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Lecture 3, January 14, 2011 energetics Nature of the Chemical Bond with applications to catalysis, materials science, nanotechnology, surface science, bioinorganic chemistry, and energy Course number: Ch120a Hours: 2-3pm Monday, Wednesday, Friday William A. Goddard, III, [email protected] 316 Beckman Institute, x3093 Charles and Mary Ferkel Professor of Chemistry, Materials Science, and Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology Teaching Assistants: Wei-Guang Liu <[email protected]> Caitlin Scott <[email protected]> Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 1 Course schedule Friday January 14: L3 and L4 Monday January 17: caltech holiday (MLKing) Wednesday January 19: wag L5 and L6 Friday January 21: wag L7 and L8, caught up Monday January 24: wag L9 Wednesday January 26: wag L10 and L11 Friday January 28: wag participates in a retreat for our nanotechnology project with UCLA Back on schedule Monday January 31: wag L12 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 2 Last time Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 3 Molecular Orbitals: Alternative way to view states of H2 Valence bond: start with ground state at R=∞ and build molecule by bonding atoms Molecular orbitals (MO): start with optimum orbitals of one electron molecule at R=Re and add electrons u: antibonding g: bonding Put 2 electrons in 2 orbitals, get 4 twoelectron states Ch120a-Goddard-L03 1-electron molecular orbitals © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 4 Analyze gu and ug states in 2 electron space All four have one nodal plane and lead to same KE and same PE except for the electron-electron repulsion term gu gu-ug ug gu+ug <Φ(1,2)|1/r12| Φ(1,2)> Worst case is for z1=z2, along diagonal Never have Maximum at z1=z2 z1=z2 2011 great EE EE Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2010 William A. Goddard III, allterrible rights reserved 5 Ground and excited states from MO analysis Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 6 Compare ground state MO and VB near Re KE: best possible KE: pretty good EE: too much ionic character EE: excellent Now consider large R: Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 7 compare ground state from VB and MO Ground state MO wavefunction is half covalent and half ionic OK for R=Requilbrium = Re, but not for R = ∞ Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 8 Compare bond dissociation for VB and MO MO limit half covalent and half ionic H- + H+ Covalent limit H + H Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 9 VB and MO for u excited states Pure covalent, but antibonding Pure ionic, but bonding Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 10 Energies for H2 states based on atomic orbitals (z=1) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 11 Summary 2nd Postulate QM EQM = KEQM + PEQM where for a system with a potential energy function, V(x,y,z,t) PEQM= < Φ| V|Φ>=∫Φ(x,y,z,t)*V(x,y,z,t)Φ(x,y,z,t)dxdydz Just like Classical mechanics except weight V with P=|Φ|2 KEQM = (Ћ2/2me) <(Φ·Φ> where <(Φ·Φ> ≡ ∫ [(dΦ/dx)2 + (dΦ/dx)2 + (dΦ/dx)2] dxdydz We have assumed a normalized wavefunction, <Φ|Φ> = 1 The stability of the H atom was explained by this KE (proportional to the average square of the gradient of the wavefunction). Also we used the preference of KE for smooth wavefunctions to explain the bonding in H2+ and H2. So far we have been able to use the above expressions to reason qualitatively. However to actually solve for the wavefunctions 12 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2010which 2011 William A. we Goddard III, all rights reserved requires the Schrodinger Eqn., derive next. Alternative form for QM KE One dimensional KEQM = (Ћ2/2me)<(dΦ/dx)| (dΦ/dx)> integrate by parts: Goddard form ∫(du/dx) (v) dx = -∫(u)(dv/dx)dx if u,v 0 at boundaries Let du/dx = (dΦ*/dx) and v = dΦ/dx then KEQM = - (Ћ2/2me) ∫(Φ*)(d2Φ/dx2) dx = - (Ћ2/2me) <Φ|(d2/dx2)| Φ> ^ | Φ> standard form KEQM = <Φ| - (Ћ2/2me) (d2/dx2)| Φ> = <Φ| KE ^ = - (Ћ2/2me) (d2/dx2) Where KE operator is KE Three dimensions KEQM = (Ћ2/2me) <(Φ·Φ> Goddard form where <(Φ·Φ> ≡ ∫ [(dΦ/dx)2 + (dΦ/dx)2 + (dΦ/dx)2] dxdydz integrating by parts: ^ | Φ> standard form KEQM = <Φ| - (Ћ2/2me)2 | Φ> = <Φ| KE Where KE operator is ^ = - (Ћ2/2me) 2 KE 2 + (dΦ/dx)2] 2Ch120a-Goddard-L03 = [(dΦ/dx)2 + (dΦ/dx) © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 13 3rd Postulate of QM, the variational principle The ground state wavefunction is the system, Φ, has the lowest possible energy out of all possible wavefunctions. Consider that Φex is the exact wavefunction with energy Eex = <Φ’|Ĥ|Φ’>/<Φ’|Φ’> and that Φap = Φex + dΦ is some other approximate wavefunction. Then Eap = <Φap|Ĥ|Φap>/<Φap|Φap> ≥ Eex This means that for sufficiently small dΦ, dE = 0 for all possible changes, dΦ We write dE/dΦ = 0 for all dΦ E Eex Eap This is called the variational principle. For the ground state, d2E/dΦ ≥ 0 for all Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved possible changes 14 Summary deriviation of Schrödinger Equation ^ | Φ> + < Φ| V|Φ> = <Φ| Ĥ | Φ> EQM = <Φ| KE ^ + V and KE ^ = - (Ћ2/2m )2 where the Hamiltonian is Ĥ ≡ KE e And we assume a normalized wavefunction, <Φ|Φ> = 1 V(x,y,z,t) is the (classical) potential energy for the system Consider arbitrary Φap = Φex + dΦ and require that dE= Eap – Eex = 0 Get <dΦ|Ĥ-Eex|Φex>] = ∫ dΦ*[(Ĥ-Eex)Φex] = 0 for all possible dΦ This [(Ĥ-Eex)Φex] = 0 or the Schrödinger equation Ĥ Φex = EexΦex The exact ground state wavefunction is a solution of this equation Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 15 Excited states The Schrödinger equation Ĥ Φk = EkΦk Has an infinite number of solutions or eigenstates (German for characteristic states), each corresponding to a possible exact wavefunction for an excited state For example H atom: 1s, 2s, 2px, 3dxy etc Also the g and u states of H2+ and H2. These states are orthogonal: <Φj|Φk> = djk= 1 if j=k = 0 if j≠k Note < Φj| Ĥ|Φk> = Ek < Φj|Φk> = Ek djk We will denote the ground state as k=0 The set of all eigenstates of Ĥ is complete, thus any arbitrary function Ө can be expanded as Ө = Sk Ck Φk where <Φj| Ө>=Cj or Ө = Sk Φk <Φk| Ө> Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 16 Coordinates of H atom The Hamiltonian for H2+ For H atom the Hamiltonian is r Ĥ = - (Ћ2/2me)2 – e2/r or Ĥ = - ½ 2 – 1/r (in atomic units) For H2+ molecule the Hamiltonian (in atomic units) is Ĥ = - ½ 2 + V(r) where 1 1 1 Coordinates of H2+ We will rewrite this as Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 17 The Schrödinger Equation for H2+ The exact (electronic wavefunction of H2+ is obtained by solving Here we can ignore the 1/R term (not depend on electron coordinates) to write where e is the electronic energy Then the total energy E becomes E= e + 1/R R Since v(r) depends on R, the E(R) wavefunction φ depends on R. Thus for each R we solve for φ and e and add to 1/R to get the total energy E(R) Born-Oppenheimer approximation Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 18 Symmetry Considerations The operation of inversion (denoted as ^ I ) through the origin of a coordinate system changes the coordinates as x -x y -y z -z Taking the origin of the coordinate system as the bond midpoint, inversion changes the electronic coordinates as illustrated. After inversion the electron is remains a distance of ra from one of the nuclei and rb from the other, but their identities are transposed. Thus the potential energy, v(r) is unchanged by inversion, v(-x,-y,-z) ≡ v( ^ I r) = v(r) where r is considered as the 3D vector with components x,y,z Thus we say that v(r)© copyright is invariant under inversion 19 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 2011 Considering symmetry Under inversion the kinetic energy terms in the Hamiltonian are also unchanged Hence the full Hamiltonian is invariant under inversion h(-x,-y,-z) ≡ h( ^ I r) = h(x,y,z) = h(r) Now consider that we had solved hφ=eφ for the exact wavefunction φ and apply the inversion to both sides ^ I hφ= e^ Iφ Which we can rewrite as h(-r)φ(-r)=eφ(-r) But h(-r) = h(r) because of inversion symmetry 20 Thus h(r)φ(-r)=eφ(-r)© copyright 2011 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 4th postulate of QM Consider the exact eigenstate of a system HΦ = EΦ and multiply the Schrödinger equation by some CONSTANT phase factor (independent of position and time) exp(ia) = eia eia HΦ = H (eia Φ) = E (eia Φ) Thus Φ and (eia Φ) lead to identical properties and we consider them to describe exactly the same state. 4th Postulate: wavefunctions differing only by a constant phase factor describe the same state Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 21 Continue with symmetry discussion We just derived that because h(-r) = h(r) Then for any eigenfunction φ(r) of h h(r)φ(r) = eφ(r) It must be that φ(-r) also is an eigenfunction of the same h with the same energy, e. φg(r) h(r)φ(-r) = eφ(-r) Thus for a system with inversion, each nondegenerate eigenstate is of either g or u inversion symmetry. φg(r) = + φg(r) g for gerade or even φu(r) φu(r) = - φu(r) u for ungerade or odd Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 22 Now consider symmetry for H2 molecule For H2 we use the coordinate system at the right. Using the same conventions and assumptions as for H2+ leads to where 1/r12 is the interaction between the two electrons and Contains all terms depending only on the coordinates of electron 1 inverting the coordinates of electron 1 leaves h(1) invariant but not H(1,2) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 23 Invert coordinates of electron 1 As before h(1) is invariant and so is h(2), but clearly something is different for H2. The problem is 1/r12. Inverting electron 1 or 2 separately does not preserve the r12 distance. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 24 For multielectron systems, the inversion symmetry applies only if we invert all electron coordinates simultaneously Thus we define I to be Which we write as This leads to Now we see that H(1,2) is invariant under inversion. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 25 Symmetry for H2 Just as for H2+, inversion symmetry of H2 leads to the result that every eigenstate of H2 is either g or u Consider the VB wavefunctions ^ I = does NOT have symmetry But I[ I ] = + is ] = - is Which is why we labeled them as such Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 26 Now consider inversion symmetry for MO wavefunctions This is easy since each MO has inversion symmetry Thus Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 27 Permutation Symmetry transposing the two electrons in H(1,2) must leave the Hamiltonian invariant since the electrons are identical 1 2 H(2,1) = h(2) + h(1) + 1/r12 + 1/R = H(1,2) We will denote this transposition as t where tΦ(1,2) = Φ(2,1) Note that t2 = e, the einheit or identity operator t2Φ(1,2) = Φ(1,2) Thus t is of order 2 and the previous arguments on inversion apply equally to transposition Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 28 Permutational symmetry of wavefunctions Every exact two-electron wavefunction must be either symmetric, s, or antisymmetric, a with respect to transposition Applying this to the product MO wavefunctions leads to No symmetry Thus symmetry alone, would tell us that the ug and gu product wavefunctions are wrong Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 29 Permutational symmetry for the u MO states of H2 We saw previously that combining these wavefunctions leads to a low lying covalent state and a high energy ionic state Which lead properly to symmetric and antisymmetric permutation states Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 30 permutational symmetry for H2 wavefunctions symmetric antisymmetric Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 31 Electron spin, 5th postulate QM Consider application of a magnetic field Our Hamiltonian has no terms dependent on the magnetic field. Hence no effect. But experimentally there is a huge effect. Namely The ground state of H atom splits into two states b B=0 Increasing B a This leads to the 5th postulate of QM In addition to the 3 spatial coordinates x,y,z each electron has internal or spin coordinates that lead to a magnetic dipole aligned either with the external magnetic field or opposite. We label these as a for spin up and b for spin down. Thus the ground states of H atom are φ(xyz)a(spin) and φ(xyz)b(spin) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 32 Electron spin So far we have considered the electron as a point particle with mass, me, and charge, -e. In fact the electron has internal coordinates, that we refer to as spin, with two possible angular momenta. +½ or a or up-spin and -½ or b or down-spin But the only external manifestation is that this spin leads to a magnetic moment that interacts with an external magnetic field to splt into two states, one more stable and the other less stable by an equal amount. DE = -gBzsz b B=0 Increasing B a Now the wavefunction of an atom is written as a spinorbital ψ(r,s) where r refers to the vector of 3 spatial coordinates, x,y,z andCh120a-Goddard-L03 s refers to the internal spin coordinates © copyright 2010 William 2011 A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 33 Spin states for 1 electron systems Our Hamiltonian does not involve any terms dependent on the spin, so without a magnetic field we have 2 degenerate states for H atom. φ(r)a, with up-spin, ms = +1/2 φ(r)b, with down-spin, ms = -1/2 The electron is said to have a spin angular momentum of S=1/2 with projections along a polar axis (say the external magnetic field) of +1/2 (spin up) or -1/2 (down spin). This explains the observed splitting of the H atom into two states in a magnetic field Similarly for H2+ the ground state becomes φg(r)a and φg(r)b While the excited state becomes φu(r)a and φu(r)b Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 34 Spin states for 2-electron systems Since each electron can have up or down spin, any two-electron system, such as H2 