What is the name of this chemical LiB2PO4H7? [duplicate]












0















This question already has an answer here:




  • Naming ionic compounds with multiple cations and anions

    1 answer




I was recently looking at a chemical equation calculator that balances equations for you.



enter image description here



I came across a reaction that I am unsure about, it goes like this:



B2H6 + LiH + PO4 = LiB2PO4H7



I was researching the name of the product of this reaction for a while, but couldn't find a name for the chemical. I ask you guys this, if this chemical actually exists, what is the name of it?










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marked as duplicate by Jon Custer, Todd Minehardt, Mithoron, Tyberius, Nilay Ghosh 14 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.















  • Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday










  • I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
    – Wither Fang136
    yesterday










  • I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday






  • 7




    These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
    – andselisk
    yesterday






  • 1




    @WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
    – Tyberius
    15 hours ago
















0















This question already has an answer here:




  • Naming ionic compounds with multiple cations and anions

    1 answer




I was recently looking at a chemical equation calculator that balances equations for you.



enter image description here



I came across a reaction that I am unsure about, it goes like this:



B2H6 + LiH + PO4 = LiB2PO4H7



I was researching the name of the product of this reaction for a while, but couldn't find a name for the chemical. I ask you guys this, if this chemical actually exists, what is the name of it?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











marked as duplicate by Jon Custer, Todd Minehardt, Mithoron, Tyberius, Nilay Ghosh 14 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.















  • Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday










  • I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
    – Wither Fang136
    yesterday










  • I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday






  • 7




    These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
    – andselisk
    yesterday






  • 1




    @WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
    – Tyberius
    15 hours ago














0












0








0


3






This question already has an answer here:




  • Naming ionic compounds with multiple cations and anions

    1 answer




I was recently looking at a chemical equation calculator that balances equations for you.



enter image description here



I came across a reaction that I am unsure about, it goes like this:



B2H6 + LiH + PO4 = LiB2PO4H7



I was researching the name of the product of this reaction for a while, but couldn't find a name for the chemical. I ask you guys this, if this chemical actually exists, what is the name of it?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












This question already has an answer here:




  • Naming ionic compounds with multiple cations and anions

    1 answer




I was recently looking at a chemical equation calculator that balances equations for you.



enter image description here



I came across a reaction that I am unsure about, it goes like this:



B2H6 + LiH + PO4 = LiB2PO4H7



I was researching the name of the product of this reaction for a while, but couldn't find a name for the chemical. I ask you guys this, if this chemical actually exists, what is the name of it?





This question already has an answer here:




  • Naming ionic compounds with multiple cations and anions

    1 answer








inorganic-chemistry nomenclature identification






share|improve this question









New contributor




Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 20 hours ago









user17915

1053




1053






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asked yesterday









Wither Fang136Wither Fang136

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1073




New contributor




Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Wither Fang136 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




marked as duplicate by Jon Custer, Todd Minehardt, Mithoron, Tyberius, Nilay Ghosh 14 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Jon Custer, Todd Minehardt, Mithoron, Tyberius, Nilay Ghosh 14 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday










  • I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
    – Wither Fang136
    yesterday










  • I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday






  • 7




    These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
    – andselisk
    yesterday






  • 1




    @WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
    – Tyberius
    15 hours ago


















  • Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday










  • I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
    – Wither Fang136
    yesterday










  • I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    yesterday






  • 7




    These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
    – andselisk
    yesterday






  • 1




    @WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
    – Tyberius
    15 hours ago
















Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
– Nicolau Saker Neto
yesterday




Where did you find this reaction? It's very strange.
– Nicolau Saker Neto
yesterday












I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
– Wither Fang136
yesterday




I found it on a balancing site.webqc.org/balance.php
– Wither Fang136
yesterday












I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
– Nicolau Saker Neto
yesterday




I don't see the equation on the site. Do you mean you input the chemicals yourself into the calculator, and asked it to balance to see what comes out?
– Nicolau Saker Neto
yesterday




