I don't think you're clear in your own mind what you mean by ΣH Reactants
If our reactant isomer is higher energy than its counterpart,... ΣH Reactants would be MORE negative
If it's higher energy, H is more positive (or less negative). That's the definition of H reactants.
ΣH Reactants would be MORE negative (I'm speaking of molecule energy level + a positive energy required for bond breaking)
Energy required for bond breaking is irrelevant. Hreactants is an energy level,
not an energy change. If the reactant is less stable, H is higher, and the energy for bond breaking is lower, but you don't add these two terms together. (If you did, you would get ΣH free atoms, relative to some arbitrary zero, which would be identical for both isomers.)
Consider a Hess's law cycle:
1. C
xH
y + (x+y/4)O
2 xCO
2 + y/2H
2O; ΔH1 = ΔHcombustion = ΣH products - ΣH reactants
2. C
xH
y + (x+y/4)O
2 xC(g) + yH(g) + (2x+y/2)O; ΔH2 = ΔHbond breaking = ΣH atoms - ΣH reactants
3. xC(g) + yH(g) + (2x+y/2)O
xCO
2 + y/2H
2O; ΔH3 = ΔH bond forming = ΣH products - ΣH atoms
I hope it is clear here that H refers to an energy
level, ΔH to an energy
change.
Now rxn 1 = 2 + 3, so ΔH1 = ΔH2 + ΔH3, which means
ΔHcombustion = ΣH products - ΣH reactants
or alternatively ΔHcombustion = ΔH bond forming (-ve, identical for both isomers) + ΔH bond breaking (+ve)
For the less stable isomer, ΣHreactants is higher, so ΔHcomb is more negative
or (an alternative way of stating the same thing) ΔH bond breaking is less positive, so ΔH comb is more negative.
I think you were confusing ΔH bond breaking with ΣH reactants. If so, I hope it's a bit clearer now.