chloriminium
Chloriminium, also referred to as chloroiminium, describes a class of reactive, positively charged species in which a chlorine atom is bonded to a carbon atom of an iminium fragment. The core motif is a chlorinated iminium cation that can be represented generically as [Cl–CH=NR2]+ or [Cl–CH=N–R]+, with various substituents on nitrogen. These cations are typically encountered as salts with counterions such as chloride, tetrafluoroborate (BF4−), or hexafluorophosphate (PF6−). They are commonly formed in situ through chlorination of imines or related precursors and are often short-lived due to their electrophilic and reactive nature.
In reactivity, chloriminium ions act as electrophiles at the iminium carbon and can be intercepted by a
Safety and handling: chloriminium species are typically moisture-sensitive and can release corrosive hydrogen chloride upon hydrolysis;