The helium hydride ion, hydridohelium(1+) ion, or helonium is a cation (electric charge ion) with chemical formula HeH+. It consists of a helium atom covalent bond to a hydrogen atom, with one electron removed. It can also be viewed as protonated helium. It is the lightest heteronuclear ion, and is believed to be the first compound formed in the Universe after the Big Bang.
The ion was first produced in a laboratory in 1925. It is stable in isolation, but extremely reactive, and cannot be prepared in bulk, because it would react with any other molecule with which it came into contact. Noted as the strongest known acid—stronger than even fluoroantimonic acid—its occurrence in the interstellar medium had been conjectured since the 1970s, and it was finally detected in April 2019 using the airborne SOFIA telescope.
Unlike the dihydrogen ion , the helium hydride ion has a permanent dipole moment, which makes its spectroscopic characterization easier. The calculated dipole moment of HeH+ is 2.26 or 2.84 debye. The electron density in the ion is higher around the helium nucleus than the hydrogen. 80% of the electron charge is closer to the helium nucleus than to the hydrogen nucleus.
Spectroscopic detection is hampered, because one of its most prominent spectral lines, at 149.14 micrometre, coincides with a doublet of spectral lines belonging to the methylidyne radical ⫶CH.
The length of the covalent bond in the ion is 0.772 Angstrom or 77.2 Picometre.
They all have three protons and two electrons. The first three are generated by radioactive decay of tritium in the molecules HT = , DT = , and = , respectively. The last three can be generated by ionizing the appropriate isotopologue of in the presence of helium-4.
The following isotopologues of the helium hydride ion, of the dihydrogen ion , and of the trihydrogen ion have the same total atomic mass number A:
The masses in each row above are not equal, though, because the binding energies in the nuclei are different.
The neutral molecule is the first entry in the Gmelin database.
Reactions with organic substances can be studied by substituting hydrogen in the desired organic compound with tritium. The decay of tritium to 3He+ followed by its extraction of a hydrogen atom from the compound yields 3HeH+, which is then surrounded by the organic material and will in turn react.
In fact, HeH+ is the strongest known acid, with a proton affinity of 177.8 kJ/mol, or a p Ka of −63.
The dihelium hydride cation, He2H+, is formed by the reaction of dihelium cation with molecular hydrogen:
The hexahelium hydride ion, He6H+, is particularly stable.
Other helium hydride ions are known or have been studied theoretically. Helium dihydride ion, or dihydridohelium(1+), , has been observed using microwave spectroscopy. It has a calculated binding energy of 25.1 kJ/mol, while trihydridohelium(1+), , has a calculated binding energy of 0.42 kJ/mol.
In 1933, K. Bainbridge used mass spectrometry to compare the masses of the ions (helium hydride ion) and (twice-deuterated trihydrogen ion) in order to obtain an accurate measurement of the atomic mass of deuterium relative to that of helium. Both ions have 3 protons, 2 neutrons, and 2 electrons. He also compared (helium deuteride ion) with (trideuterium ion), both with 3 protons and 3 neutrons.
In 1963, Fulvio Cacace at the Sapienza University of Rome conceived the decay technique for preparing and studying organic radicals and carbenium ions. In a variant of that technique, exotic species like methanium are produced by reacting organic compounds with the that is produced by the decay of that is mixed with the desired reagents. Much of what we know about the chemistry of came through this technique.
HeH+ could be formed in the cooling gas behind dissociative shocks in dense interstellar clouds, such as the shocks caused by , and outflowing material from young stars. If the speed of the shock is greater than about , quantities large enough to detect might be formed. If detected, the emissions from HeH+ would then be useful tracers of the shock.
Several locations had been suggested as possible places HeH+ might be detected. These included cool , H II regions, and dense , like NGC 7027, where, in April 2019, HeH+ was reported to have been detected.
Neutral molecule
Chemical properties and reactions
Preparation
Acidity
Other helium-hydrogen ions
It is a linear ion with hydrogen in the centre.
History
Discovery in ionization experiments
Early theoretical studies
Tritium decay methods in chemistry
Implications for neutrino mass experiments
Spectral predictions and detection
Interstellar space
Natural occurrence
From decay of tritium
Interstellar medium
See also
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