Abstract

Bonding in the C2 molecule is investigated with CAS(8,8) wave functions using canonical MOs. In a subsequent step, orthogonal atomic orbitals are constructed by localizing the CASSCF MOs on the two carbon atoms with an orthogonal transformation. This orbital transformation causes an orthogonal transformation of the configuration state functions (CSF) spanning the function space of the singlet ground state of C2. Instead of CSFs built from canonical MOs, one obtains CSFs of orthogonal deformed atomic orbitals (AO). This approach resembles the orthogonal valence bond (OVB) methods’ CSFs, which are very different from the conventional VB, based on non-orthogonal AOs. To become used to the different argumentation, the bonding situations in ethane (single bond), ethene (double bond), and the nitrogen molecule (triple bond) are also studied. The complex bonding situation in C2 is caused by the possibility to excite an electron with a spin flip from the doubly occupied 2s AO into the 2p subshell, and the resulting high-spin 5Su state of the carbon atom allows for a better reduction of the Pauli repulsion. However, the electron structure around the equilibrium distance does not allow one to say that C2 in its ground state has a double, or triple, or even a quadruple bond.

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