Bond Order Calculator -- MO Theory Diatomic Molecules | LazyTools
Chemistry

Bond Order Calculator

Calculate bond order for common diatomic molecules and ions using molecular orbital (MO) theory. Select a molecule to get the bond order and MO configuration, or enter bonding and antibonding electron counts directly.

16 diatomic molecules pre-loaded MO electron configuration shown Manual Nb/Na entry Bond order formula Paramagnetic species flagged
Bond Order Calculator
MO theory bond orders for diatomic molecules
Or calculate from electron counts:

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Key features

Why use the LazyTools Bond Order Calculator?

16 diatomic molecules pre-loaded

H2, He2, Li2, B2, C2, N2, O2, F2, NO, CO, HF, O2+, O2-, N2+ and more -- select and get bond order instantly.

MO configuration shown

The molecular orbital filling configuration is displayed with every pre-loaded result.

Manual electron-count entry

Enter bonding and antibonding electron counts directly for any molecule not in the list.

Formula displayed

Bond order = (Nb - Na) / 2 shown with every result.

Paramagnetic species flagged

Species with unpaired electrons (O2, B2, NO) are identified as paramagnetic.

Free, no signup

Runs in your browser.

How to use

How to use this tool in three steps

Select molecule

Choose from the pre-loaded list of 16 common diatomic molecules and ions.

Click Get Bond Order

The bond order, MO configuration and key notes appear instantly.

Or use manual entry

Enter bonding and antibonding electron counts for any species not in the list.

Copy result

Click Copy to copy the bond order for homework or notes.

Comparison

LazyTools vs other Bond Order Calculator tools

FeatureLazyToolsOmnicalculatorChemCalcSciencing
Pre-loaded moleculesYES (16)✓ (limited)✗ No✗ No
MO config shownYES✗ No✗ No✗ No
Manual electron entryYES✓ Yes✓ Yes✗ No
Paramagnetic flagYES✗ No✗ No✗ No
No signupYES✓ Yes✓ Yes✓ Yes
Reference

Bond orders of common diatomic species

MoleculeValence e-Bond orderBond typeMagnetic
H221Single sigmaDiamagnetic
He240Does not exist--
Li221Single sigmaDiamagnetic
B261Single piParamagnetic
C282Double piDiamagnetic
N2103TripleDiamagnetic
O2122DoubleParamagnetic
F2141SingleDiamagnetic
NO112.5Bond order 2.5Paramagnetic
CO103TripleDiamagnetic
O2+112.5Bond order 2.5Paramagnetic
O2-131.5Bond order 1.5Paramagnetic
Guide

Bond Order Calculator: MO Theory Guide

Bond order quantifies the number of chemical bonds between two atoms in a molecule. In molecular orbital (MO) theory, bond order = (number of bonding electrons - number of antibonding electrons) / 2. A bond order of 1 indicates a single bond, 2 a double bond, 3 a triple bond. Fractional bond orders (e.g. 1.5, 2.5) occur in species with an odd number of electrons. Bond order is directly related to bond strength (higher order = stronger bond) and inversely related to bond length (higher order = shorter bond).

MO theory bond order formula

Bond order = (Nb - Na) / 2, where Nb = bonding electrons and Na = antibonding electrons. The MO filling order for second-period diatomics (Li2 to N2, where 2p pi comes before 2p sigma): sigma(1s), sigma*(1s), sigma(2s), sigma*(2s), pi(2p), pi(2p), sigma(2p), pi*(2p), pi*(2p), sigma*(2p). For O2 and F2, the sigma(2p) fills before pi*(2p). For N2: 10 bonding electrons in sigma(1s), sigma(2s), pi(2p)x2, sigma(2p); 4 antibonding electrons in sigma*(1s) and sigma*(2s). Bond order = (10-4)/2 = 3. N2 has a triple bond, the strongest and shortest bond among diatomic molecules.

Bond order of O2 and paramagnetism

O2 has 12 valence electrons in the MO diagram. Filling: sigma(2s)^2, sigma*(2s)^2, sigma(2p)^2, pi(2p)^4, pi*(2p)^2 (by Hund's rule, one electron in each degenerate pi* orbital). Bonding electrons = 8 (sigma(2s), sigma(2p), pi(2p)x4); wait -- count carefully: sigma(2s)^2 + sigma(2p)^2 + pi(2p)^4 = 8 bonding. Antibonding: sigma*(2s)^2 + pi*(2p)^2 = 4. Bond order = (8-4)/2 = 2. The two unpaired electrons in pi* make O2 paramagnetic -- attracted to a magnetic field. This is a famous experimental confirmation of MO theory that VB theory cannot explain.

Bond order of NO, CO and diatomic ions

NO has 11 electrons. MO filling is similar to O2 but with one fewer electron in pi*. Bond order = (8-3)/2 = 2.5. The odd electron makes NO a radical. CO has 10 valence electrons, isoelectronic with N2, giving bond order = 3 (triple bond). O2+: remove one electron from O2's pi* -- Na decreases by 1. Bond order = (8-3)/2 = 2.5. O2- (superoxide): add one electron to O2's pi*. Bond order = (8-5)/2 = 1.5. N2+: remove one electron from N2's sigma(2p). Bond order = (9-4)/2 = 2.5. These ion bond orders are commonly tested in MO theory exam questions.

