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Two p-orbitals forming a π-bond. Pi bonds are usually weaker than sigma bonds.The C-C double bond, composed of one sigma and one pi bond, [1] has a bond energy less than twice that of a C-C single bond, indicating that the stability added by the pi bond is less than the stability of a sigma bond.
Linus Pauling proposed that the double bond in ethylene results from two equivalent tetrahedral orbitals from each atom, [5] which later came to be called banana bonds or tau bonds. [6] Erich Hückel proposed a representation of the double bond as a combination of a sigma bond plus a pi bond.
Localized molecular orbitals are molecular orbitals which are concentrated in a limited spatial region of a molecule, such as a specific bond or lone pair on a specific atom. They can be used to relate molecular orbital calculations to simple bonding theories, and also to speed up post-Hartree–Fock electronic structure calculations by taking ...
Pi bonds are created by the “side-on” interactions of the orbitals. [3] Once again, in molecular orbitals, bonding pi (π) electrons occur when the interaction of the two π atomic orbitals are in-phase. In this case, the electron density of the π orbitals needs to be symmetric along the mirror plane in order to create the bonding ...
Different valence bond methods use either of the two representations, which have mathematically equivalent total many-electron wave functions and are related by a unitary transformation of the set of occupied molecular orbitals. For multiple bonds, the sigma-pi representation is the predominant one compared to the equivalent orbital ...
Pi bonds occur when two orbitals overlap when they are parallel. [9] For example, a bond between two s-orbital electrons is a sigma bond, because two spheres are always coaxial. In terms of bond order, single bonds have one sigma bond, double bonds consist of one sigma bond and one pi bond, and triple bonds contain one sigma bond and two pi ...
This MO is called the bonding orbital and its energy is lower than that of the original atomic orbitals. A bond involving molecular orbitals which are symmetric with respect to any rotation around the bond axis is called a sigma bond (σ-bond). If the phase cycles once while rotating round the axis, the bond is a pi bond (π-bond).
To summarize, we are assuming that: (1) the energy of an electron in an isolated C(2p z) orbital is =; (2) the energy of interaction between C(2p z) orbitals on adjacent carbons i and j (i.e., i and j are connected by a σ-bond) is =; (3) orbitals on carbons not joined in this way are assumed not to interact, so = for nonadjacent i and j; and ...