7




7




These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
– andselisk
yesterday




These websites would accurately balance any BS you feed them with, they don't care about chemistry, only math. What are the reaction conditions (solutions/molten salts/hydrothermal/...)? Where does $ce{PO4^3-}$ come from? If it's phosphoric acid it doesn't make much sense as both diborane and lithium hydride would first react quite violently with water ending up in boric acid and lithium hydroxide. Also, the product seems to be an anion, $ce{LiB2PO4H7-}$, which again doesn't make much sense.
– andselisk
yesterday




1




1




@WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
– Tyberius
15 hours ago




@WitherFang136 arguably the point of having the more general question is to address the large number of specific questions asked on this topic. Since the naming follows general rules, the general question addresses all the specific ones.
– Tyberius
15 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















14














There is an important concept to be understood underlying this question, something all new chemistry students eventually learn: all sensible chemical reactions will balance, but not all equations that balance make chemical sense.



Balancing is purely mathematical manipulation (solving a system of linear equations), and proper balancing is necessary but not sufficient to represent real chemistry.
As a simple example, $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ balances just fine, but doesn't actually mean anything chemically. Here are a few more examples of proposed chemical reactions which balance correctly, but don't actually represent real chemistry due to more subtle arguments.



The crux of the problem is that it is very easy to write a program which can do mathematical balancing of chemical reactions, but it is exceptionally difficult to write a program which can tell in general whether the reaction actually happens! Chemists have spent the past several hundred years tabulating enormous amounts of information (e.g. physical chemistry) and making qualitative descriptions of chemical behaviour (e.g. atomic models, Lewis dot structures, etc.) so we can make this problem tractable after "getting a feel for it".



Okay, back to your reaction. In your particular case, things are made worse by the fact that one of your reagents, $ce{PO4}$, already doesn't exist in any reasonable conditions. Because this is such an unusual chemical, it's hard to predict exactly how it would react based on the rules-of-thumb we know, as most have been developed to understand more "normal" chemistry. What would most likely happen is that it would tear electrons out of just about anything, such as the hydride ions in $ce{LiH}$. The products could end up as a mixture of $ce{Li3PO4}$, $ce{LiBH4}$, $ce{H2}$ and possibly left over reagents, among others.



The closest chemically valid entity to $ce{PO4}$ is the phosphate anion $ce{PO4^3-}$. The calculator you used doesn't understand this by itself, so you would have to write "PO4{3-}" instead of "PO4" in the input field. If you had done this, since $ce{LiH}$ and $ce{B2H6}$ are true, neutral compounds, then any combination of all the above must have a negative charge too (conservation of charge). Nevertheless, I would still expect the online calculator to fail. My basic guess is that the most favourable outcome would be the formation of $ce{LiBH4}$, with other less important side-reactions.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
    – David Richerby
    17 hours ago






  • 2




    @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    17 hours ago



















6














I've never stumbled upon a "balancing" website that would be checking the correctness of the reaction. This one doesn't even seem to take oxidation state of any element into account as the charges are not balanced (-3 from $ce{PO4^3-}$ on the left and -1 from $ce{LiB2PO4H7^-}$ on the right).



Also, as it's been already ruled out in other answer, these precursors would unlikely result in any borophosphates. However, there is at least one compound characterized that consists of $ce{H,Li,B,O,P}$ only:





  • $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$, catena-[monoboro-mono-dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate]. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{LiOH · 2 H2O}$, $ce{P2O5}$ and $ce{B2O3}$, conc. solution in $ce{HCl}$ at $433~mathrm{K}$ [1].


There is also a few dozens of lithium borophosphates with addenda metals, to name a few:





  • $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$, lithium cadmium diaqua catena-[monoborodiphosphate]- monohydrate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{CdCl2 · 2.5 H2O}$, $ce{LiOH}$, $ce{H3BO3}$ and $85%$ $ce{H3PO4}$ in deionized water at $443~mathrm{K}$ [2].


  • $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$, trilithium divanadium(III) borophosphate hydrogenphosphate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{VCl3}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$, $ce{LiCl}$ in deionized water at $553~mathrm{K}$ [3].


  • $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$, lithium dicopper hihydroxoboro-bis(phosphate(V)). Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{Cu(OAc)2·H2O}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$ in deionized water at $473~mathrm{K}$ [4].


As you can see, all methods use less volatile precursors and hydrothermal conditions. Feel free to practice with writing and balancing chemical reactions for these real syntheses.



