How is the superacid CH5+ made?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the synthesis of the superacid CH5+, exploring its formation, underlying chemistry, and theoretical implications. Participants express confusion regarding the feasibility of creating CH5+ and its properties as a superacid, with references to chemical bonding and reactions involving methane.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions the possibility of CH5+ being formed due to carbon's lack of 'd' orbitals.
  • Another suggests that CH5+ might be derived from CH4H, but expresses uncertainty about the bonding and acidity implications.
  • A participant mentions "chemical ionization mass spectrometry" as a method related to the production of CH5+.
  • Concerns are raised about carbon's inability to expand its octet and the bonding capabilities of hydrogen in this context.
  • Discussion includes historical perspectives on CH5+ configurations, with references to trigonal bi-pyramidal structures and the role of H+ in reactions with methane.
  • One participant notes that CH5+ can be produced in mass spectrometers and serves as a gentler ionization agent for samples.
  • A later reply references Olah's work on CH5+, describing it as a two-electron, three-nuclear bond involving shared sigma orbitals with protons.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various viewpoints and uncertainties regarding the formation and properties of CH5+. There is no consensus on how CH5+ is synthesized or its structural characteristics, indicating ongoing debate and exploration of the topic.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge limitations in their understanding of Lewis acids, nucleophilic attacks, and the specific conditions required for producing CH4+. There are references to the need for strong electrophiles and the role of organometallic catalysts in facilitating reactions.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to students and researchers in chemistry, particularly those focused on superacids, chemical bonding, and mass spectrometry techniques.

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Could someone please tell me how CH5 is made? I learned in class that is a superacid, but i am having a hard time seeing how something like could be made. Carbon does not contain a 'd' orbital so in theory CH5+ should not be able to be created.


I have search online for the anwser, but have not found it.



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maybe its CH4H and one of the hydrogens is bonded to another hydrogen
not sure though
though if its a super acid meaning the H would leave readily and hydrogen bonds dissolve little in solution so that would make it a weak acid. So it seems that we are back in the same place. And hydrogen only has one electron pair so it couldn't bond to C and H.

I know a man that would know, his name is Adrian Dingle, he teaches at a very prestigous school in Georgia i think. Search for the name and you might find it.
 
"Chemical ionization mass spectrometry." See also, papers by Burnaby Munson.
 
Carbon can't expand its octet, so how could it hold another hydrogen?

And I've neevr heard of hydrogen expanding its octet in the case of of a hydrogen bonded to another hydrogen AND a carbon.

I don't know how this would work.
 
The QM crowd may have more up-to-date thoughts/theories/solutions on this, but mid- to late- 70s, the party line was that you're looking at a trigonal bi-pyramidal configuration. Sorta frozen nucleophilic attack of H+ on methane --- reaction being H+ + CH4 = same, so no net enthalpy or free energy change --- it just sits there in the CH5+ configuration, picking its nose and wondering what to do next. Call it sp2 with a pair of half ionized Hs associated with the un-hybridized p.


At that time, the only identifiable production occurred in the source of a mass spectrometer --- ionize hydrogen in the source, let it mingle with a "high" pressure of methane in the region surrounding the source, and the CH5+ then served as the agent/reagent for ionization of whatever sample was in the mass spec --- a "kinder, gentler" ionization of the sample --- less fragmentation.
 
Thanks for the anwser but I am still confused

Thank you all for the answers, but I am still confused on how it works or is possible. I am still in G-Chem (taking O-chem next year), so my understandings of lewis acids/bases/nucleopliphic attact is limited.


I read a few artical on superacids form physical review but did not fully understand them. I know they react methane with CH4+ to make CH5+ CH3. I am not sure how they make CH4= (the artical said they bombarded with a 150eV electrons (does this energy need to be negative).


If any ones has any links to this topic i would greatly appreate it.
 
Olah's was one of the first to introduce this concept; go to the nobel prize site and download his nobel lecture in pdf. It is essentially a 2 electron 3 nuclear bond; in the case of CH5, one of the local C-H sigma orbital is actually shared with another proton. A proper organometallic catalyst can be used to faciliate this reaction, it requires a strong electrophile.

C-----------H, the sigma bond local serves as somewhat of a pi locality (although no pi bonds are involved), a nucleophilic site.



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Thank you

Thank you, i will do that. LOL, before i posted this went to the noble prize site and looked at every link but his lecture ( figured it would be an "i would like to thank 'x', 'y','z'" speach
 

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