Modern valence bond theory
Modern valence bond theory is the application of valence bond theory with computer programs that are competitive in accuracy and economy, with programs for the Hartree–Fock or post-Hartree-Fock methods. The latter methods dominated quantum chemistry from the advent of digital computers because they were easier to program. The early popularity of valence bond methods thus declined. It is only recently that the programming of valence bond methods has improved. These developments are due to and described by Gerratt, Cooper, Karadakov and Raimondi ; Li and McWeeny ; Joop H. van Lenthe and co-workers ; Song, Mo, Zhang and Wu ; and Shaik and Hiberty
While molecular orbital theory describes the electronic wavefunction as a linear combination of basis functions that are centered on the various atoms in a species, VBT describes the electronic wavefunction as a linear combination of several valence bond structures. Each of these valence bond structures can be described using linear combinations of either atomic orbitals, delocalized atomic orbitals, or even molecular orbital fragments. Although this is often overlooked, MOT and VBT are equally valid ways of describing the electronic wavefunction, and are actually related by a unitary transformation. Assuming MOT and VBT are applied at the same level of theory, this relationship ensures that they will describe the same wavefunction, but will do so in different forms.
Theory
Bonding in H2
Heitler and London's original work on VBT attempts to approximate the electronic wavefunction as a covalent combination of localized basis functions on the bonding atoms. In VBT, wavefunctions are described as the sums and differences of VB determinants, which enforce the antisymmetric properties required by the Pauli exclusion principle. Taking H2 as an example, the VB determinant isIn this expression, N is a normalization constant, and a and b are basis functions that are localized on the two hydrogen atoms, often considered simply to be 1s atomic orbitals. The numbers are an index to describe the electron. ɑ and β describe the spin of the electron. The bar over b in indicates that the electron associated with orbital b has β spin. By itself, a single VB determinant is not a proper spin-eigenfunction, and thus cannot describe the true wavefunction. However, by taking the sum and difference of VB determinants, two approximate wavefunctions can be obtained:
ΦHL is the wavefunction as described by Heiter and London originally, and describes the covalent bonding between orbitals a and b in which the spins are paired, as expected for a chemical bond. ΦT is a representation of the bond that where the electron spins are parallel, resulting in a triplet state. This is a highly repulsive interaction, so this description of the bonding will not play a major role in determining the wave function.
Other ways of describing the wavefunction can also be constructed. Specifically, instead of considering a covalent interaction, the ionic interactions can be considered, resulting in the wavefunction
This wavefunction describes the bonding in H2 as the ionic interaction between an H+ and an H−.
Since none of these wavefunctions, ΦHL or ΦI perfectly approximates the wavefunction, a combination of these two can be used to describe the total wavefunction
where λ and μ are coefficients that can vary from 0 to 1. In determining the lowest energy wavefunction, these coefficients can be varied until a minimum energy is reached. λ will be larger in bonds that have more covalency, while μ will be larger in bonds that are more ionic. In the specific case of H2, λ ≈ 0.75, and μ ≈ 0.25.
The orbitals that were used as the basis do not necessarily have to be localized on the atoms involved in bonding. Orbitals that are partially delocalized onto the other atom involved in bonding can also be used, as in the Coulson-Fischer theory. Even the molecular orbitals associated with a portion of a molecule can be used as a basis set, a processes referred to as using fragment orbitals.
For more complicated molecules, ΦVBT could consider several possible structures that all contribute in various degrees. An example of this is the Kekule and Dewar structures used in describing benzene.
Note that all normalization constants were ignored in the discussion above for simplicity.
Relationship to molecular orbital theory
History
The application of VBT and MOT to computations that attempt to approximate the Schrödinger equation began near the middle of the 20th century, but MOT quickly became the preferred approach between the two. The relative computational ease of doing calculations with non-overlapping orbitals in MOT is said to have contributed to its popularity. In addition, the successful explanation of π-systems, pericyclic reactions, and extended solids further cemented MOT as the preeminent approach. Despite this, the two theories are just two different ways of representing the same wavefunction. As shown below, at the same level of theory, the two methods lead to the same results.H2 - molecular orbital vs valence bond theory
The relationship between MOT and VBT can be made more clear by directly comparing the results of the two theories for the hydrogen molecule, H2. Using MOT, the same basis orbitals can be used to describe the bonding. Combining them in a constructive and destructive manner gives two spin-orbitalsThe ground state wavefunction of H2 would be that where the σ orbital is doubly occupied, which is expressed as the following Slater determinant
This expression for the wavefunction can be shown to be equivalent to the following wavefunction
which is now expressed in terms of VB determinants. This transformation does not alter the wavefunction in any way, only the way that the wavefunction is represented. This process of going from an MO description to a VB description can be referred to as ‘mapping MO wavefunctions onto VB wavefunctions’, and is fundamentally the same process as that used to generate localized molecular orbitals.
Rewriting the VB wavefunction derived above, we can clearly see the relationship between MOT and VBT
Thus, at its simplest level, MOT is just VBT, where the covalent and ionic contributions are equal. This is the basis of the claim that MOT does not correctly predict the dissociation of molecules. When MOT includes configuration interaction, this allows the relative contributions of the covalent and ionic contributions to be altered. This leads to the same description of bonding for both VBT and MO-CI. In conclusion, the two theories, when brought to a high enough level of theory, will converge. Their distinction is in the way they are built up to that description.
Note that in all of the aforementioned discussions, as with the derivation of H2 for VBT, normalization constants were ignored for simplicity.