The
simplest molecules that could be imagined would have two atomic
nuclei surrounded by one to four electrons derived originally from
the two 1s atomic orbitals. We shall look at such molecules first,
and what we learn about combining 1s orbitals will carry over into
the combining of other orbitals for more complicated molecules.
The most familiar example of a molecule built from 1s atomic orbitals
is hydrogen, H ,
which has two electrons. The hydrogen molecule-ion, ,
also can exist with only one electron to hold the nuclei together.
The bond is weak, and the molecule-ion is hyperreactive, seizing
an electron where it can and turning into a neutral hydrogen molecule
again. Another short-lived but observable molecule-ion is He ,
with two nuclei and three electrons. As we shall see shortly, two
of these electrons help to bond the nuclei together, and the third
electron weakens the bond. The molecule with four electrons, He,
is only imaginary, because with two electrons holding the nuclei
and two repelling them, He
would fall apart into two helium atoms. These four molecules, one
stable, two less stable, and one nonexistent, offer a simple test
of the MO theory because they all use the same orbitals and energy
levels.
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The most familiar example of a molecule
built from 1s atomic orbitals, H2
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