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What are degenerate orbitals in MOT?

Here’s a explanation:


Degenerate Orbitals in MOT

  • Degenerate orbitals are molecular orbitals that have the same energy.
  • In diatomic molecules, certain orbitals (like the two π orbitals in a p-subshell) have exactly the same energy level.
  • Electrons can occupy any of these orbitals without changing the total energy of the molecule.

Example

  • In the O₂ molecule, the two π(2px) and π(2py) orbitals are degenerate.
  • Both orbitals have the same energy, so electrons fill them according to Hund’s rule (one electron in each first, then pairing).

Key Points

  1. Degenerate orbitals always belong to the same type and energy level.
  2. Electrons fill separately first before pairing.
  3. Degeneracy affects the magnetic properties of the molecule (like paramagnetism in O₂).

In short:
Degenerate orbitals are “equal-energy orbitals” where electrons can freely occupy without affecting the molecule’s overall energy.

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