Huckel Calculations for Ethylene ($C_2H_4$)
Ethylene is considered a simple conjugated system containing two interacting $p$-orbitals perpendicular to the molecular plane. The interaction of these atomic orbitals forms a $\pi$-electron system. The determinantal form of the secular equation for this system is given by:
The expansion of this secular determinant yields a direct quadratic algebraic equation:
In Huckel theory, these roots correspond to the energy levels of the molecular systems. Solving for energy ($E$), we find two distinct states:
The two available $\pi$-electrons in ethylene occupy the lower energy molecular orbital ($E_1$) in the ground state. The total $\pi$-electron energy ($E_\pi$) is computed as follows:
Since the baseline energy of two isolated electrons residing in unhybridized carbon $2p$ orbitals is $2\alpha$, the net $\pi$-bond stabilization energy (delocalization/resonance energy) in ethylene is exactly $2\beta$.
Derivation of Coefficients and Wave Functions
The coefficients of the atomic orbitals in each molecular orbital are obtained by substituting the values of $x$ back into the secular equations:
For the ground state where $x = 1$, substituting this value into equation (3) gives:
Since any valid molecular orbital wave function must be normalized, the normalisation requirement dictates that:
Integrating the square of the wave function over all space gives:
When orbital overlap ($S_{12} = \int \phi_1 \phi_2 d\tau$) is neglected ($S_{12} = 0$) and individual atomic orbitals are normalized ($\int \phi_i^2 d\tau = 1$), this reduces seamlessly to:
Combining equations (4) and (5), we can solve for the unique normalization coefficients:
Hence, the molecular orbital wave function corresponding to the higher antibonding energy level $E_2 = \alpha - \beta$ is given by:
Similarly, evaluating the system for the bonding condition ($x = -1$) yields matching coefficients, meaning the molecular orbital whose energy is $E_1 = \alpha + \beta$ is given by:
Electron Densities, Bond Orders, and Free Valence
Since both $\pi$-electrons occupy the ground-state molecular orbital $\psi_1$, the individual $\pi$-electron densities ($q_1, q_2$) and the resulting net $\pi$-bond order ($p_{12}$) evaluate uniformly to unity:
In an ethylene molecule, each carbon atom is structurally bound to two hydrogen atoms via $\sigma$-bonds. If we assign a local bond order value of unity to each distinct $C-H$ covalent linkage, the total bond order value ($N$) associated with each carbon atom is four ($2 \times \sigma_{\text{C-H}} + 1 \times \sigma_{\text{C-C}} + 1 \times \pi_{\text{C-C}} = 4$). Following the standard mathematical definition of free valence index ($F$), we find:
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