molecule will lead to 4 possible spin states each with the same energy Φ(1,2) a(1) a(2) Φ(1,2) a(1) b(2) Symmetric spin Φ(1,2) b(1) a(2) Neither symmetric nor antisymmetric Φ(1,2) b(1) b(2) Symmetric spin This immediately raises an issue with permutational symmetry Since the Hamiltonian is invariant under interchange of the spin for electron 1 and the spin for electron 2, the two-electron spin functions must be symmetric or antisymmetric with respect to interchange of the spin coordinates, s1 and s2 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 35 Spin states for 2 electron systems Combining the two-electron spin functions to form symmetric and antisymmetric combinations leads to M S Φ(1,2) a(1) a(2) Φ(1,2) [a(1) b(2) + b(1) a(2)] +1 Symmetric spin Φ(1,2) b(1) b(2) Φ(1,2) [a(1) b(2) - b(1) a(2)] 0 -1 Antisymmetric spin 0 Adding the spin quantum numbers, ms, to obtain the total spin projection, MS = ms1 + ms2 leads to the numbers above. The three symmetric spin states are considered to have spin S=1 with components +1.0,-1, which are referred to as a triplet state (since it leads to 3 levels in a magnetic field) The antisymmetric state is considered to have spin S=0 with just © copyright 2010 A. Goddard III, all rights reserved oneCh120a-Goddard-L03 component, 0. It is called2011 aWilliam singlet state. 36 Spinorbitals The Hamiltonian does not depend on spin the spatial and spin coordinates are independent. Hence the total wavefunction can be written as a product of a spatial wavefunction, φ(s), called an orbital, and a spin function, х(s) = a or b. We refer to the composite as a spinorbital ψ(r,s) = φ(s) х(s) where r refers to the vector of 3 spatial coordinates, x,y,z while s to the internal spin coordinates. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 37 spinorbitals for two-electron systems Thus for a two-electron system with independent electrons, the wavefunction becomes Ψ(1,2) = Ψ(r1,s1,r2,s2) = ψa(r1,s1) ψb(r2,s2) = φa(r1) хa(s1) φb(r2) хb(s2) =[φa(r1) φb(r2)][хa(s1) хb(s2)] Where the last term factors the total wavefunction into space and spin parts Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 38 Permutational symmetry again For a two-electron system the Hamiltonian is invariant (unchanged) upon transposition of the electrons (changing both spatial and spin coordinates) H(2,1) = H(1,2) Again the simultaneous transposition of space-spin coordinats of two electrons is of order 2 Thus for every eigenstate of the Hamiltonian we obtain either Ψs(1,2) = +1 Ψs(1,2) Ψa(1,2) = -1 Ψa(1,2) Here the transposition interchanges both spin and space components of the wavefunction simultaneously Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 39 Permutational symmetry continued Factoring the wave function as spatial and spin coordinates Ψ(1,2) = (1,2)(1,2) We know that the H(1,2) is separately unchanged by transposing either just the spacial coordinates or the spin coordinates Thus (2,1) = +(1,2) or (2,1) = -(1,2) and either (2,1) = +(1,2) or (2,1) = -(1,2) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 40 Permutational symmetry, summary Our Hamiltonian for H2, H(1,2) =h(1) + h(2) + 1/r12 + 1/R Does not involve spin This it is invariant under 3 kinds of permutations Space only: r1 r2 Spin only: s1 s2 Space and spin simultaneously: (r1,s1) (r2,s2) Since doing any of these interchanges twice leads to the identity, we know from previous arguments that Ψ(2,1) = Ψ(1,2) symmetry for transposing spin and space coord Φ(2,1) = Φ(1,2) symmetry for transposing space coord Χ(2,1) = Χ(1,2) symmetry for transposing spin coord Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 41 Permutational symmetries for H2 and He H2 Have 4 degenerate g ground states for H2 Have 4 degenerate u excited states for H2 He Have 4 degenerate ground state for He Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 42 Permutational symmetries for H2 and He H2 Have 4 degenerate g ground states for H2 Have 4 degenerate u excited states for H2 He Have 4 degenerate ground state for He Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 43 Permutational symmetries for H2 and He H2 He Ch120a-Goddard-L03 the only states observed are those for which the wavefunction changes sign upon transposing all coordinates of electron 1 and 2 Leads to the 6th postulate of 44 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved QM The 6th postulate of QM: the Pauli Principle For every eigenstate of an electronic system H(1,2,…i…j…N)Ψ(1,2,…i…j…N) = EΨ(1,2,…i…j…N) The electronic wavefunction Ψ(1,2,…i…j…N) changes sign upon transposing the total (space and spin) coordinates of any two electrons Ψ(1,2,…j…i…N) = - Ψ(1,2,…i…j…N) We can write this as tij Ψ = - Ψ for