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chlorideproton

Chlorideproton is a term occasionally used in theoretical chemistry and chemical physics to describe a transient, protonated chloride state that can form when a chloride ion accepts a proton. In practice, this state is typically associated with hydrogen chloride (HCl) as a covalently bonded molecule or with a short-lived hydrogen-bonded complex in solution or the gas phase, rather than a stable, isolated ion.

Formation occurs via proton transfer reactions, such as Cl− reacting with a proton source: Cl− + H+ →

Bonding and structure are those of hydrogen chloride: a polar covalent H–Cl bond with bond length about

Relevance and applications are mostly in acid-base chemistry, atmospheric chemistry, and catalysis studies that involve proton

See also: Hydrogen chloride, proton transfer, hydronium, halide, protonated species.

HCl.
In
aqueous
media,
the
proton
is
largely
solvated
(as
H3O+
or
more
broadly
as
hydronium
complexes),
so
the
actual
observable
species
is
often
the
solvated
hydrogen
chloride
rather
than
a
discrete
chlorideproton.
In
nonpolar
or
low-temperature
environments,
HCl
can
exist
as
a
simple
diatomic
molecule,
sometimes
discussed
under
the
broader
concept
of
a
protonated
halide.
1.27
angstroms
and
a
dipole
moment
around
1
Debye.
In
solution,
HCl
participates
in
strong
hydrogen
bonding
with
solvent
molecules,
which
affects
vibrational
spectra
and
apparent
acidity.
Spectroscopic
detection
commonly
relies
on
infrared
or
Raman
signatures
near
the
HCl
vibrational
band
(~2885
cm−1
in
the
gas
phase).
transfer
to
chloride-containing
species.
The
term
"chlorideproton"
is
not
a
standardized
IUPAC
designation
and
is
more
often
used
informally
to
describe
transient
proton-chloride
interactions
or
to
refer
to
HCl
in
certain
contexts.