In chemistry, bond order is a formal measure of the multiplicity of a covalent bond between two atoms. As introduced by Gerhard Herzberg,Herzberg, Gerhard (1929) "Zum Aufbau der zweiatomigen Moleküle" Zeitschrift für Physik 57: 601-630 building off of work by R. S. Mulliken and Friedrich Hund, bond order is defined as the difference between the numbers of electron pairs in bonding and antibonding molecular orbitals.
Bond order gives a rough indication of the stability of a bond. Isoelectronicity species have the same bond order.
In some molecules, bond orders can be 4 (quadruple bond), 5 (quintuple bond) or even 6 (sextuple bond). For example, potassium octachlorodimolybdate salt () contains the anion, in which the two Molybdenum atoms are linked to each other by a bond with order of 4. Each Mo atom is linked to four Chloride ligands by a bond with order of 1. The compound (terphenyl)–chromium–(terphenyl) contains two chromium atoms linked to each other by a bond with order of 5, and each chromium atom is linked to one terphenyl ligand by a single bond. A bond of order 6 is detected in ditungsten molecules Tungsten, which exist only in a gaseous phase.
Generally, the higher the bond order, the stronger the bond. Bond orders of one-half may be stable, as shown by the stability of (bond length 106 pm, bond energy 269 kJ/mol) and (bond length 108 pm, bond energy 251 kJ/mol).Bruce Averill and Patricia Eldredge, Chemistry: Principles, Patterns, and Applications (Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2007), 409.
Hückel molecular orbital theory offers another approach for defining bond orders based on molecular orbital coefficients, for planar molecules with delocalized π bonding. The theory divides bonding into a sigma framework and a pi system. The π-bond order between atoms r and s derived from Hückel theory was defined by Charles Coulson by using the orbital coefficients of the Hückel MOs:
Here the sum extends over π molecular orbitals only, and ni is the number of electrons occupying orbital i with coefficients cri and csi on atoms r and s respectively. Assuming a bond order contribution of 1 from the sigma component this gives a total bond order (σ + π) of 5/3 = 1.67 for benzene, rather than the commonly cited bond order of 1.5, showing some degree of ambiguity in how the concept of bond order is defined.
For more elaborate forms of molecular orbital theory involving larger basis sets, still other definitions have been proposed. A standard quantum mechanical definition for bond order has been debated for a long time.IUPAC Gold Book bond order A comprehensive method to compute bond orders from quantum chemistry calculations was published in 2017.
where d1 is the single bond length, dij is the bond length experimentally measured, and b is a constant, depending on the atoms. Pauling suggested a value of 0.353 Angstrom for b, for carbon-carbon bonds in the original equation:
The value of the constant b depends on the atoms. This definition of bond order is somewhat ad hoc and only easy to apply for diatomic molecules.
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