Antibonding
molecular orbitals (MOs) are normally
higher in energy than bonding molecular orbitals. Bonding and antibonding orbitals form when atoms combine into molecules. If two
hydrogen atoms are initially far apart, they have identical
atomic orbitals. However, as the spacing between the two atoms becomes smaller, the electron
wave functions begin to overlap. The
Pauli exclusion principle prohibits any two electrons (e-) in a molecule from having the same set of
quantum numbers. Therefore each original atomic orbital of the isolated atoms (for example, the ground state energy level, 1
s) splits into two molecular orbitals belonging to the pair, one lower in energy than the original atomic level and one higher. The orbital which is in a lower energy state than the orbitals of the separate atoms is the bonding orbital, which is more stable and promotes the bonding of the two H atoms into H2. The higher-energy orbital is the antibonding orbital, which is less stable and opposes bonding if it is occupied. In a molecule such as H2, the two electrons normally occupy the lower-energy bonding orbital, so that the molecule is more stable than the separate H atoms. A molecular orbital becomes antibonding when there is less
electron density between the two nuclei than there would be if there were no bonding interaction at all. When a molecular orbital changes sign (from positive to negative) at a
nodal plane between two atoms, it is said to be
antibonding with respect to those atoms. Antibonding orbitals are often labelled with an
asterisk (*) on molecular orbital diagrams. In
homonuclear diatomic molecules, σ* (
sigma star) antibonding orbitals have no nodal planes passing through the two nuclei, like
sigma bonds, and π* (
pi star) orbitals have one nodal plane passing through the two nuclei, like
pi bonds. The
Pauli exclusion principle dictates that no two electrons in an interacting system may have the same quantum state. If the bonding orbitals are filled, then any additional electrons will occupy antibonding orbitals. This occurs in the
He2 molecule, in which both the 1sσ and 1sσ* orbitals are filled. Since the
antibonding orbital is more antibonding than the bonding orbital is bonding, the molecule has a higher energy than two separated helium atoms, and it is therefore unstable. ==Polyatomic molecules==