The statistical interpretation of bond index, valence and charge fluctuation is connected with the hardness-softness concept developed by Pearson, Parr and co-workers. It is shown that the MO selfcharge of an atom is its softness in the molecule. For all pairs (A, B) of atoms in a molecule, a recipr
✦ LIBER ✦
Some remarks on the polemic about “direct consequences of the bond index statistical interpretation”
✍ Scribed by I. Mayer
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 160 KB
- Volume
- 148
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2614
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Direct consequences of the bond index st
✍
Paulo Pitanga; Mario Giambiagi; Myriam S. De Giambiagi
📂
Article
📅
1986
🏛
Elsevier Science
🌐
English
⚖ 193 KB
Comment on“direct consequences of the bo
✍
Francisco Elias Jorge; Antoniô Brasil Batista
📂
Article
📅
1987
🏛
Elsevier Science
🌐
English
⚖ 183 KB
It is shown that half the valence of an atom, in MO theory, is equal to the fluctuation of its atomic charge, and that the softness of an atom in a molecule is linearly related to the valence. In consequence the hardness of the atoms in the first row of the periodic table increases symmetrically fro
Reply to “comment on direct consequences
✍
Myriam S. de Giambiagi; Mario Giambiagi; Paulo Pitanga
📂
Article
📅
1987
🏛
Elsevier Science
🌐
English
⚖ 164 KB
In this reply to the Comment by Jorge and Batista (Chem. Phys. Letters I38 (1987) 115) we show that the softness of an atom in a molecule is actually proportional to the atom's MO self-charge, as stated before.