A carbonium ion is a carbocation of the penta- or tetracoordinated nonclassical type such as an ion of the type R5C+.[1]
The parent compound methanium or CH5+ is protonated methane and a superacid. This ion exists as a reactive intermediate in the interstellar medium and can be produced in the laboratory in low concentrations in the gas phase at low temperatures. This compound is considered a CH3+ carbenium ion with a molecule of hydrogen interacting with the empty orbital in a 3-center-2-electron bond. The two hydrogen atoms in H2 can continuously exchange positions with the three hydrogen atoms in the CH3+ so the methanium ion is considered a fluxional molecule. The energy barrier for the exchange is quite low and occurs even at very low temperatures.
Infrared spectroscopy has been used to obtain information about the conformations of methanium.[2][3][4] The IR spectrum of plain methane has two C-H bands from symmetric and asymmetric stretching at around 3000 cm−1 and two bands around 1400 cm−1 from symmetrical and asymmetric bending vibrations. In the spectrum of CH5+ three asymmetric stretching vibrations are present around 2800 – 3000 cm−1, a rocking vibration at 1300 cm−1 and a bending vibration at 1100 1300 cm−1.