (eV) -13.6 PY3P05

  9. Bonding and anti-bonding orbitals • Substituting for Ea into Eqn. 6 => cb = -ca = -c.The total wavefunction is thus • Similarly for Eb => ca = cb = c, which gives • For symmetric case (top right), occupation probability for  is positive. Not the case for a asymmetric wavefunctions (bottom right). • Energy splits depending on whether dealing with a bonding or an anti-bonding wavefunction. Anti-bonding orbital Bonding orbital PY3P05

  10. Bonding and anti-bonding orbitals • The energy E of the hydrogen molecular ion can finally be written • ‘+’ correspond to anti-bonding orbital energies, ‘-’ to bonding. • Energy curves below are plotted to show their dependence on rab PY3P05

  11. Molecular orbitals PY3P05

  12. Molecular orbitals PY3P05

  13. Molecular orbitals • Energies of bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals for first row diatomic molecules. • Two electrons in H2 occupy bonding molecular orbital, with anti-parallel spins. If irradiated by UV light, molecule may absorb energy and promote one electron into its anti-bonding orbital. PY3P05

  14. Molecular orbitals PY3P05

More Related