Hypothetical chemical compound

A hypothetical chemical compound is a chemical compound that has been conceived of, but is not known to have been synthesized or isolated (identified or shown to exist).

Some hypothetical compounds cannot form at all, or they might turn out to be highly unstable, decomposing, isomerizing, polymerizing, rearranging, or disproportionating. Some might exist only as reactive intermediates or in vacuum (helium hydride ion).

Some cannot hold together due, to steric hindrance (tetra-tert-butylmethane) or bond stress (tetrahedrane).

Some have no known pathway for synthesis (hypercubane).

Hypothetical compounds are often predicted or expected from known compounds, such as a families of salts for which the parent acid is not a stable form, or in which salts form with some cations but not others.

Hypothetical compounds are used in thought experiments.

Some compounds long regarded as hypothetical have later been isolated. Ethylene dione was suggested in 1913 and observed spectroscopically in 2015.[1]

Prediction

Stability and other properties can be predicted using energy calculations and computational chemistry.

"[Using] the Born–Haber cycle to estimate ... the heat of formation ... can be used to determine whether a hypothetical compound is stable." However, "a negative formation enthalpy does not automatically imply the existence of a hypothetical compound." The method predicts that NaCl is stable but NeCl is not. It predicted XePtF6 based on the stability of O2PtF6.[2]

References

  1. "An elusive molecule—finally revealed". Phys.Org. 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2018-07-10.
  2. Gregory S. Rohrer. Structure and Bonding in Crystalline Materials. pp. 293–294.
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