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Showing posts with label O₂ molecular orbital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label O₂ molecular orbital. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 October 2025

Energy Diagram of Oxygen, Superoxide, and Peroxide – Molecular Orbital Theory Explained

Energy Diagram of Oxygen, Superoxide and Peroxide (O2, O2, O22−)

Oxygen, one of the most essential elements for life, exists in various molecular forms — dioxygen (O₂), superoxide ion (O₂⁻), and peroxide ion (O₂²⁻). Each of these species exhibits a distinct molecular orbital configuration and bond order, which directly influence their magnetic and chemical properties. Let’s understand this through their energy diagrams and the concept of molecular orbital theory (MOT).

🌿 Molecular Orbital Concept in Oxygen Molecules

The Molecular Orbital Theory (MOT) explains bonding by combining atomic orbitals of two atoms to form molecular orbitals that can be either bonding or antibonding. The general energy order for oxygen and other elements from O₂ to F₂ is:

σ(1s) σ*(1s) σ(2s) σ*(2s) σ(2pz) π(2px) = π(2py) π*(2px) = π*(2py) σ*(2pz)

Total number of electrons in O₂ = 16 Filling these orbitals in order of increasing energy gives the configuration:

σ(1s)² σ*(1s)² σ(2s)² σ*(2s)² σ(2pz)² π(2px)² π(2py)² π*(2px)¹ π*(2py

🔹 Bond Order and Magnetic Property

Bond order (B.O.) = ½ × (Nb − Na) where Nb = number of electrons in bonding orbitals and Na = number in antibonding orbitals.

Species Total Electrons Configuration (2p level) Bond Order Magnetic Nature
O₂ 16 π*(2px,y)¹¹ 2 Paramagnetic (2 unpaired e⁻)
O₂⁻ (Superoxide) 17 π*(2px,y 1.5 Paramagnetic (1 unpaired e⁻)
O₂²⁻ (Peroxide) 18 π*(2px,y)⁴ 1 Diamagnetic (no unpaired e⁻)

⚡ Energy Level Diagram Explanation

As we move from O₂ → O₂⁻ → O₂²⁻, the extra electrons are added to the antibonding π* orbitals. This causes the bond order to decrease from 2 → 1.5 → 1, meaning the bond becomes weaker and the bond length increases. The magnetic property also changes from paramagnetic (unpaired electrons) to diamagnetic (all paired).

🧠 Remember: - More bond order = Stronger bond, shorter bond length. - Fewer unpaired electrons = Weaker magnetism.

🧩 Graphical Representation

The following conceptual energy diagram summarizes the trend:

O₂: Bond Order = 2
O₂⁻: Bond Order = 1.5
O₂²⁻: Bond Order = 1

Energy increases upward → Additional antibonding electrons lower stability.

🌍 Real-world Importance

  • O₂ — supports combustion and respiration; essential for aerobic life.
  • O₂⁻ — found in biological systems; acts as a reactive oxygen species (ROS).
  • O₂²⁻ — found in compounds like H₂O₂ (hydrogen peroxide); strong oxidizing agent.
⚙️ Chemical connection: In biological systems, superoxide ions play a critical role in oxidative stress, while peroxides are used in disinfection and bleaching processes.

📘 Summary

  • Oxygen’s energy diagram explains its magnetic and bonding properties.
  • Extra electrons in antibonding orbitals reduce bond strength.
  • Bond order trend: O₂ (2) > O₂⁻ (1.5) > O₂²⁻ (1)
  • Magnetic trend: Paramagnetic → Diamagnetic.

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