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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Explain the concept of atomic orbital hybridization
  • Determine the hybrid orbitals associated with various molecular geometries

Thinking in terms of overlapping atomic orbitals is one way for us to explain how chemical bonds form in diatomic molecules. However, to understand how molecules with more than two atoms form stable bonds, we require a more detailed model. As an example, let us consider the water molecule, in which we have one oxygen atom bonding to two hydrogen atoms. Oxygen has the electron configuration 1 s 2 2 s 2 2 p 4 , with two unpaired electrons (one in each of the two 2 p orbitals). Valence bond theory would predict that the two O–H bonds form from the overlap of these two 2 p orbitals with the 1 s orbitals of the hydrogen atoms. If this were the case, the bond angle would be 90°, as shown in [link] , because p orbitals are perpendicular to each other. Experimental evidence shows that the bond angle is 104.5°, not 90°. The prediction of the valence bond theory model does not match the real-world observations of a water molecule; a different model is needed.

Two peanut-shaped orbitals lie perpendicular to one another. They overlap with spherical orbitals to the left and top of the diagram.
The hypothetical overlap of two of the 2 p orbitals on an oxygen atom (red) with the 1 s orbitals of two hydrogen atoms (blue) would produce a bond angle of 90°. This is not consistent with experimental evidence. Note that orbitals may sometimes be drawn in an elongated “balloon” shape rather than in a more realistic “plump” shape in order to make the geometry easier to visualize.

Quantum-mechanical calculations suggest why the observed bond angles in H 2 O differ from those predicted by the overlap of the 1 s orbital of the hydrogen atoms with the 2 p orbitals of the oxygen atom. The mathematical expression known as the wave function, ψ , contains information about each orbital and the wavelike properties of electrons in an isolated atom. When atoms are bound together in a molecule, the wave functions combine to produce new mathematical descriptions that have different shapes. This process of combining the wave functions for atomic orbitals is called hybridization    and is mathematically accomplished by the linear combination of atomic orbitals , LCAO, (a technique that we will encounter again later). The new orbitals that result are called hybrid orbitals . The valence orbitals in an isolated oxygen atom are a 2 s orbital and three 2 p orbitals. The valence orbitals in an oxygen atom in a water molecule differ; they consist of four equivalent hybrid orbitals that point approximately toward the corners of a tetrahedron ( [link] ). Consequently, the overlap of the O and H orbitals should result in a tetrahedral bond angle (109.5°). The observed angle of 104.5° is experimental evidence for which quantum-mechanical calculations give a useful explanation: Valence bond theory must include a hybridization component to give accurate predictions.

Two diagrams are shown and labeled “a” and “b.” Diagram a shows two peanut-shaped orbitals lying in a tetrahedral arrangement around the letter “O.” Diagram b shows the same two orbitals, but they now overlap to the top and to the left with two spherical orbitals, each labeled “H.” A pair of electrons occupies each lobe of the peanut-shaped orbitals.
(a) A water molecule has four regions of electron density, so VSEPR theory predicts a tetrahedral arrangement of hybrid orbitals. (b) Two of the hybrid orbitals on oxygen contain lone pairs, and the other two overlap with the 1 s orbitals of hydrogen atoms to form the O–H bonds in H 2 O. This description is more consistent with the experimental structure.

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Source:  OpenStax, Ut austin - principles of chemistry. OpenStax CNX. Mar 31, 2016 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11830/1.13
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