Chemistry 2000 Slide Set 8: Valence bond theory Marc R. Roussel - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chemistry 2000 Slide Set 8: Valence bond theory Marc R. Roussel - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Chemistry 2000 Slide Set 8: Valence bond theory Marc R. Roussel January 23, 2020 Marc R. Roussel Valence bond theory January 23, 2020 1 / 26 MO theory: a recap A molecular orbital is a one-electron wavefunction which, in principle, extends


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SLIDE 1

Chemistry 2000 Slide Set 8: Valence bond theory

Marc R. Roussel January 23, 2020

Marc R. Roussel Valence bond theory January 23, 2020 1 / 26

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SLIDE 2

MO theory: a recap

A molecular orbital is a one-electron wavefunction which, in principle, extends over the whole molecule. Two electrons can occupy each MO. MOs have nice connections to a number of experiments, e.g. photoelectron spectroscopy, Lewis acid-base properties, etc. However, correlating MO calculations to bond properties is less straightforward.

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SLIDE 3

Valence-bond theory

Valence-bond (VB) theory takes a different approach, designed to agree with the chemist’s idea of a chemical bond as a shared pair of electrons between two particular atoms. Bonding is described in terms of overlap between orbitals from adjacent atoms. This “overlap” gives a two-electron bond wavefunction, not a

  • ne-electron molecular orbital.

There are no molecular orbitals in valence-bond theory. The description of bonding in VB theory is a direct counterpart to Lewis diagrams.

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SLIDE 4

Example: H2

For diatomic molecules, the VB and MO descriptions of bonding are superficially similar. In VB theory, we start with the Lewis diagram, which for H2 is H—H We need to make a single bond. We take one 1s orbital from each H atom, and “overlap” them to make a valence bond: Two electrons occupy this valence bond. The overlap operation is not the same as the linear combinations of LCAO-MO theory.

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SLIDE 5

Polyatomic molecules

In traditional chemical theory (e.g. Lewis diagrams), a chemical bond consists of one or more pairs of electrons being shared between two atoms. Valence-bond theory builds two-electron bond wavefunctions. These wavefunctions should occupy the space between two atoms and not extend very far outside this region. (Again, think in terms of the lines in a Lewis diagram.) Problem: Atomic orbitals don’t necessarily point in the right directions in space, nor are they necessarily confined to the region between two atoms. Solution: Use mixtures of atomic orbitals (“hybrid orbitals”) instead of the AOs themselves.

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SLIDE 6

BeH2

Suppose that we wanted to make VB wavefunctions for the two Be-H bonds in BeH2. We can’t use a Be 2s orbital to form the valence bonds because this

  • rbital extends into the bonding regions for both H atoms:

Another way to think about this is that a valence bond made between

  • ne of the H atoms and the Be atom using the 2s orbital would

interfere with the valence bond to the other H atom.

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SLIDE 7

Hybrid atomic orbitals

To fix this problem, we add atomic orbitals on Be to get hybrid atomic orbitals that point towards each of the H atoms, with little extension in the opposite direction. Specifically, for a linear molecule, we use sp hybrids made by adding (or subtracting) the 2s and 2pz atomic orbitals on the same atom: =

–1.5 –1 –0.5 0.5 1 1.5 –2 –1 1 2

=

–1.5 –1 –0.5 0.5 1 1.5 –2 –1 1 2

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SLIDE 8

Hybrid atomic orbitals (continued)

Once we have the hybrid orbitals, we can overlap them with the H 1s AOs to form two valence bond wavefunctions. Notation: Each of these bonds would be described as Be(sp)-H(1s).

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SLIDE 9

Comparing MO and VB theory

In MO theory, we make linear combinations of AOs (LCAOs) from different atoms to make an MO. These MOs extend (in principle) over the whole molecule.

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SLIDE 10

Comparing MO and VB theory (continued)

In VB theory we combine AOs from one atom to make hybrid atomic

  • rbitals.

=

–1.5 –1 –0.5 0.5 1 1.5 –2 –1 1 2

These hybrid orbitals are used to construct a wavefunction for a shared electron pair involved in a particular chemical bond.

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SLIDE 11

BH3

BH3 is trigonal planar. The s and p orbitals of boron do not point toward the corners of an equilateral triangle. We will create a set of hybrid orbitals that do point toward the corners of an equilateral triangle and can thus be used in the VB treatment of BH3. The 2p orbitals point along the Cartesian axes. We will need two 2p orbitals to create orbitals that point toward different directions in a plane. We will therefore construct sp2 hybrids from the 2s, 2px and 2py atomic orbitals.

