Einstein Mcfly said:
Are you perhaps confusing the way that electrons are CALCULATED in open-shell singlet calculations (where up and down spins are allowed to "be" in different spatial orbitals even though their are the same number of up and down spins) with the fact that they are paired or not paired? The first is a model of nature meant to give more accurate total energy differences, the second is an experimentally testable fact (does the system have an overall magnetic moment or not).
Thanks, very useful comment to include magnetic moment to help determine if two unpaired electrons in 2p are paired or not. So, take C-12 isotope for example. It has two single e- within two separate 2p orbitals, 2px \uparrowand 2py\uparrow. It is known experimentally that C-12 has 0.0 magnetic moment. Therefore, we know via experiment (not Hund's rule) that the two e- in 2p energy level ARE NOT PAIRED, since, if they were paired, C-12 would have a magnetic moment > 0.0. Experimental data on magnetic moments takes priority over Hund's Rule to help understand pairing or not of the 2p electrons in C-12 isotope.
Thus, concerning my OP question, given the experiment data on C-12 that it has magnetic moment = 0.0, this means the two single electrons in the 2px and 2py orbits of C-12 could be either \uparrow\uparrow OR \downarrow\downarrow OR \uparrow\downarrow, that is, BECAUSE THEY ARE NOT PAIRED, all quantum spin states are equally possible for each individual 2p orbital.
Do I have this all correct ?
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I think the above is incorrect.
The 2p electrons in C-12 must be PAIRED to have a magnetic moment = 0.0. See this link for C-12 magnetic moment:
http://www.webelements.com/carbon/isotopes.html. Elements with unpaired e- are called paramagnetic, but clearly C-12 is diamagnetic since magnetic moment = 0.0.
Of interest is that two e- of C-12 are not paired within the same x,y,z orbit of 2p, but they are paired in two different 2p orbits. From comments below by Gadong, using NIST table reference, C-12 has the two e- in 2p in triplet state \uparrow\downarrow in ground state, and this triplet state, from PAIRED e- found in two different 2p orbits, results in C-12 having a 0.0 magnetic moment.
What is very confusing is that I have read that CARBON as an element is paramagnetic (thus magnetic moment > 0.0) because it has two UNPAIRED electrons in 2p...but this is factually incorrect for the C-12 isotope given that experimental data shows magnetic moment is 0.0.