all I and j Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 45 Implications of the Pauli Principle Consider two independent electrons, 1 on the earth described by ψe(1) and 2 on the moon described by ψm(2) Ψ(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) And test whether this satisfies the Pauli Principle Ψ(2,1)= ψm(1) ψe(2) ≠ - ψe(1) ψm(2) Thus the Pauli Principle does NOT allow the simple product wavefunction for two independent electrons Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 46 Quick fix to satisfy the Pauli Principle Combine the product wavefunctions to form a symmetric combination Ψs(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) + ψm(1) ψe(2) And an antisymmetric combination Ψa(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2) We see that t12 Ψs(1,2) = Ψs(2,1) = Ψs(1,2) (boson symmetry) t12 Ψa(1,2) = Ψa(2,1) = -Ψa(1,2) (Fermion symmetry) Thus for electrons, the Pauli Principle only allows the antisymmetric combination for two independent electrons Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 47 Consider some simple cases: identical spinorbitals Ψ(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2) Identical spinorbitals: assume that ψm = ψe Then Ψ(1,2)= ψe(1) ψe(2) - ψe(1) ψe(2) = 0 Thus two electrons cannot be in identical spinorbitals Note that if ψm = eia ψe where a is a constant phase factor, we still get zero Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 48 Consider some simple cases: orthogonality Consider the wavefunction Ψold(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2) where the spinorbitals ψm and ψe are orthogonal hence <ψm|ψe> = 0 Define a new spinorbital θm = ψm + l ψe (ignore normalization) That is NOT orthogonal to ψe. Then Ψnew(1,2)= ψe(1) θm(2) - θm(1) ψe(2) = ψe(1) θm(2) + l ψe(1) ψe(2) - θm(1) ψe(2) - l ψe(1) ψe(2) = ψe(1) ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2) =Ψold(1,2) Thus the Pauli Principle leads to orthogonality of spinorbitals for different electrons, <ψi|ψj> = dij = 1 if i=j =0 if i≠j Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 49 Consider some simple cases: nonuniqueness Starting with the wavefunction ψm Ψold(1,2)= ψe(1) ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2) Consider the new spinorbitals θm and θe where θm = (cosa) ψm + (sina) ψe Note that <θi|θj> = dij a Then Ψnew(1,2)= θe(1) θm(2) - θm(1) θe(2) = +(cosa)2 ψ (1)ψ (2) +(cosa)(sina) ψ (1)ψ (2) θm ψe θe = (cosa) ψe - (sina) ψm e m e e -(sina)(cosa) ψm(1) ψm(2) - (sina)2 ψm(1) ψe(2) θe a -(cosa)2 ψm(1) ψe(2) +(cosa)(sina) ψm(1) ψm(2) -(sina)(cosa) ψe(1) ψe(2) +(sina)2 ψe(1) ψm(2) [(cosa)2+(sina)2] [ψe(1)ψm(2) - ψm(1) ψe(2)] =Ψold(1,2) Thus linear combinations of the spinorbitals do not change Ψ(1,2)50 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved Determinants The determinant of a matrix is defined as The determinant is zero if any two columns (or rows) are identical Adding some amount of any one column to any other column leaves the determinant unchanged. Thus each column can be made orthogonal to all other columns.(and the same for rows) The above properties are just those of the Pauli Principle Thus we will take determinants of our wavefunctions. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 51 The antisymmetrized wavefunction Now put the spinorbitals into the matrix and take the deteminant Where the antisymmetrizer determinant operator. can be thought of as the Similarly starting with the 3!=6 product wavefunctions of the form The only combination satisfying the Pauil Principle is Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 52 Example: Interchanging electrons 1 and 3 leads to From the properties of determinants we know that interchanging any two columns (or rows) that is interchanging any two spinorbitals, merely changes the sign of the wavefunction Guaranteeing that the Pauli Principle is always satisfied Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 53 Historical Note The idea of combining functions to form say a determinant in the same way we would combine numbers algebraically goes back to a German Mathematician, Stäckel in ~1905 Later Heisenberg introduced the concept of an antisymmetrized product of orbitals in discussing magnetic systems in ~1925 For some reason they are now called Slater determinants, I believe this is because Slater showed that the simplest allowed product wavefunction would have this form, in ~1928 Warning: these dates are from remembering reading these papers when I was a graduate student, they may be a bit off Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 54 New material L3 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 55 Energy for 2 electron product wavefunction