References




  1. Hauf, C.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Catena-[Monoboro-Mono-Dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate), $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 1997, 212 (1), 313–314. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.313. (Open Access)

  2. Ge, M.-H.; Mi, J.-X.; Huangm, Y.-X.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Cadmium Diaqua Catena-[Monoborodiphosphate]- Monohydrate, $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2003, 218 (JG), 295–296. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2003.218.jg.295. (Open Access)

  3. Lin, Z.-S.; Hoffmann, S.; Huang, Y.-X.; Prots, Y.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Trilithium Divanadium(III) Borophosphate Hydrogenphosphate, $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2014, 225 (1), 3–4. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2010.0002. (Open Access)

  4. Yang, M.; Li, X.; Yu, J.; Zhu, J.; Liu, X.; Chen, G.; Yan, Y. $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$: A Chiral Open-Framework Copper Borophosphate via Spontaneous Asymmetrical Crystallization. Dalton Trans. 2013, 42 (18), 6298–6301. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3DT50591J.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
    – kasperd
    21 hours ago






  • 1




    @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
    – andselisk
    21 hours ago





















2














This ion is most likely not the correct product, like the answers say, especially since it is not. However, IUPAC has methods on how to name compounds like these. Take a look at this page in the IUPAC red book.



However, if you were to just name the compound, ignoring the fact that its charge does not balance, you would get something along the lines of:



Lithium diboron phosphate heptahydride.






share|improve this answer




























    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    14














    There is an important concept to be understood underlying this question, something all new chemistry students eventually learn: all sensible chemical reactions will balance, but not all equations that balance make chemical sense.



    Balancing is purely mathematical manipulation (solving a system of linear equations), and proper balancing is necessary but not sufficient to represent real chemistry.
    As a simple example, $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ balances just fine, but doesn't actually mean anything chemically. Here are a few more examples of proposed chemical reactions which balance correctly, but don't actually represent real chemistry due to more subtle arguments.



    The crux of the problem is that it is very easy to write a program which can do mathematical balancing of chemical reactions, but it is exceptionally difficult to write a program which can tell in general whether the reaction actually happens! Chemists have spent the past several hundred years tabulating enormous amounts of information (e.g. physical chemistry) and making qualitative descriptions of chemical behaviour (e.g. atomic models, Lewis dot structures, etc.) so we can make this problem tractable after "getting a feel for it".



    Okay, back to your reaction. In your particular case, things are made worse by the fact that one of your reagents, $ce{PO4}$, already doesn't exist in any reasonable conditions. Because this is such an unusual chemical, it's hard to predict exactly how it would react based on the rules-of-thumb we know, as most have been developed to understand more "normal" chemistry. What would most likely happen is that it would tear electrons out of just about anything, such as the hydride ions in $ce{LiH}$. The products could end up as a mixture of $ce{Li3PO4}$, $ce{LiBH4}$, $ce{H2}$ and possibly left over reagents, among others.



    The closest chemically valid entity to $ce{PO4}$ is the phosphate anion $ce{PO4^3-}$. The calculator you used doesn't understand this by itself, so you would have to write "PO4{3-}" instead of "PO4" in the input field. If you had done this, since $ce{LiH}$ and $ce{B2H6}$ are true, neutral compounds, then any combination of all the above must have a negative charge too (conservation of charge). Nevertheless, I would still expect the online calculator to fail. My basic guess is that the most favourable outcome would be the formation of $ce{LiBH4}$, with other less important side-reactions.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 3




      And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago






    • 2




      @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
      – Nicolau Saker Neto
      17 hours ago
















    14














    There is an important concept to be understood underlying this question, something all new chemistry students eventually learn: all sensible chemical reactions will balance, but not all equations that balance make chemical sense.



    Balancing is purely mathematical manipulation (solving a system of linear equations), and proper balancing is necessary but not sufficient to represent real chemistry.
    As a simple example, $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ balances just fine, but doesn't actually mean anything chemically. Here are a few more examples of proposed chemical reactions which balance correctly, but don't actually represent real chemistry due to more subtle arguments.



