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Onium ion

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In chemistry, an onium compound, or onium ion, is a cation formally obtained by the protonation of mononuclear parent hydride of elements of the nitrogen group (group 15 of the periodic table), chalcogens (group 16), or halogens (group 17). The oldest-known onium ion, and the namesake for the class, is ammonium NH+
4
, the protonated derivative of ammonia NH
3
.[1][2]

The name onium is also used for cations that would result from the substitution of hydrogen atoms in those ions by other groups, such as organic radicals, or halogens; such as tetraphenylphosphonium (C
6
H
5
)
4
P+
. The substituent groups may be di- or trivalent, yielding ions such as iminium and nitrilium.[1][2]

Onium ions have a charge of +1. A molecule with two or more onium ion subgroups is said to be a double onium ion, triple onium ion, and so on. Compounds of an onium cation and some other negative ion are known as onium salts.

Onium compounds are inversely analogous to ate complexes. Lewis bases form onium ions when the central atom gains one more bond and becomes a positive cation. Lewis acids form -ate ions when the central atom gains one more bond and becomes a negative anion. [3]

Simple onium cations (hydrides with no substitutions)

Group 15 (nitrogen group/pnictogen) onium cations

Group 16 (chalcogen) onium cations

Group 17 (halogen) onium cations, halonium ions, H
2
X+
(protonated hydrogen halides)

Pseudohalogen onium cations

Group 14 (carbon group) onium cations

Group 13 (boron group) onium cations

Hydrogen onium cation

Group 18 (noble gas) onium cations

Onium cations with monovalent substitutions

Onium cations with polyvalent substitutions

  • secondary ammonium cations having one double-bonded substitution, R=NH2+
  • quaternary ammonium cations having one double-bonded substitution and two single-bonded substitutions, R=NR2+
  • tertiary ammonium cations having two partially double-bonded substitutions, R=-NH+=-R
  • quaternary ammonium cations having one triple-bonded substitution and one single-bonded substitution, R≡NR+
  • tertiary oxonium cations having one triple-bonded substitution, R≡O+
  • tertiary oxonium cations having two partially double-bonded substitutions, R=-O+=-R
  • tertiary sulfonium cations having one triple-bonded substitution, R≡S+

Double-onium dications

Unusual onium cations

External links

References

  1. ^ a b IUPAC definition
  2. ^ a b George A. Olah (1998), "Onium Ions". John Wiley & Sons, 509 pages. ISBN 9780471148777
  3. ^ Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions and mechanisms, Maya Shankar Singh, 2007, Dorling Kindersley, ISBN 978-81-317-1107-1