Consider the product wavefunction Ψ(1,2) = ψa(1) ψb(2) And the Hamiltonian H(1,2) = h(1) + h(2) +1/r12 + 1/R In the details slides next, we derive E = < Ψ(1,2)| H(1,2)|Ψ(1,2)>/ <Ψ(1,2)|Ψ(1,2)> E = haa + hbb + Jab + 1/R where haa =<a|h|a>, hbb =<b|h|b> Jab ≡ <ψa(1)ψb(2) |1/r12 |ψa(1)ψb(2)>=ʃ [ψa(1)]2 [ψb(1)]2/r12 Represent the total Coulomb interaction between the electron density ra(1)=| ψa(1)|2 and rb(2)=| ψb(2)|2 Since the integrand ra(1) rb(2)/r12 is positive for all positions of 1 and 2, the integral is positive, Jab > 0 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 56 Details in deriving energy: normalization First, the normalization term is <Ψ(1,2)|Ψ(1,2)>=<ψa(1)|ψa(1)><ψb(2) ψb(2)> Which from now on we will write as <Ψ|Ψ> = <ψa|ψa><ψb|ψb> = 1 since the ψi are normalized Here our convention is that a two-electron function such as <Ψ(1,2)|Ψ(1,2)> is always over both electrons so we need not put in the (1,2) while one-electron functions such as <ψa(1)|ψa(1)> or <ψb(2) ψb(2)> are assumed to be over just one electron and we ignore the labels 1 or 2 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 57 Details of deriving energy: one electron terms Using H(1,2) = h(1) + h(2) +1/r12 + 1/R We partition the energy E = <Ψ| H|Ψ> as E = <Ψ|h(1)|Ψ> + <Ψ|h(2)|Ψ> + <Ψ|1/R|Ψ> + <Ψ|1/r12|Ψ> Here <Ψ|1/R|Ψ> = <Ψ|Ψ>/R = 1/R since R is a constant <Ψ|h(1)|Ψ> = <ψa(1)ψb(2) |h(1)|ψa(1)ψb(2)> = = <ψa(1)|h(1)|ψa(1)><ψb(2)|ψb(2)> = <a|h|a><b|b> = ≡ haa Where haa≡ <a|h|a> ≡ <ψa|h|ψa> Similarly <Ψ|h(2)|Ψ> = <ψa(1)ψb(2) |h(2)|ψa(1)ψb(2)> = = <ψa(1)|ψa(1)><ψb(2)|h(2)|ψb(2)> = <a|a><b|h|b> = ≡ hbb The remaining term we denote as Jab ≡ <ψa(1)ψb(2) |1/r12 |ψa(1)ψb(2)> so that the total energy is E =Ch120a-Goddard-L03 haa + hbb + Jab + 1/R © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 58 The energy for an antisymmetrized product, A ψaψb The total energy is that of the product plus the exchange term which is negative with 4 parts Eex=-< ψaψb|h(1)|ψb ψa >-< ψaψb|h(2)|ψb ψa >-< ψaψb|1/R|ψb ψa > - < ψaψb|1/r12|ψb ψa > The first 3 terms lead to < ψa|h(1)|ψb><ψbψa >+ <ψa|ψb><ψb|h(2)|ψa >+ <ψa|ψb><ψb|ψa>/R But <ψb|ψa>=0 Thus all are zero Thus the only nonzero term is the 4th term: -Kab=- < ψaψb|1/r12|ψb ψa > which is called the exchange energy (or the 2-electron exchange) since it arises from the exchange term due to the antisymmetrizer. Summarizing, the energy of the Aψaψb wavefunction for H2 is E = haa + hbb + (Jab –Kab) + 1/R Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 59 The energy of the antisymmetrized wavefunction The total electron-electron repulsion part of the energy for any wavefunction Ψ(1,2) must be positive Eee =∫ (d3r1)((d3r2)|Ψ(1,2)|2/r12 > 0 This follows since the integrand is positive for all positions of r1 and r2 then We derived that the energy of the A ψa ψb wavefunction is E = haa + hbb + (Jab –Kab) + 1/R Where the Eee = (Jab –Kab) > 0 Since we have already established that Jab > 0 we can conclude that Jab > Kab > 0 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 60 Separate the spinorbital into orbital and spin parts Since the Hamiltonian does not contain spin the spinorbitals can be factored into spatial and spin terms. For 2 electrons there are two possibilities: Both electrons have the same spin ψa(1)ψb(2)=[Φa(1)a(1)][Φb(2)a(2)]= [Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)a(2)] So that the antisymmetrized wavefunction is Aψa(1)ψb(2)= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)a(2)]= =[Φa(1)Φb(2)- Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)a(2)] Also, similar results for both spins down Aψa(1)ψb(2)= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][b(1)b(2)]= =[Φa(1)Φb(2)- Φb(1)Φa(2)][b(1)b(2)] Since <ψa|ψb>= 0 = < Φa| Φb><a|a> = < Φa| Φb> We see that the spatial orbitals for same spin must be orthogonal Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 61 Energy for 2 electrons with same spin The total energy becomes E = haa + hbb + (Jab –Kab) + 1/R where haa ≡ <Φa|h|Φa> and hbb ≡ <Φb|h|Φb> where Jab= <Φa(1)Φb(2) |1/r12 |Φa(1)Φb(2)> We derived the exchange term for spin orbitals with same spin as follows Kab ≡ <ψa(1)ψb(2) |1/r12 |ψb(1)ψa(2)> `````= <Φa(1)Φb(2) |1/r12 |Φb(1)Φa(2)><a(1)|a(1)><a(2)|a(2)> ≡ Kab where Kab ≡ <Φa(1)Φb(2) |1/r12 |Φb(1)Φa(2)> Involves only spatial coordinates. