Atomic orbitals 6p electron density

Animated plot of the 6p electron density function (ψ6p)2. The yellow zones are where the wave function has positive values and the white zones denote negative values. There are three 6p orbitals. These have the same shape but are aligned differently in space. The three 6p orbitals normally used are labelled 6px, 6py, and 6pz.

The graph on the right is a plot of values along a single line drawn through the nucleus while the surface plot on the left shows values of (ψ6p)2 on a plane including the nucleus.

The "surface" of the three-dimensional orbital at the top of each animation represents a set of points for which the electron density of that orbital is the same - an isosurface. By choosing different values of electron density, denoted by the bar moving up and down on the line plot or by the moving plane on the surface plot, then the size of the three-dimensional plot changes. Examine the 6p wave function plots for further information.

All values of electron density are of necessity not negative since the square of any real number cannot be less than zero.

Each 6p orbital has a planar node normal to the axis of the orbital (so the 6px orbital has a yz nodal plane, for instance) and four spherical nodal surfaces. The higher p-orbitals (7p) are more complex since they have spherical nodes as well while lower p orbitals (2p, 3p, 4p, and 5p) have fewer.


The OrbitronTM, a gallery of orbitals on the WWW: https://winter.group.shef.ac.uk/orbitron/
Copyright 2002-2023 Prof. Mark Winter [The University of Sheffield]. All rights reserved.