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Topic: Adding and multiplying wave functions  (Read 12869 times)

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Offline ddue2

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Adding and multiplying wave functions
« on: January 28, 2012, 06:03:19 PM »
Sometimes a new wave function is obtain by summing two other wave functions (e.g. for H2+ wave function = constant * (1sA + 1sB) where 1sA and 1sB are wave functions for an electron in a 1s orbital on hydrogen A or B) and sometimes by taking a product of two wave functions (e.g. H2 wave function = constant * 1sA(1) * 1sB(2) where 1 and 2 stand for electron 1 and 2 on hydrogen A or B.
When are new wave functions obtained by addition and when are they multiplication?

Offline juanrga

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Re: Adding and multiplying wave functions
« Reply #1 on: January 29, 2012, 09:14:04 AM »
Sometimes a new wave function is obtain by summing two other wave functions (e.g. for H2+ wave function = constant * (1sA + 1sB) where 1sA and 1sB are wave functions for an electron in a 1s orbital on hydrogen A or B) and sometimes by taking a product of two wave functions (e.g. H2 wave function = constant * 1sA(1) * 1sB(2) where 1 and 2 stand for electron 1 and 2 on hydrogen A or B.
When are new wave functions obtained by addition and when are they multiplication?

You are comparing one electron case with a two electron case.

For an electron in a molecule (e.g, H2+) the stationary wavefunction \Phi(x) , where x is the coordinate of the electron can be initially developed as a combination of atomic wavefunctions such as 1sA and 1sB in your example.

For two electrons in a molecule (e.g, H2) the stationary wavefunction \Phi(x_1,x_2) , where x_j is the coordinate of the electron j can be initially developed as a product of atomic wavefunctions such as 1sA(1) (which is a function of x_1 ) and 1sB(2) (which is a function of x_2 ) in your example.
« Last Edit: April 03, 2012, 09:00:39 AM by Borek »
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Offline ddue2

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Re: Adding and multiplying wave functions
« Reply #2 on: January 29, 2012, 10:30:24 PM »
Thank you for the reply.
« Last Edit: January 29, 2012, 10:48:06 PM by ddue2 »

Offline ddue2

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Re: Adding and multiplying wave functions
« Reply #3 on: January 29, 2012, 10:46:26 PM »
Here is a follow-up question.
For one of the N - H bonds in NH3 the wave function can be written as psi = 1sHa(1)sp13(2) + 1sHa(2)sp13(1).  This is for two electrons in one MO.  What is the rationale for taking products of wave functions and then adding them? Is each of the products the same as allowing an electron in each AO and the sum is to allow them to exchange places?

Offline juanrga

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Re: Adding and multiplying wave functions
« Reply #4 on: January 31, 2012, 09:33:47 AM »
Here is a follow-up question.
For one of the N - H bonds in NH3 the wave function can be written as psi = 1sHa(1)sp13(2) + 1sHa(2)sp13(1).  This is for two electrons in one MO.  What is the rationale for taking products of wave functions and then adding them? Is each of the products the same as allowing an electron in each AO and the sum is to allow them to exchange places?

Imagine that H_A is the Hamiltonian of system A and H_B the Hamiltonian of system B. The time-independent Schrödinger equations are

H_A \Psi(x_A) = E_A \Psi(x_A)

H_B \Psi(x_B) = E_B \Psi(x_B)

with E_A and E_B the respective energies. Multiplying the first equation by a function of coordinates x_B and the second by a function of coordinates x_A does not change anything because H_A only works on x_A and H_B only does on x_B . I.e.,

H_i \Psi(x_i)\Psi(x_j) = \Psi(x_j) H_i \Psi(x_i)

Now consider a total Hamiltonian H_{AB} = H_A + H_B and use the above equations, you obtain

H_{AB} \Psi(x_A)\Psi(x_B) =  ( E_A + E_B ) \Psi(x_A)\Psi(x_B)

I.e. the function for the total system is a product \Psi(x_A,x_B) = \Psi(x_A)\Psi(x_B)

Mathematically, this method is named separation of variables.

You can repeat this for the NH3 and obtain a product \Psi(x_1,x_2) = \Psi(x_1)\Psi(x_2) for the MO. Notice that up to this point we are considering a product of functions but not saying what functions.

One possibility is \Psi'(x_1,x_2) = 1\mathrm{s}(x_1)\mathrm{sp}^3(x_2) and other \Psi''(x_1,x_2) = \mathrm{sp}^3(x_1)1\mathrm{s}(x_2) . Mathematically, a linear combination of two special solutions of a differential equation give a general solution of the equation. That is the reason which you sum both to obtain a more general solution.

Physically, you can interpret this sum as that a given electron (e.g. 1) is neither in atom N nor in atom H but in a superposition.
« Last Edit: April 03, 2012, 09:01:26 AM by Borek »
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