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The nature of the chemical bond

Thom H. Dunning, Mark S. Gordon, Sotiris S. Xantheas

2023The Journal of Chemical Physics13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The nature of the chemical bond has long been a topic of much interest, beginning with the speculations of Isaac Newton about the “forces” that hold atoms together to the famous book by Linus Pauling with this title. For chemists, the existence of bonds between the atoms in a molecule is without question, but what are they, how can they be categorized, and what accounts for their existence? Furthermore, early theories focused on the attraction of electrical charges of opposite sign, which could account for the binding in many inorganic molecules. But what would account for the binding in electrically neutral organic molecules? Slightly more than a century ago, G. N. Lewis noted that the chemical bond appeared to be associated with electron pairs. Shortly after the discovery of the wave equation by Irwin Schrödinger in 1925-6, Heitler and London showed that quantum mechanics, in the form of what would eventually be called valence bond (VB) theory, accounted for the binding in that most improbable of molecules, the simple H<sub>2</sub> molecule.

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