Diatomic carbon

Diatomic carbon
Identifiers
CAS number 12070-15-4 N
PubChem 139247
ChemSpider 122807 Y
ChEBI CHEBI:30083
Gmelin Reference 196
Jmol-3D images Image 1
Properties
Molecular formula C2
Molar mass 24.02 g mol−1
Exact mass 24.000000000000 g mol-1
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)
Infobox references

Diatomic carbon is a diatomic molecule of carbon (C2), which occurs in electric arcs; in comets, stellar atmospheres and the interstellar medium; and in blue hydrocarbon flames.[1]

Contents

Chemistry

Valence bond theory predicts a quadruple bond as the only way to satisfy the octet rule for carbon. However, molecular orbital theory shows that there are two sets of paired electrons in the sigma system (one bonding, one antibonding), and two sets of paired electrons in a degenerate pi bonding set of orbitals. This adds up to give a bond order of 2, meaning that there exists a double bond between the two carbons in a C2 molecule. This is surprising because the MO diagram of diatomic carbon would show that there are two pi bonds and no sigma bonds.

Bond dissociation energies of B2, C2, and N2 show increasing BDE, indicating single, double, and triple bonds, respectively.

C2 is an unstable molecule; carbon is far more frequently encountered as diamond, graphite, and fullerenes.

Comets

The light of fainter comets mainly originates from the emission of diatomic carbon. There are several lines of C2 light, mostly in the visible spectrum, forming the Swan bands.[2]

Properties

Cohesive energy (eV): 6.32

Bond length (Angstrom): 1.24

Vibrational Mode (cm-1): 1855

The triplet state has a longer bond length than the singlet state.

Reactions

Diatomic carbon will react with acetone and acetylaldehyde to produce acetylene by two different pathways.[3]

Charge density

In certain forms of crystalline carbon, such as diamond and graphite, a saddle point or “hump” occurs at the bond site in the charge density. The triplet state of C2 does follow this trend. However, the singlet state of C2 acts more like silicon or germanium; that is, the charge density has a maximum at the bond site.[5]

References

  1. ^ Roald Hoffmann (1995). "C2 In All Its Guises". American Scientist 83: 309–311. Bibcode 1995AmSci..83..309H. 
  2. ^ Herman Mikuz, Bojan Dintinjana. "CCD Photometry of Comets". http://www.observatorij.org/CCDPhot/iwca5.html. Retrieved 2006-10-26. 
  3. ^ a b c Skell, P. S.; Plonka, J. H. (1970). "Chemistry of the Singlet and Triplet C2 Molecules. Mechanism of Acetylene Formation from Reaction with Acetone and Acetaldehyde". Journal of the American Chemical Society 92 (19): 5620–5624. doi:10.1021/ja00722a014. 
  4. ^ Skell, P. S.; Fagone, F. A.; Klabunde, K. J. (1972). "Reaction of Diatomic Carbon with Alkanes and Ethers/ Trapping of Alkylcarbenes by Vinylidene". Journal of the American Chemical Society 94 (22): 7862–7866. doi:10.1021/ja00777a032. 
  5. ^ Chelikowsky, J. R.; Troullier, N.; Wu, K.; Saad, Y. (1994). "Higher-order finite-difference pseudopotential method: An application to diatomic molecules". Physical Review B 50: 11356–11364. Bibcode 1994PhRvB..5011355C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.50.11355.