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 62 Energy for 2 electrons with opposite spin Now consider the exchange term for spin orbitals with opposite spin Kab ≡ <ψa(1)ψb(2) |1/r12 |ψb(1)ψa(2)> `````= <Φa(1)Φb(2) |1/r12 |Φb(1)Φa(2)><a(1)|b(1)><b(2)|a(2)> =0 Since <a(1)|b(1)> = 0. Thus the total energy is Eab = haa + hbb + Jab + 1/R With no exchange term unless the spins are the same Since <ψa|ψb>= 0 = < Φa| Φb><a|b> There is no orthogonality condition of the spatial orbitals for opposite spin electrons In general < Φa| Φb> =S, where the overlap S ≠ 0 Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 63 Summarizing: Energy for 2 electrons When the spinorbitals have the same spin, Aψa(1)ψb(2)= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)a(2)] The total energy is Eaa = haa + hbb + (Jab –Kab) + 1/R But when the spinorbitals have the opposite spin, Aψa(1)ψb(2)= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)b(2)]= The total energy is Eab = haa + hbb + Jab + 1/R With no exchange term Thus exchange energies arise only for the case in which both electrons have the same spin Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 64 Consider further the case for spinorbtials with opposite spin Neither of these terms has the correct permutation symmetry separately for space or spin. But they can be combined [Φa(1)Φb(2)-Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)+b(1)a(2)]= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)b(2)]-A[Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)] Which describes the Ms=0 component of the triplet state [Φa(1)Φb(2)+Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)-b(1)a(2)]= A[Φa(1)Φb(2)][a(1)b(2)]+A[Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)] Which describes the Ms=0 component of the singlet state Thus for the ab case, two Slater determinants must be combined to obtain the correct spin and space permutational symmetry Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 65 Consider further the case for spinorbtials with opposite spin The wavefunction [Φa(1)Φb(2)-Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)+b(1)a(2)] Leads directly to 3E ab = haa + hbb + (Jab –Kab) + 1/R Exactly the same as for [Φa(1)Φb(2)-Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)a(2)] [Φa(1)Φb(2)-Φb(1)Φa(2)][b(1)b(2)] These three states are collectively referred to as the triplet state and denoted as having spin S=1 The other combination leads to one state, referred to as the singlet state and denoted as having spin S=0 [Φa(1)Φb(2)+Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)-b(1)a(2)] We will analyze the energy for this wavefunction next. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 66 Consider the energy of the singlet wavefunction [Φa(1)Φb(2)+Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)-b(1)a(2)] ≡ (ab+ba)(ab-ba) The next few slides show that 1E = {(haa + hbb + (hab + hba) S2 + Jab + Kab + (1+S2)/R}/(1 + S2) Where the terms with S or Kab come for the exchange \ Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 67 energy of the singlet wavefunction - details [Φa(1)Φb(2)+Φb(1)Φa(2)][a(1)b(2)-b(1)a(2)] ≡ (ab+ba)(ab-ba) 1E = numerator/ denominator Where numerator =<(ab+ba)(ab-ba)|H|(ab+ba)(ab-ba)> = =<(ab+ba)|H|(ab+ba)><(ab-ba)|(ab-ba)> denominator = <(ab+ba)(ab-ba)|(ab+ba)(ab-ba)> Since <(ab-ba)|(ab-ba)>= 2 <ab|(ab-ba)>= 2[<a|a><b|b>-<a|b><b|a>]=2 We obtain numerator =<(ab+ba)|H|(ab+ba)> = 2 <ab|H|(ab+ba)> denominator = <(ab+ba)|(ab+ba)>=2 <ab|(ab+ba)> Thus 1E = <ab|H|(ab+ba)>/<ab|(ab+ba)> Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 68 energy of the singlet wavefunction - details 1E = <ab|H|(ab+ba)>/<ab|(ab+ba)> Consider first the denominator <ab|(ab+ba)> = <a|a><b|b> + <a|b><b|a> = 1 + S2 Where S= <a|b>=<b|a> is the overlap The numerator becomes <ab|(ab+ba)> = <a|h|a><b|b> + <a|h|b><b|a> + + <a|a><b|h|b> + <a|b><b|h|a> + + <ab|1/r12|(ab+ba)> + (1 + S2)/R Thus the total energy is 1E = {(haa + hbb + (hab + hba) S2 + Jab + Kab + (1+S2)/R}/(1 + S2) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 69 Re-examine the energy for H2+ For H2+ the VB wavefunctions were Φg = (хL + хR) and Φu = (хL - хR) (ignoring normalization) where H = h + 1/R. This leads to the energy for the bonding state eg = <L+R|H|L+R>/ <L+R|L+R> = 2 <L|H|L+R>/ 2<L|L+R> = (hLL + hLR)/(1+S) + 1/R And for the antibonding state eu = (hLL - hLR)/(1-S) + 1/R We find it convenient to rewrite as eg = (hLL + 1/R) + t/(1+S) eu = (hLL + 1/R) - t/(1-S) where t = (hLR - ShLL) includes the terms that dominate the bonding and antibonding character of these 2 states Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 70 The VB interference or resonance energy for H2+ The VB wavefunctions for H2+ Φg = (хL + хR) and Φu = (хL - хR) lead to eg = (hLL + 1/R) + t/(1+S) ≡ ecl + Egx eu = (hLL + 1/R) - t/(1-S) ≡ ecl + Eux where t = (hLR - ShLL) is the VB interference or resonance energy and ecl = (hLL + 1/R) is the classical energy As shown here the t dominates the bonding and antibonding of these states Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 71 