What is the bond order of any molecule containing equal numbers of bonding and antibonding electrons?
1 Answer
Bond order really describes the "degree" of the bond. For instance, an ideal triple bond has a bond order of
Each electron can be thought of as contributing to the bonding or antibonding character.
- Each electron in a bonding molecular orbital contributes
#1/2# to the bonding character. - Each electron in an antibonding molecular orbital contributes
#1/2# to the antibonding character.
When bonding and antibonding character are equal, the bond order is
So, when the number of bonding and antibonding electrons is equal, the bond order is
It can also be shown mathematically. You may have been taught:
#"Bond Order" = 1/2("bonding electrons - antibonding electrons")#
but if there are equal numbers of each kind, then the bond order is
Take
The bond order for this is