Dictionary Definition
hydride n : any binary compound formed by the
union of hydrogen and other elements
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
hydride
- Italian: idruro
- Spanish: hidruro
Derived terms
- aluminium hydride
- aluminohydride
- beryllium hydride
- bismuth hydride
- borohydride
- dihydride
- fluorohydride
- gallium hydride
- indium hydride
- lanthanide hydride
- lead hydride
- lithium aluminium hydride
- lithium hydride
- metal hydride
- nickel hydride
- palladium hydride
- plutonium hydride
- polonium hydride
- selenium hydride
- silicon hydride
- sodium hydride
- tellurium hydride
- tetrahydride
- thallium hydride
- tin hydride
- trihydride
See also
- alane
- alkane
- alkene
- alkyne
- alumane
- ammonia
- arsane
- arsine
- astatane
- azane
- bismuthane
- bromane
- carbane
- chlorane
- fluorane
- gallane
- germane
- hydrazine
- hydrogen peroxide
- hydrogen selenide
- hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen sulphide
- hydrogen telluride
- indigane
- iodane
- oxidane
- phosphane
- phosphine
- plumbane
- polane
- selane
- silane
- stannane
- stibane
- stibine
- sulfane, sulphane
- tellane
- thallane
- water
Extensive Definition
Hydride is the name given to the negative
ion of hydrogen, H−. Although this ion
does not exist except in extraordinary conditions, the term hydride
is widely applied to describe compounds
of hydrogen with other elements,
particularly those of groups 1–16.
The variety of compounds formed by hydrogen is vast, arguably
greater than that of any other element. Various metal hydrides are
currently being studied for use as a means of hydrogen storage in
fuel
cell-powered electric cars and batteries.
They also have important uses in organic
chemistry as powerful reducing
agents, and many promising uses in hydrogen
economy.
Every element of the periodic
table (except some noble gases)
forms one or more hydrides. These compounds may be classified into
three main types by the predominant nature of their bonding:
- Saline hydrides, which have significant ionic character,
- Covalent hydrides, which include the hydrocarbons and many other compounds, and
- Interstitial hydrides, which may be described as having metallic bonding.
Hydride ion
- See also: hydrogen anion.
Aside from electride, the hydride ion is
the simplest possible anion, consisting of two electrons and a proton. Hydrogen has a relatively
low electron
affinity, 72.77 kJ/mol, thus hydride is so basic that
it is unknown in solution. This however is deceptive since the
proton is so acidic it is also unknown in solution. The reactivity
of the hypothetic hydride ion is dominated by its exothermic
protonation to give dihydrogen:
-
- H− + H+ → H2; ΔH = −1676 kJ/mol
-
- H2 + 2e− 2H−; Eo = −2.25 V
Ionic hydrides
In ionic, or saline, hydrides, the hydrogen is viewed as a pseudohalide. The saline hydrides are insoluble in conventional solvents, reflecting their nonmolecular structures. H− has stable electron configuration of helium with a filled 1s-orbital. Ionic hydrides also feature an electropositive metal, usually one of the alkali metals or alkaline earth metals. These hydrides are called binary if they only involve two elements including hydrogen. Chemical formulae for binary ionic hydrides typically MH (as in LiH). As the charge on the metal increases, the M-H bonding becomes more covalent as in MgH2 and AlH3. Ionic hydrides are commonly encountered as basic reagents in organic synthesis:- C6H5C(O)CH3 + KH → C6H5C(O)CH2K + H2
Alkali metal hydrides react with metal halides.
Lithium
aluminium hydride (often abbreviated as LAH) arises from
reactions with aluminium
chloride.
- 4 LiH + AlCl3 → LiAlH4 + 3 LiCl
Covalent hydrides
In covalent hydrides, hydrogen is covalently bonded to more electropositive element such as p-block (boron, aluminium, and Group 4-7) elements as well as beryllium. Common compounds include the hydrocarbons and ammonia could be considered as hydrides of carbon and nitrogen, respectively. Charge neutral covalent hydrides that are molecular are often volatile at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. Some covalent hydrides are not volatile because they are polymeric—i.e. nonmolecular—such as the binary hydrides of aluminium and beryllium. Replacing some hydrogen atoms in such compounds with larger ligands, one obtains molecular derivatives. For example, diisobutylaluminium hydride (DIBAL) consists of two aluminium centers bridged by hydride ligands. Hydrides that are soluble in common solvents are widely used in organic synthesis. Particularly common are sodium borohydride (NaBH4) and lithium aluminum hydride and hindered reagents such as DIBAL.Transition metal hydrido complexes
Most transition metal complexes form molecular compounds that contain one or more hydride ligands. Usually such compounds are discussed in the context of organometallic chemistry. They are intermediates in many industrial processes that rely on metal catalysts, such as hydroformylation, hydrogenation, and hydrodesulfurization.Deprotonation of dihydrogen
complexes gives metal hydrides.
