Einstein Mcfly said:
JohnRC, I've very much enjoyed many of your posts on this forum. Can you please explain a bit more of what you mean by this? Given that orbitals are an approximation within a theoretical construct and "chemical intuition" with regard to orbitals is ultimately referenced to simple examples of this, it seems to me that the role of d-orbitals in a bonding scheme are DEFINED as no more and no less than what the results of high-level calculations specify. Am I misreading your post?
Yes , I will try to explain. Recognising that single electron wavefunctions do not give a good picture of fluorine compound structures anyway, let us persist with Hartree-Fock type calculations. Most "high level" MO calculations are based around "atomic orbitals" -- that is, about functions which are based on the eigenfunctions for spherical fields around each atom in the molecule. So it is customary to talk about "contributions" of F(2pz) or S(3px) to the structure of individual "molecular orbitals" of SF
6, for example. The real "molecular orbitals" simply do not have the form of such a combination; it is merely a strategy for getting at a pretty good approximation.
In the case of E
g symmetry, there are three pairs of occupied orbitals in the *real* Hartree Fock molecular orbitals. Taking a single orbital from each degenerate pair, the component symmetric with respect to C
2(z) rotation, they are
(1) An extremely close approximation to {F2(1s) – F3(1s) + F4(1s) – F5(1s)}
(2) A pretty good approximation to {F2(2s) – F3(2s) + F4(2s) – F5(2s)}
(3) A rather poor approximation to some combination of
{F2(2px) + F3(2py) – F4(2px) – F5(spy)} and {S(3dx2–y2)}
If we take the last of these orbitals as a normal orbital function, optimized for an isolated sulfur atom, we will find that the lowest energy combination of such a mixture involves very little of the latter function; if on the other hand we re-optimise the d function and allow the sulfur orbital to shrink, while retaining its essential form --most calculations use either
(x
2-y
2)*exp( –alpha * r) , or
{sum from n = 1 to 4} c
n*(x
2-y
2)*exp( –ζ
n * r
2),
Then we will find a larger contribution from S(3d)
It is neither right nor wrong to declare that "3d orbitals are not involved in the bonding structure of SF
6." Rather, it should be said that for some purposes it is helpful, and for other purposes it is unhelpful.
The *real* third molecular orbital of this symmetry in this molecule will have a definite functional form. If, in an ideal world, we could map out that form with total accuracy, we would be able to calculate its overlap integral with the F(2p) symmetry adapted orbital and the S(3d) orbital. My guess is that the answer would be something like 75% F(2p), 15% S(3d), 10% unaccounted for with these two atomic orbitals.
I like the word caricature, because it is very appropriate for the situation that a serious theoretical chemist often finds himself in. A caricature is a cartoon, particularly a political or a humorous cartoon. The depiction of a character is not like a photograph, it is something that makes a character recognisable by one or two of his features, often in exaggerated form. VSEPR insights, Crystal Field insights, Molecular Orbital insights, and Valence Bond insights into molecular structure are all caricatures: They are each designed to get
some features of molecular structure correct, while passing over and failing to paint a correct picture of others. A caricature cannot be right or wrong; it is something that provides a decent explanatory basis for some particular features that it emphasises.
A perfect quantum chemical calculation of molecular structure would produce correct values for a number of observables, backed up by reams of numerical output; it would provide little or no basis for a satisfying explanatory framework that could be shifted to other related systems -- it would simply be "this gee whizz calculation has got all of the numbers right for this particular system"