bonding molecular orbital उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The metal-ligand bond is somewhat strengthened by this interaction, but the complementary anti-bonding molecular orbital from ligand-to-metal bonding is not higher in energy than the anti-bonding molecular orbital from the ? bonding.
- This reduction of symmetry lifts the degeneracy of the two formerly non-bonding molecular orbitals, which by Hund's rule forces the two unpaired electrons into a new, weakly bonding orbital ( and also creates a weakly antibonding orbital ).
- Diatomic dications corresponding to stable neutral species ( e . g . formed by removal of two electrons from H 2 ) often decay quickly into two singly charged particles ( H + ), due to the loss of electrons in bonding molecular orbitals.
- A "'non-bonding orbital "', also known as " non-bonding molecular orbital " ( NBMO ), is a molecular orbital whose occupation by electrons neither increases nor decreases the bond order between the involved atoms.
- As this transforms the ground state bonding molecular orbitals of the starting materials into the ground state bonding orbitals of the product in a symmetry conservative manner this is predicted to not have the great energetic barrier present in the ground state [ 2 + 2 ] reaction above.
- While many stable molecules HOMOs consist of bonding molecular orbitals and therefore require a moderate energy jump from bonding to antibonding to reach their first excited state, the antibonding nature of molecular oxygen s HOMO allows for a lower energy gap between its ground state and first excited state.
- One example of an electronic transition degree of freedom which contributes heat capacity at standard temperature is that of nitric oxide ( NO ), in which the single electron in an anti-bonding molecular orbital has energy transitions which contribute to the heat capacity of the gas even at room temperature.
- In complexes of metals with these " d "-electron configurations, the non-bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals can be filled in two ways : one in which as many electrons as possible are put in the non-bonding orbitals before filling the anti-bonding orbitals, and one in which as many unpaired electrons as possible are put in.
- Due to complex interactions which arise from electron-electron repulsion, algebraic solutions of the Schr�dinger equation are only possible for systems with one electron such as the hydrogen atom, H 2 +, H 3 2 +, etc .; however, from these simple models arise all the familiar ?-bonding molecular orbitals stretching through the entire molecule rather than two isolated double bonds as predicted by a simple Lewis structure.