collidinium
Collidinium is the cation formed when collidine, a hindered derivative of pyridine known as 2,4,6-trimethylpyridine, is protonated. In practice, collidinium refers to the pyridinium salt of this base, such as collidinium chloride or collidinium tetrafluoroborate, in which the positive charge is located on the ring nitrogen of the 2,4,6-trimethylpyridinium moiety. The term is used to describe the protonated form rather than a distinct compound by itself.
Collidine itself is a weak, hindered base due to its bulky methyl groups. Its conjugate acid, collidinium,
Preparation of collidinium salts is straightforward: collidine is treated with a strong acid, which protonates the
Applications of collidinium salts arise mainly in organic synthesis as mild bases or as components of reaction