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Last hour: • Good angular momentum quantum numbers in linear molecules (e.g. diatomic): |ML| = ; S; MS= ; • Molecular terms constructed similar to atomic terms: = | + | 2S+1 additional information for symmetry (+/- superscript) and parity (only in molecules with inversion symmetry, g/u subscript) • MO diagrams MO energies and occupation – for homonuclear diatomic molecules: mix “like” AO’s to MO’s – for heteronuclear diatomic molecules: mix AO’s close in energy Angular momentum in multielectron molecules (II): • In a non-rotating molecule, all terms with > 0 are doubly degenerate. This is split in rotating molecules ( doubling) • Fine structure splitting: Vℓ,s = A··, resulting in 2S+1 terms, each doubly degenerate (for >0 in non-rotating molecules) • The ground state is denoted X. • Excited states with the same multiplicity as the ground state are denoted with capital letters A,B,C,D,... in order of their energy • Excited states that have a different multiplicity are denoted with lower-case letters (a,b,c,d,...) in order of their energy. Unfortunately, the literature is full of inconsistent orderings, since the identification of excited states for many molecules is “historically grown” • Polyatomic molecules often have a tilde above the term symbol to avoid confusion with group theory labels. • Term symbols can be determined using a microstate analysis, but recall that = |ML| is used, not L • Note that is used in a confusing manner: as the quantum number for the spin projection and as a designation for a =0 state From W. Demtröder “Molecular Physics” Learning Goals for Chapter 23 – MO Theory of diatomic molecules After this chapter, the related homework problems, and reading the relevant parts of the textbook, you should be able to: • explain the fundamental assumptions leading to MO theory; • construct MO diagrams and electron configurations for diatomic molecules; • construct molecular term symbols for a given electron configuration; • explain shortcomings of MO theory. sp Hybrid Orbitals sp hybrid orbital in BeH2 from McQuarrie & Simon “Physical Chemistry” BeH2 MO diagram from Demtröder “Molecular Physics” AH2 molecules – linear vs. bent from McQuarrie & Simon “Physical Chemistry” AH2 MO diagram from Demtröder “Molecular Physics” AH2 molecules – Walsh diagram from Demtröder “Molecular Physics” Walsh diagrams from Demtröder “Molecular Physics”