Lecture 3 Notes
Lecture 3 Notes
Lecture 3 Notes
Lecture 3
Further reading: Chemistry3, section 3.5
Ψ ( r ,θ , φ)=R n ,l (r )• Y l ,m (θ ,φ)
l
Notice that R(r) is negative for certain values of r. This is the phase of the wavefunction (it is not to do with
charge or an electron’s position. As we will see later in course this is very important in BONDING when
electrons occupy orbitals in molecules not atoms – the orbitals which overlap must have the same phases
or they cancel out (like sine waves).
The effect of squaring R(r) is that the plots have no negative regions. Any point that was 0 for R(r) is still 0.
These plots do not take into account the 3 dimensional nature of orbitals; the most useful is a radial
distribution function (RDF).
Overall probability of x = probability of x × number of ways of getting x. For example, consider a die, where
there is equal probability of getting any number. Now consider a die with sides 1,1,1,2,3,4. The probability
of getting a 1 is now 0.5, i.e. 1/6 (prob of any side of die being up) × 3 (there are 3 ‘1’s).
The area of maximum probability (density) increases with increasing n but is independent of l. n
determines the orbital size
There is a small (but > 0) probability of finding the electron a very long way from the nucleus – hard
to define the orbital size. So we use a boundary surface. A surface that captures 90% of
probability.
There are distances from the nucleus (i.e. r>0) with zero probability, called nodes. In this case,
radial nodes (we are looking at radial wavefunction). Number of radial nodes = n – l – 1
Maximum shows the most probable distance from the nucleus that electron density will be found.
Boundary surfaces show the phase of the wavefunction at the surface (+ or -). s orbitals have the same
phase over the whole boundary surface, whilst p and d orbitals contain both positive and negative phases,
usually indicated by shading the appropriate lobes.
The s Orbital
l = 0, s orbital. The s orbital is spherical in shape as it is independent of both θ and φ.
The p Orbitals
l = 1, p orbital, for l = 1 there are 3 value of ml: -1, 0, 1, meaning there are 3 p orbitals
The p orbitals are shaped like a dumbbell, with lobes pointing along the 3 axes. They are denoted np x, npy,
npz according to which axis they are aligned with.
The d Orbitals
l = 2, d orbital, for l = 2 there are 5 value of ml: -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, meaning there are 5 d orbitals. There are 3
orbitals with 4 lobes (xy, xz, yz), the lobes point between the axes in a 2D plane. We define that the orbital
in the xy plane (drawn) is the dxy etc.
There is one orbital that looks the same as dxy etc but with lobes pointing along the x and y axes. This is
called the dx2-y2
There is one orbital looks different, like a p-orbital with a doughnut around it, its lobe points along z-axis.
This is the dz2 orbital, (the favourite orbital of every self-respecting chemist!)
Angular nodes are present in p, d and f orbitals: Number of angular nodes = l