Reaction between iron(II) sulphate, sulphuric acid

In summary: Sorry, I'm not sure where you're getting this from. Metallic crystals do not have molecular orbitals, they have metallic bonding. Metallic bonding is different than covalent bonding.
  • #36
But GCT : metals do not have molecular orbitals. So there is no question of HOMOs or LUMOs in a metal.

that's quite a statement. However, it is in direct contradiction to textbook definitions, so rather than argue endlessly about it here it is:

Band theory: ...delocalized electrons move freely through "bands" formed by overlapping molecular orbitals."

...since the number of atoms in even a small piece of magnesium is enormously large, the number of molecular orbitals they form is also very large


the band is a result of closely spaced molecular orbitals

The formation of these bands or as my text calls it molecular orbitals is from the individual atomic orbitals contributed by each metal. The same rule applies, the number of MOs must equal the number of AOs combined, this many MOs must be so close on an energy level diagram that they form a continuous band of energies. The point is that the molecular orbitals do exist within metals. In all contexts, it is appropriate to say that metals do have molecular orbitals, perhaps not so assertively, and it does not deserve emphasis...however it makes no sense to say that there are no molecular orbitals. The band theory is nothing too far out special and magical from the ordinary formation of molecular orbitals from atomic orbitals, it is merely a special case.
 
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  • #37
More fuel to the fire ;)

How is a metal particle properly described if it's dimensions are smaller then the de Broglie wavelength of its electrons ?
 
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  • #38
GCT said:
Band theory: ...delocalized electrons move freely through "bands" formed by overlapping molecular orbitals."
Tell me this is from a graduate level condensed matter physics text, and I'll take back my previous statements.

Band structure is calculated starting from the free electron model; not starting from a molecular orbital description.

Borek : No, the transition from a cluster to a crystal is not abrupt. Periodicity first nucleates within the bulk of the cluster and grows outwards with increasing number of atoms, N. As N increases, the fraction of atoms that belong in a crytalline grain(N_x/N) increases, but never reaches 1. Even in large, pure crystals, the surface atoms have distorted, cluster-like structure, but this number is negligible compared to N.
 
  • #39
Borek said:
And I have doubt if you are right stating that electrons on the molecular orbitals are bound - ie they are bound to the orbital, but the orbital can spread over whole molecule (or whole cluster) - in such situation there will be no difference between free electron in the valence bond and the localized electron on the molecular orbital.
Yes you are correct. The difference between conductors and insulators comes from the relative position of the Fermi energy with respect to the band edges.
 
  • #40
Tell me this is from a graduate level condensed matter physics text, and I'll take back my previous statements.

Band structure is calculated starting from the free electron model; not starting from a molecular orbital description.

alright, I'm just not going to go on with this discussion of whether metals have molecular orbitals or not, obviously you are aware of a different mechanism starting from two atomic orbitals (or not) to bands; where according to you, these bands are do not consist of closely spaced molecular orbitals, but that of something completely different. I'm not completely disagreeing with you as I'm no expert on this subject and have yet to learn further about it.

On to a more interesting proposal for you Gokul, can you give us an explanation of how a metal, such as magnesium, would react with aqueous hydrochloric acid, in relevance to orbital dynamics? I'm not trying to cause you to trip here, I just think that the answer would be quite interesting (such cases, in conforming to your standards, are explained thorugh LUMO and HOMO interactions with organic molecules).

[tex]Mg_{(s)}+HCl_{(aq)} \rightarrow MgCl_2_{(aq)} + 2H^{+}_{(aq)} [/tex]
 
  • #41
How is a metal particle properly described if it's dimensions are smaller then the de Broglie wavelength of its electrons ?
don't know off the top of my head, Gokul might be able to answer this question more throughly in the meanwhile...more research for me. Also you might get better answers posting in one of the physics subforums, e.g. "atoms, particles etc.."
 
  • #42
GCT said:
don't know off the top of my head, Gokul might be able to answer this question more throughly in the meanwhile...more research for me. Also you might get better answers posting in one of the physics subforums, e.g. "atoms, particles etc.."

This is not a question for me just a challenge for you and anybody living in a quantum well will surely know the answer ;)
 
  • #43
GCT said:
alright, I'm just not going to go on with this discussion of whether metals have molecular orbitals or not, obviously you are aware of a different mechanism starting from two atomic orbitals (or not) to bands; where according to you, these bands are do not consist of closely spaced molecular orbitals, but that of something completely different.
I did not say anything about them being completely different. The origin of the energy bands of a crystalline solid is in the single atom states, but the bands are not constructed the way molecular orbitals are. Crystal symmetry imposes additional conditions on them; so when you go from a cluster to a crytal, you change the energy dispersion of the system. Hence you can not say that metals have molecular orbitals. However, this does not mean that you can not use some form of molecular orbital theory to understand reactions with bulk metals.

In a metal, the equivalent of the LUMO and the HOMO is the same thing, known as the Fermi energy. When an electrophile or nucleophile binds to the surface of a metal, it raises or lowers the Fermi energy locally (it also affects the HOMO of the binding ion). The relative position of the Fermi level with respect to the HOMO of the adsorbed ion is what seems to be important to determining the mechanism. In addition, the binding ions form a cluster at the surface whose energetics may now be roughly described in terms of LUMOs and HOMOs (since the crystalline symmetry has been destroyed locally) for the cluster. Current theoretical understanding involves semi-empirical approximations based on the Extended Huckel Model.

To summarize :

1. You can not speak of LUMOs and HOMOs of a metal, unless you are talking about nanoparticles/clusters

2. You can not provide a simple Molecular Orbital description of reactions with bulk metals (short of doing a Hartree-Fock simulation or somesuch)

http://www.qtp.ufl.edu/~roitberg/pdf/1999_01.pdf
http://www.iupac.org/publications/pac/2000/7201/7201pdf/3_rao.pdf
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Chemistry/Electrochemis/Electrochemical/ElectrodeKinetics/ElectrodeKinetics.htm
 
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  • #44
DrMark said:
More fuel to the fire ;)

How is a metal particle properly described if it's dimensions are smaller then the de Broglie wavelength of its electrons ?
You are now talking about nanoparticles/clusters. To the crudest approximation you may treat this as a particle in a box problem and get a rough idea for the dispersion spectrum. But really good calculations have been done using DFT (and a host of other techniques that I know little about) for such particles.
 

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