    The crux of the problem is that it is very easy to write a program which can do mathematical balancing of chemical reactions, but it is exceptionally difficult to write a program which can tell in general whether the reaction actually happens! Chemists have spent the past several hundred years tabulating enormous amounts of information (e.g. physical chemistry) and making qualitative descriptions of chemical behaviour (e.g. atomic models, Lewis dot structures, etc.) so we can make this problem tractable after "getting a feel for it".



    Okay, back to your reaction. In your particular case, things are made worse by the fact that one of your reagents, $ce{PO4}$, already doesn't exist in any reasonable conditions. Because this is such an unusual chemical, it's hard to predict exactly how it would react based on the rules-of-thumb we know, as most have been developed to understand more "normal" chemistry. What would most likely happen is that it would tear electrons out of just about anything, such as the hydride ions in $ce{LiH}$. The products could end up as a mixture of $ce{Li3PO4}$, $ce{LiBH4}$, $ce{H2}$ and possibly left over reagents, among others.



    The closest chemically valid entity to $ce{PO4}$ is the phosphate anion $ce{PO4^3-}$. The calculator you used doesn't understand this by itself, so you would have to write "PO4{3-}" instead of "PO4" in the input field. If you had done this, since $ce{LiH}$ and $ce{B2H6}$ are true, neutral compounds, then any combination of all the above must have a negative charge too (conservation of charge). Nevertheless, I would still expect the online calculator to fail. My basic guess is that the most favourable outcome would be the formation of $ce{LiBH4}$, with other less important side-reactions.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 3




      And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago






    • 2




      @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
      – Nicolau Saker Neto
      17 hours ago














    14












    14








    14






    There is an important concept to be understood underlying this question, something all new chemistry students eventually learn: all sensible chemical reactions will balance, but not all equations that balance make chemical sense.



    Balancing is purely mathematical manipulation (solving a system of linear equations), and proper balancing is necessary but not sufficient to represent real chemistry.
    As a simple example, $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ balances just fine, but doesn't actually mean anything chemically. Here are a few more examples of proposed chemical reactions which balance correctly, but don't actually represent real chemistry due to more subtle arguments.



    The crux of the problem is that it is very easy to write a program which can do mathematical balancing of chemical reactions, but it is exceptionally difficult to write a program which can tell in general whether the reaction actually happens! Chemists have spent the past several hundred years tabulating enormous amounts of information (e.g. physical chemistry) and making qualitative descriptions of chemical behaviour (e.g. atomic models, Lewis dot structures, etc.) so we can make this problem tractable after "getting a feel for it".



    Okay, back to your reaction. In your particular case, things are made worse by the fact that one of your reagents, $ce{PO4}$, already doesn't exist in any reasonable conditions. Because this is such an unusual chemical, it's hard to predict exactly how it would react based on the rules-of-thumb we know, as most have been developed to understand more "normal" chemistry. What would most likely happen is that it would tear electrons out of just about anything, such as the hydride ions in $ce{LiH}$. The products could end up as a mixture of $ce{Li3PO4}$, $ce{LiBH4}$, $ce{H2}$ and possibly left over reagents, among others.



    The closest chemically valid entity to $ce{PO4}$ is the phosphate anion $ce{PO4^3-}$. The calculator you used doesn't understand this by itself, so you would have to write "PO4{3-}" instead of "PO4" in the input field. If you had done this, since $ce{LiH}$ and $ce{B2H6}$ are true, neutral compounds, then any combination of all the above must have a negative charge too (conservation of charge). Nevertheless, I would still expect the online calculator to fail. My basic guess is that the most favourable outcome would be the formation of $ce{LiBH4}$, with other less important side-reactions.






    share|improve this answer














    There is an important concept to be understood underlying this question, something all new chemistry students eventually learn: all sensible chemical reactions will balance, but not all equations that balance make chemical sense.



    Balancing is purely mathematical manipulation (solving a system of linear equations), and proper balancing is necessary but not sufficient to represent real chemistry.
    As a simple example, $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ balances just fine, but doesn't actually mean anything chemically. Here are a few more examples of proposed chemical reactions which balance correctly, but don't actually represent real chemistry due to more subtle arguments.



