Lesson 342: Probability Clouds and Orbitals

Introduction: What Orbitals Really Are

An orbital is a wavefunction for an electron. The probability density \(|\psi|^2\) forms a "cloud" showing where the electron is likely to be found. These shapes determine chemistry.

Radial Probability

Probability of finding electron between \(r\) and \(r + dr\):

\[P(r)dr = |R(r)|^2 \cdot 4\pi r^2 dr = |u(r)|^2 dr\]

The factor \(4\pi r^2\) accounts for the shell's volume.

Orbital Shapes

Node Counting

Example: 3d orbital has \(n = 3, l = 2\): 2 angular nodes, 0 radial nodes.

The Quantum Connection

These probability clouds aren't just pictures—they determine chemical bonding. Overlapping orbitals form molecular bonds. The shapes of s, p, d orbitals explain molecular geometries (tetrahedral for sp³, linear for sp, etc.). Quantum mechanics isn't abstract here; it's the theory behind the entire chemical world.