To begin to generate an isolobal fragment, the molecule needs to follow certain criteria. Molecules based around
main group elements should satisfy the
octet rule when all bonding and nonbonding
molecular orbitals (MOs) are filled and all antibonding MOs are empty. For example, methane is a simple molecule from which to form a main group fragment. The removal of a hydrogen atom from methane generates a methyl radical. The molecule retains its
molecular geometry as the frontier orbital points in the direction of the missing hydrogen atom. Further removal of hydrogen results in the formation of a second frontier orbital. This process can be repeated until only one bond remains to the molecule's central atom. The isolobal fragments of
octahedral complexes, such as type ML6, can be created in a similar fashion.
Transition metal complexes should initially satisfy the
eighteen electron rule, have no net charge, and their
ligands should be two electron donors (
Lewis bases). Consequently, the metal center for the ML6 starting point must be d6. Removal of a ligand is analogous to the removal of hydrogen of methane in the previous example resulting in a frontier orbital, which points toward the removed ligand. Cleaving the bond between the metal center and one ligand results in a radical complex. In order to satisfy the zero-charge criteria the metal center must be changed. For example, a MoL6 complex is d6 and neutral. However, removing a ligand to form the first frontier orbital would result in a complex because Mo has obtained an additional electron making it d7. To remedy this, Mo can be exchanged for Mn, which would form a neutral d7 complex in this case, as shown in Figure 3. This trend can continue until only one ligand is left coordinated to the metal center.
Relationship between tetrahedral and octahedral fragments Isolobal fragments of tetrahedral and octahedral molecules can be related. Structures with the same number of frontier orbitals are isolobal to one another. For example, the methane with two hydrogen atoms removed, CH2 is isolobal to a d8 ML4 complex formed from an octahedral starting complex (Figure 4).
MO theory dependence Any sort of saturated molecule can be the starting point for generating isolobal fragments. The molecule's bonding and nonbonding molecular orbitals (MOs) should be filled and the antibonding MOs empty. With each consecutive generation of an isolobal fragment, electrons are removed from the bonding orbitals and a frontier orbital is created. The frontier orbitals are at a higher energy level than the bonding and nonbonding MOs. Each frontier orbital contains one electron. For example, consider Figure 5, which shows the production of frontier orbitals in tetrahedral and octahedral molecules. As seen above, when a fragment is formed from CH4, one of the sp3
hybrid orbitals involved in bonding becomes a nonbonding singly occupied frontier orbital. The frontier orbital’s increased energy level is also shown in the figure. Similarly when starting with a metal complex such as d6-ML6, the d2sp3 hybrid orbitals are affected. Furthermore, the t2g nonbonding metal orbitals are unaltered. ==Extensions of the analogy==