Q.7Β The decreasing order of bond lengths for ππ, ππ, ππ and ππ is
(A) B2 > C2 > N2 > O2
(B) B2 > C2 > O2 > N2
(C) N2 > C2 > O2 > B2
(D) B2 > O2 > N2 > C2
The correct answer is (C) Nβ > Cβ > Oβ > Bβ.
This order reflects the experimentally observed bond lengths: Nβ (1.09 Γ ), Cβ (1.24 Γ ), Oβ (1.21 Γ ), and Bβ (1.59 Γ ).β
Bond Orders
Bond order determines bond strength and inversely correlates with bond length in these homonuclear diatomic molecules. Higher bond order means more shared electrons pulling atoms closer.
-
Bβ (10 electrons): Bond order = 1 (Ο2sΒ² Ο*2sΒ² Ο2pβ΄).β
-
Cβ (12 electrons): Bond order = 2 (adds Ο2pΒ²).β
-
Nβ (14 electrons): Bond order = 3 (KK (Ο2s)Β² (Ο*2s)Β² Ο2pβ΄ Ο2pΒ²).β
-
Oβ (16 electrons): Bond order = 2 (Ο*2pΒ² antibonding electrons weaken it).β
Why This Order?
Pure bond order predicts Nβ (shortest) < Cβ β Oβ < Bβ (longest), but atomic size refines it. Oxygenβs smaller radius shortens Oβ below Cβ despite same bond order.
Bond lengths confirm: Bβ longest (lowest order, largest atoms), then Oβ (double bond, small atoms), Cβ, Nβ shortest (triple bond).β
Option Analysis
-
(A) Bβ > Cβ > Nβ > Oβ: Wrong; Nβ shorter than Cβ, Oβ not longest.
-
(B) Bβ > Cβ > Oβ > Nβ: Wrong; violates Nβ shortest and Oβ < Cβ.
-
(C) Nβ > Cβ > Oβ > Bβ: Correct; matches experiment (1.09 < 1.24 > 1.21 < 1.59 Γ ).
-
(D) Bβ > Oβ > Nβ > Cβ: Wrong; Nβ not between Oβ and Cβ.
The decreasing order of bond lengths for O2, B2, N2, and C2 is a core CSIR NET Life Sciences topic in molecular orbital theory. Candidates often confuse it due to bond order similarities in C2 and O2. This guide explains the correct sequenceβN2 > C2 > O2 > B2βusing valence electrons, MO diagrams, and real bond lengths.
Bond Order Calculation
Molecular orbital (MO) theory fills orbitals as Ο2s, Ο2s, Ο2p, Ο2p (for B2-C2), then Ο2p, Ο*2p (O2 onward).β
| Molecule | Valence Electrons | Configuration (valence) | Bond Order ((Nb β Na)/2) | Experimental Bond Length (Γ ) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B2 | 6 | (Ο2s)Β² (Ο*2s)Β² (Ο2p)β΄ | 1 | 1.59 |
| C2 | 8 | above + (Ο2p)Β² | 2 | 1.24 |
| N2 | 10 | above + empty | 3 | 1.09 |
| O2 | 12 | above + (Ο*2p)Β² | 2 | 1.21 |
Higher bond order shortens bonds; O2βs antibonding Ο* electrons and smaller atomic radius make it shorter than C2.β
Why Not Bond Order Alone?
Atomic radius decreases BβO, overriding same-order comparisons. N2βs triple bond dominates for shortest length.β
Exam Tips for CSIR NET
-
Remember: For second-period diatomics, N2 < O2 < C2 for doubles; B2 longest (single).β
-
Practice MO diagrams: B2 paramagnetic, O2 too; N2/C2 diamagnetic.
-
Common trap: Ignoring size effect on C2 vs O2.
This order (option C) appears in CSIR NET; verify with NIST CCCBDB for values.β