    The crux of the problem is that it is very easy to write a program which can do mathematical balancing of chemical reactions, but it is exceptionally difficult to write a program which can tell in general whether the reaction actually happens! Chemists have spent the past several hundred years tabulating enormous amounts of information (e.g. physical chemistry) and making qualitative descriptions of chemical behaviour (e.g. atomic models, Lewis dot structures, etc.) so we can make this problem tractable after "getting a feel for it".



    Okay, back to your reaction. In your particular case, things are made worse by the fact that one of your reagents, $ce{PO4}$, already doesn't exist in any reasonable conditions. Because this is such an unusual chemical, it's hard to predict exactly how it would react based on the rules-of-thumb we know, as most have been developed to understand more "normal" chemistry. What would most likely happen is that it would tear electrons out of just about anything, such as the hydride ions in $ce{LiH}$. The products could end up as a mixture of $ce{Li3PO4}$, $ce{LiBH4}$, $ce{H2}$ and possibly left over reagents, among others.



    The closest chemically valid entity to $ce{PO4}$ is the phosphate anion $ce{PO4^3-}$. The calculator you used doesn't understand this by itself, so you would have to write "PO4{3-}" instead of "PO4" in the input field. If you had done this, since $ce{LiH}$ and $ce{B2H6}$ are true, neutral compounds, then any combination of all the above must have a negative charge too (conservation of charge). Nevertheless, I would still expect the online calculator to fail. My basic guess is that the most favourable outcome would be the formation of $ce{LiBH4}$, with other less important side-reactions.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    Nicolau Saker NetoNicolau Saker Neto

    18.6k35391




    18.6k35391








    • 3




      And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago






    • 2




      @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
      – Nicolau Saker Neto
      17 hours ago














    • 3




      And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago






    • 2




      @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
      – Nicolau Saker Neto
      17 hours ago








    3




    3




    And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
    – David Richerby
    17 hours ago




    And, of course, the website linked in the question happily confirms that $ce{200 H2 + O2 -> 2 H200O}$ is the balanced equation for the synthesis of Nicolau's reagent from hydrogen and oxygen.
    – David Richerby
    17 hours ago




    2




    2




    @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    17 hours ago




    @DavidRicherby Yes, indeed, the prototypical example of dictacoordinate oxygen. With two extra lone pairs.
    – Nicolau Saker Neto
    17 hours ago











    6














    I've never stumbled upon a "balancing" website that would be checking the correctness of the reaction. This one doesn't even seem to take oxidation state of any element into account as the charges are not balanced (-3 from $ce{PO4^3-}$ on the left and -1 from $ce{LiB2PO4H7^-}$ on the right).



    Also, as it's been already ruled out in other answer, these precursors would unlikely result in any borophosphates. However, there is at least one compound characterized that consists of $ce{H,Li,B,O,P}$ only:





    • $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$, catena-[monoboro-mono-dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate]. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{LiOH · 2 H2O}$, $ce{P2O5}$ and $ce{B2O3}$, conc. solution in $ce{HCl}$ at $433~mathrm{K}$ [1].


    There is also a few dozens of lithium borophosphates with addenda metals, to name a few:





    • $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$, lithium cadmium diaqua catena-[monoborodiphosphate]- monohydrate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{CdCl2 · 2.5 H2O}$, $ce{LiOH}$, $ce{H3BO3}$ and $85%$ $ce{H3PO4}$ in deionized water at $443~mathrm{K}$ [2].


    • $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$, trilithium divanadium(III) borophosphate hydrogenphosphate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{VCl3}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$, $ce{LiCl}$ in deionized water at $553~mathrm{K}$ [3].


    • $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$, lithium dicopper hihydroxoboro-bis(phosphate(V)). Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{Cu(OAc)2·H2O}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$ in deionized water at $473~mathrm{K}$ [4].


    As you can see, all methods use less volatile precursors and hydrothermal conditions. Feel free to practice with writing and balancing chemical reactions for these real syntheses.