Bond order, bond length and bond energy

Bond order, bond length and bond dissociation energy are directly correlated. For nitrogen-nitrogen bonds: N-N single bond (hydrazine): length 146 pm, energy 167 kJ/mol. N=N double bond: length 125 pm, energy 418 kJ/mol. N triple N (N2): length 110 pm, energy 945 kJ/mol. For carbon-carbon: C-C single: 154 pm, 346 kJ/mol. C=C double: 134 pm, 614 kJ/mol. C triple C: 120 pm, 839 kJ/mol. For oxygen: O-O single: 148 pm, 146 kJ/mol. O=O (O2): 121 pm, 498 kJ/mol. These correlations appear consistently in structure-property relationship questions at A-level and undergraduate level.

Resonance structures and fractional bond orders

In molecules with resonance structures, the actual bond order is the average over all resonance contributors. For the carbonate ion CO3^2-: three equivalent C-O bonds, each intermediate between single (bond order 1) and double (bond order 2). The formal bond order = (1 x 2 + 2 x 1) / 3 = 1.33 per C-O bond. For benzene: alternating single and double bonds in Lewis structures, but the actual C-C bond order = 1.5 for all six bonds. For NO3-: N-O bond order = (1 x 2 + 2 x 1) / 3 = 1.33. For ozone O3: O-O bond order = 1.5. These fractional bond orders explain why all bonds in a resonance-stabilised molecule are equivalent in length and strength.

Using this calculator in coursework and lab reports

All LazyTools chemistry calculators run entirely in your browser with no data transmitted to any server. This makes them suitable for use with real experimental data in lab settings. Results can be copied with one click for inclusion in assignments, lab reports, problem sets and revision notes. The formula used is displayed alongside every result so it can be cited and verified. No account or installation is required, and the tools work identically on desktop, laptop, tablet and smartphone. The LazyTools chemistry suite covers all major quantitative topics in general, physical, organic and analytical chemistry -- see the related tools section for calculators most commonly used alongside this one.

Chemistry problem-solving: approach and common errors

Chemistry calculation problems are most reliably solved by identifying the formula, listing the known and unknown quantities, checking units, substituting, calculating and checking the reasonableness of the answer. The most common errors are: using the wrong formula for the context, forgetting to convert units (particularly percentages to fractions), rounding intermediate steps instead of carrying full precision, and misidentifying which quantity is the unknown. LazyTools calculators display the formula and inputs together, which makes it easy to spot these errors. For exam practice, attempt the calculation manually first, then verify with the calculator to build both fluency and error-checking habits.

Bond order in polyatomic molecules and extended systems

While MO theory gives exact bond orders for diatomic molecules, bond order in polyatomic molecules is more complex. For benzene (C6H6), all six C-C bonds have a bond order of 1.5 -- intermediate between single and double, arising from the delocalised pi system spanning all six carbon atoms. For graphene, the C-C bond order is approximately 1.33, between that of benzene and graphite. In metal-metal bonded complexes such as Re2Cl8^2-, the bond order is 4 (a quadruple bond) arising from sigma, pi (x2) and delta bonding. In Mo2^4+ complexes, bond order 4 is also observed. These very high bond orders (above 3) are characteristic of transition metal multiple bonds and require d-orbital participation beyond the scope of simple MO diagrams for main-group diatomics.

Predicting molecular properties from bond order

Bond order predicts three key molecular properties: bond length (higher order = shorter), bond energy (higher order = stronger), and vibrational frequency (higher order = higher frequency infrared stretching). N2 with bond order 3 has a stretching frequency of 2358 cm-1; NO (bond order 2.5) at 1876 cm-1; O2 (bond order 2) at 1556 cm-1; F2 (bond order 1) at 917 cm-1. These IR stretching frequencies decrease monotonically with decreasing bond order. This relationship is used in infrared spectroscopy to assign peaks to specific bonds and to track bond order changes during chemical reactions, particularly in organometallic chemistry where CO ligand stretching frequencies reveal the electron density at the metal centre.

Bond order and stability: which species exist?

A bond order of zero means the molecule does not exist as a stable species under normal conditions. He2, Be2 and Ne2 all have bond order zero from MO theory -- equal numbers of bonding and antibonding electrons -- and none of these diatomic molecules exist in the gas phase at room temperature. He2+ however, with one fewer antibonding electron, has bond order 0.5 and has been observed experimentally at very low temperatures. Similarly, H2- has bond order 0.5 (one bonding, one antibonding electron) and exists transiently. The bond order criterion is therefore a reliable predictor of molecular stability: species with bond order greater than zero can potentially be observed, with stability increasing as bond order increases. For main-group diatomics, the trend is: He2=0 (unstable), H2=1 (very stable), F2=1 (less stable due to F-F repulsion from lone pairs), O2=2, N2=3 (most stable, highest bond energy of any diatomic molecule at 945 kJ/mol).

Bond order is one of the most fundamental concepts connecting molecular orbital theory to observable physical and spectroscopic properties in chemistry.

Frequently asked questions

Bond order = (bonding electrons - antibonding electrons) / 2. It indicates the number of bonds between two atoms: 1=single, 2=double, 3=triple.

N2 has 10 bonding electrons and 4 antibonding electrons. Bond order = (10-4)/2 = 3. N2 has a triple bond.

O2 has 8 bonding electrons and 4 antibonding electrons. Bond order = (8-4)/2 = 2. O2 has a double bond and is paramagnetic.

MO theory shows O2 has two unpaired electrons in degenerate pi* antibonding orbitals. Unpaired electrons create paramagnetism. VB theory incorrectly predicts O2 to be diamagnetic.

NO has 11 electrons. Bond order = (8-3)/2 = 2.5. The half-integer order arises from the odd number of electrons.

Higher bond order = shorter bond. N triple N (bond order 3): 110 pm. N=N (bond order 2): 125 pm. N-N (bond order 1): 146 pm.

CO has 10 valence electrons, isoelectronic with N2. Bond order = 3 (triple bond).

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