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SLIDE 12

In general, combining two p wavefunctions gives another p wavefunction, but rotated: −1 2(2px) + √ 3 2 (2py) =

–2 –1 1 2 –2 –1 1 2

Note: − 1

2(1, 0, 0) + √ 3 2 (0, 1, 0) is a vector that points 120◦

counter-clockwise from the x axis. Adding in an appropriate amount of s character then cancels off most

  • f the wave in one of the lobes:

=

–2 –1 1 2 –2 –1 1 2

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SLIDE 13

sp2 hybrids

1 √ 3 (2s) + 2 √ 6 (2px) =

–2 –1 1 2 –2 –1 1 2

1 √ 3 (2s) − 1 √ 6 (2px) + 1 √ 2 (2py) =

–2 –1 1 2 –2 –1 1 2

1 √ 3 (2s) − 1 √ 6 (2px) − 1 √ 2 (2py) =

–2 –1 1 2 –2 –1 1 2

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SLIDE 14

CH4

We now need to make hybrid orbitals that point to the corners of a tetrahedron. The idea is exactly as with the trigonal planar geometry, except that we now need our hybrid orbitals to point to directions in the full three-dimensional space. We therefore need all three 2p orbitals, resulting in sp3 hybrids.

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SLIDE 15

sp3 hybrids

1 2 (2s + 2px + 2py + 2pz) =

–2 –1 1 2 x –2 –1 1 2 y –2 –1 1 2 z

1 2 (2s − 2px − 2py + 2pz) =

–2 –1 1 2 x –2 –1 1 2 y –2 –1 1 2 z

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SLIDE 16

1 2 (2s − 2px + 2py − 2pz) =

–2 –1 1 2 x –2 –1 1 2 y –2 –1 1 2 z

1 2 (2s + 2px − 2py − 2pz) =

–2 –1 1 2 x –2 –1 1 2 y –2 –1 1 2 z

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SLIDE 17

All four sp3 hybrids together:

–2 –1 1 2 x –2 –1 1 2 y –2 –1 1 2 z

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Hybridization and VSEPR

The VSEPR electronic geometries are each uniquely associated with a hybridization state: Electronic geometry Hybridization Linear sp Trigonal planar sp2 Tetrahedral sp3 In a lot of cases, this table is all you need to know about VB theory. . . Example: NH3 has a tetrahedral electronic geometry, therefore sp3 hybridization at N.

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SLIDE 19

Ethene

C C H H H H

Trigonal planar carbons = ⇒ sp2 hybridization sp2 hybrids used to make σ bonds to H atoms (with their 1s orbitals) and between the C atoms:

H H H C C H )−C(sp ) valence bond H(1s)−C(sp2) valence bond C(sp2

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Ethene (continued)

This leaves one unused p orbital on each carbon atom:

C C H H H H

The overlap of these p orbitals forms a π valence bond. VB description of the π bond: C(2p)-C(2p).

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SLIDE 21

Ethyne

C C H H

Linear geometry around each carbon = ⇒ sp hybridization Each carbon atom has two p orbitals left over:

H H C C

These p orbitals combine into two π bonds.

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Formaldehyde

C H H :O:

Trigonal planar geometry at the carbon atom = ⇒ sp2 hybridization The O atom can form a σ bond using a p orbital.

H :O: O(2p)−C(sp C H ) valence bond H(1s)−C(sp

2 2)

valence bonds

Why use the O(2p) rather than the O(2s) for bonding?

The general assumption in VB theory is that lone pairs go into the lowest-energy AO.

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SLIDE 23

Formaldehyde

The carbon atom has one p orbital left over which can combine with the corresponding orbital on O to form the π bond.

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SLIDE 24

Ozone

O O O O O: :O .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

The sigma framework of ozone is easy:

The central O is sp2 hybridized. One of the sp2 hybrids contains a lone pair. The other two form σ bonds with one p orbital on each of the terminal O atoms.

What about the double bond? Resonance!

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SLIDE 25

Construct VB wavefunctions corresponding to both of these structures and average these wavefunctions together:

O O O O O: :O extra 2p used for pi bonding .. .. .. .. 2s and one 2p as lone pairs, .. .. .. extra 2p used for pi bonding ..

  • ne sp hybrid as lone pair,

.. .. 2s and two 2p’s as lone pairs

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SLIDE 26

Shortcomings of VB theory

A lot of things that fall out naturally in MO theory are hard in VB theory:

Explanation of photoelectron spectra Explanation of paramagnetism of O2

In its simplest form, VB theory only tells us what we already know based on Lewis diagrams and VSEPR. It only becomes a predictive theory in its most advanced forms.

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