In 1916,
G. N. Lewis proposed that a chemical bond forms by the interaction of two shared bonding electrons, with the representation of molecules as
Lewis structures. In 1916, Kossel put forth his theory of the
ionic chemical bond (
octet rule), also independently advanced in the same year by
Gilbert N. Lewis.
Walther Kossel put forward a theory similar to that of Lewis theory, except that Kossel supposed complete transfers of electrons between atoms, a model of
ionic bonding. Both Lewis and Kossel based their bonding models on
Abegg's rule (1904) that the difference between the maximum positive and negative valences of an element is frequently eight. In 1921 the chemist
Charles Rugeley Bury suggested that eight and eighteen electrons in a shell form stable configurations. Bury proposed that the electron configurations in transitional elements depended upon the valence electrons in their outer shell. Although there is no mathematical formula either in chemistry or quantum mechanics for the arrangement of electrons in the atom, the hydrogen atom can be described by the
Schrödinger equation and the
Matrix Mechanics equation both derived in 1925. However, for hydrogen alone, in 1927 the Heitler–London theory was formulated which for the first time enabled the calculation of bonding properties of the
hydrogen molecule H2 based on quantum mechanical considerations. Specifically,
Walter Heitler determined how to use
Schrödinger's wave equation (1926) to show how two hydrogen atom
wavefunctions join together, with plus, minus, and exchange terms, to form a
covalent bond. He then called up his associate
Fritz London and they worked out the details of the theory over the course of the night. Later,
Linus Pauling used the pair bonding ideas of Lewis together with Heitler–London theory to develop two other key concepts in VB theory:
resonance (1928) and
orbital hybridization (1930). According to
Charles Coulson, author of the noted 1952 book
Valence, this period marks the start of "modern valence bond theory", as contrasted with older valence bond theories, which are essentially electronic theories of
valence couched in pre-wave-mechanical terms. Linus Pauling published in 1931 his landmark paper on valence bond theory: "On the Nature of the Chemical Bond". Building on this article, Pauling's 1939 textbook:
On the Nature of the Chemical Bond would become what some have called the bible of modern chemistry. This book helped experimental chemists to understand the impact of quantum theory on chemistry. However, the later edition in 1959 failed to adequately address the problems that appeared to be better understood by molecular orbital theory. The impact of valence theory declined during the 1960s and 1970s as molecular orbital theory grew in usefulness as it was implemented in large
digital computer programs. Since the 1980s, the more difficult problems, of implementing valence bond theory into computer programs, have been solved largely, and valence bond theory has seen a resurgence. ==Theory==