Analysis of classical and interference energies The classical energy, ecl = (hLL + 1/R), is the total energy of the system if the wavefunction is forced to remain an atomic orbital as R is decreased. The exchange part of the energy is the change in the energy due to QM interference of хL and хR, that is the exchange of electrons between orbitals on the L and R nuclei The figure shows that ecl is weakly antibonding with little change down to 3 bohr whereas the exchange terms start splitting the g and u states starting at ~ 7 bohr. Here the bonding of the g state arises solely from the exchange term, egx = t/(1+S) where t is strongly negative, while the exchange term makes the u state hugely repulsive, eux = -t/(1-S) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 72 Analysis of classical and interference energies egx = t/(1+S) while eux = -t/(1-S) Consider first very long R, where S~0 Then egx = t while eux = -t so that the bonding and antibonding effects are similar. Now consider a distance R=2.5 bohr = 1.32 A near equilbrium Here S= 0.4583 t= -0.0542 hartree leading to egx = -0.0372 hartree while eux = + 0.10470 hartree ecl = 0.00472 hartree Where the 1-S term in the denominator makes the u state 3 times as antibonding as the g ©state is2011 bonding. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 copyright 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 73 Analytic results - details Explicit calculations (see appendix A of chapter 2) leads to S = [1+R+ R2/3] exp(-R) ecl = - ½ + (1 + 1/R) exp(-2R) t = -[2R/3 – 1/R] exp(-R) – S(1+1/R) exp(-2R) t ~ -[2R/3 – 1/R] exp(-R) neglecting terms of order exp(-3R) Thus for long R, t ~ -2S/R That is, the quantity in t dominating the bond in H2+ is proportional to the overlap between the atomic orbitals. At long R this leads to a bond energy of the form t~ -(2/3) R exp(-R) That is the bond strength decreases exponentially with R. t has a minimum at ~ R=2 bohr, which is the optimum R. But S continues to increase until S=1 at R=0. Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 74 Contragradience The above discussions show that the interference or exchange part of KE dominates the bonding. This decrease in the KE due to overlapping orbitals is dominated by tx = ½ [< (хL). ((хR)> - S [< (хL)2> хL Which is large and negative in the shaded region between atoms, where the L and R orbitals have opposite slope (congragradience) Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved хR 75 Analysis of classical and exchange energies for H2 For H2 the VB energy for the bonding state (g, singlet) is 1E = <ab|H|(ab+ba)>/<ab|(ab+ba)> g 1E = {(h 2 2 g aa + hbb + (hab + hba) S + Jab + Kab + (1+S )/R}/(1 + S ) Similary for the VB triplet we obtain 3E = <ab|H|(ab-ba)>/<ab|(ab-ba)> u 3E = {(h 2 2 u aa + hbb - (hab + hba) S + Jab - Kab + (1-S )/R}/(1 - S ) As with H2+, we find it useful to define a classical energy, with no exchange or interference or resonance Ecl = <ab|H|ab>/<ab|ab> = haa + hbb + Jab + 1/R Again we can define the exchange energy as 1E = Ecl + E x g g 3E = Ecl + E x u u Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 76 The VB exchange energies for H2 For H2, the classical energy is slightly attractive, but again the difference between bonding (g) and anti bonding (u) is essentially all due to the exchange term. 1E g 3E u = Ecl + Egx = Ecl + Eux Each energy is referenced to the value at R=∞, which is -1 for Ecl, Eu, Eg and 0 for Exu and Exg Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 77 Analysis of the exchange energies Egx = {(hab + hba) S + Kab –EclS2}/(1 + S2) = Ex/(1 + S2) Eux = -{(hab + hba) S + Kab –EclS2}/(1 - S2) = - Ex/(1 - S2) where Ex = {(hab + hba) S + Kab –EclS2} = T1 + T2 Here T1 = {(hab + hba) S –(haa + hbb)S2} = 2St contains the 1e part T2 = {Kab –S2Jab} contains the 2e part Clearly the Ex is dominated by T1 and clearly T1 is dominated by the kinetic part, T1t. Thus we can understand bonding by analyzing just the KE Ch120a-Goddard-L03 part T2 Ex T1 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved 78 Analysis of the exchange energies The one electron exchange for H2 leads to Eg1x ~ +2St /(1 + S2) Eu1x ~ -2St /(1 - S2) which can be compared to the H2+ case egx ~ +t/(1 + S) eux ~ -t/(1 - S) For R=1.6bohr (near Re), S=0.7 Eg1x ~ 0.94t vs. egx ~ 0.67t Eu1x ~ -2.75t vs. eux ~ -3.33t For R=4 bohr, S=0.1 Eg1x ~ 0.20t vs. egx ~ 0.91t Eu1x ~ -0.20t vs. eux ~ -1.11t E(hartree) Eu1x Consider a very small R with S=1. Then Eg1x ~ 2t vs. egx ~ t/2 so that the 2e bond is twice as strong as the 1e bond 1x E g but at long R, the 1e bond is R(bohr) 79 stronger than the 2e bond Ch120a-Goddard-L03 © copyright 2011 2010 William A. Goddard III, all rights reserved