Two famous examples of transition metal hydrides
are HCo(CO)4 and H2Fe(CO)4, are acidic thus demonstrating that the
term hydride is used very broadly. The anion [ReH9]2−
is a rare example of a molecular homoleptic metal
hydride.
Interstitial hydrides of the transitional metals
Structurally related to the saline hydrides, the transition metals form binary hydrides which are often non-stoichiometric, with variable amounts of hydrogen atoms in the lattice, where they can migrate through it. In materials engineering, the phenomenon of hydrogen embrittlement is a consequence of interstitial hydrides. Palladium absorbs up to 900 times its own volume of hydrogen at room temperatures, forming palladium hydride, and was therefore once thought as a means to carry hydrogen for vehicular fuel cells. Hydrogen gas is liberated proportional to the applied temperature and pressure but not to the chemical composition.Interstitial hydrides show certain promise as a
way for safe hydrogen
storage. During last 25 years many interstitial hydrides were
developed that readily absorb and discharge hydrogen at room
temperature and atmospheric pressure. They are usually based on
intermetallic
compounds and solid-solution alloys. However, their application is
still limited, as they are capable of storing only about 2 weight
percent of hydrogen, which is not enough for automotive
applications.
Nomenclature
The following is a list of the nomenclature for the hydride derivatives of main group compounds:- alkali and alkaline earth metals: metal hydride
- boron: borane and rest of the group as metal hydride
- carbon: alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, and all hydrocarbons
- silicon: silane
- germanium: germane
- tin: stannane
- lead: plumbane
- nitrogen: ammonia ('azane' when substituted), hydrazine
- phosphorus: phosphine ('phosphane' when substituted)
- arsenic: arsine ('arsane' when substituted)
- antimony: stibine ('stibane' when substituted)
- bismuth: bismuthine ('bismuthane' when substituted)
According to the convention above, the following
are "hydrogen compounds" and not "hydrides":
- oxygen: water ('oxidane' when substituted), hydrogen peroxide
- sulfur: hydrogen sulfide ('sulfane' when substituted)
- selenium: hydrogen selenide ('selane' when substituted)
- tellurium: hydrogen telluride ('tellane' when substituted)
- halogens: hydrogen halides
Examples:
- nickel hydride: used in NiMH batteries
- palladium hydride: electrodes in cold fusion experiments
- lithium aluminium hydride: a powerful reducing agent used in organic chemistry
- sodium borohydride: selective specialty reducing agent, hydrogen storage in fuel cells
- sodium hydride: a powerful base used in organic chemistry
- diborane: reducing agent, rocket fuel, semiconductor dopant, catalyst, used in organic synthesis; also borane, pentaborane and decaborane
- arsine: used for doping semiconductors
- stibine: used in semiconductor industry
- phosphine: used for fumigation
- silane: many industrial uses, e.g. manufacture of composite materials and water repellents
- ammonia: coolant, fertilizer, many other industrial uses
- hydrogen sulfide: component of natural gas, important source of sulfur
- Chemically, even water and hydrocarbons could be considered hydrides.
Isotopes of hydride
Protide, deuteride, and tritide are used to describe ions or compounds, which contain enriched hydrogen-1, deuterium or tritium, respectively.Precedence convention
According to IUPAC convention, by precedence (stylized electronegativity), hydrogen falls between group 15 and group 16 elements. Therefore we have NH3, 'nitrogen hydride' (ammonia), versus H2O, 'hydrogen oxide' (water).See also
External links
hydride in Czech: Hydrid
hydride in German: Hydride
hydride in Spanish: Hidruro
hydride in French: Hydrure
hydride in Italian: Idruro
hydride in Hebrew: הידריד
hydride in Latvian: Hidrīdi
hydride in Dutch: Hydride
hydride in Japanese: 水素化合物
hydride in Low German: Hydriden
hydride in Polish: Wodorki
hydride in Portuguese: Hidreto
hydride in Russian: Гидриды
hydride in Finnish: Hydridi
hydride in Swedish: Metallhydrid
hydride in Ukrainian: Гідриди
hydride in Chinese: 氢化物