    References




    1. Hauf, C.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Catena-[Monoboro-Mono-Dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate), $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 1997, 212 (1), 313–314. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.313. (Open Access)

    2. Ge, M.-H.; Mi, J.-X.; Huangm, Y.-X.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Cadmium Diaqua Catena-[Monoborodiphosphate]- Monohydrate, $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2003, 218 (JG), 295–296. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2003.218.jg.295. (Open Access)

    3. Lin, Z.-S.; Hoffmann, S.; Huang, Y.-X.; Prots, Y.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Trilithium Divanadium(III) Borophosphate Hydrogenphosphate, $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2014, 225 (1), 3–4. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2010.0002. (Open Access)

    4. Yang, M.; Li, X.; Yu, J.; Zhu, J.; Liu, X.; Chen, G.; Yan, Y. $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$: A Chiral Open-Framework Copper Borophosphate via Spontaneous Asymmetrical Crystallization. Dalton Trans. 2013, 42 (18), 6298–6301. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3DT50591J.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
      – kasperd
      21 hours ago






    • 1




      @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
      – andselisk
      21 hours ago


















    6














    I've never stumbled upon a "balancing" website that would be checking the correctness of the reaction. This one doesn't even seem to take oxidation state of any element into account as the charges are not balanced (-3 from $ce{PO4^3-}$ on the left and -1 from $ce{LiB2PO4H7^-}$ on the right).



    Also, as it's been already ruled out in other answer, these precursors would unlikely result in any borophosphates. However, there is at least one compound characterized that consists of $ce{H,Li,B,O,P}$ only:





    • $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$, catena-[monoboro-mono-dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate]. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{LiOH · 2 H2O}$, $ce{P2O5}$ and $ce{B2O3}$, conc. solution in $ce{HCl}$ at $433~mathrm{K}$ [1].


    There is also a few dozens of lithium borophosphates with addenda metals, to name a few:





    • $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$, lithium cadmium diaqua catena-[monoborodiphosphate]- monohydrate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{CdCl2 · 2.5 H2O}$, $ce{LiOH}$, $ce{H3BO3}$ and $85%$ $ce{H3PO4}$ in deionized water at $443~mathrm{K}$ [2].


    • $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$, trilithium divanadium(III) borophosphate hydrogenphosphate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{VCl3}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$, $ce{LiCl}$ in deionized water at $553~mathrm{K}$ [3].


    • $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$, lithium dicopper hihydroxoboro-bis(phosphate(V)). Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{Cu(OAc)2·H2O}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$ in deionized water at $473~mathrm{K}$ [4].


    As you can see, all methods use less volatile precursors and hydrothermal conditions. Feel free to practice with writing and balancing chemical reactions for these real syntheses.



    References




    1. Hauf, C.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Catena-[Monoboro-Mono-Dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate), $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 1997, 212 (1), 313–314. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.313. (Open Access)

    2. Ge, M.-H.; Mi, J.-X.; Huangm, Y.-X.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Cadmium Diaqua Catena-[Monoborodiphosphate]- Monohydrate, $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2003, 218 (JG), 295–296. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2003.218.jg.295. (Open Access)

    3. Lin, Z.-S.; Hoffmann, S.; Huang, Y.-X.; Prots, Y.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Trilithium Divanadium(III) Borophosphate Hydrogenphosphate, $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2014, 225 (1), 3–4. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2010.0002. (Open Access)

    4. Yang, M.; Li, X.; Yu, J.; Zhu, J.; Liu, X.; Chen, G.; Yan, Y. $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$: A Chiral Open-Framework Copper Borophosphate via Spontaneous Asymmetrical Crystallization. Dalton Trans. 2013, 42 (18), 6298–6301. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3DT50591J.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
      – kasperd
      21 hours ago






    • 1




      @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
      – andselisk
      21 hours ago
















    6












    6








    6






    I've never stumbled upon a "balancing" website that would be checking the correctness of the reaction. This one doesn't even seem to take oxidation state of any element into account as the charges are not balanced (-3 from $ce{PO4^3-}$ on the left and -1 from $ce{LiB2PO4H7^-}$ on the right).



    Also, as it's been already ruled out in other answer, these precursors would unlikely result in any borophosphates. However, there is at least one compound characterized that consists of $ce{H,Li,B,O,P}$ only:





    • $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$, catena-[monoboro-mono-dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate]. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{LiOH · 2 H2O}$, $ce{P2O5}$ and $ce{B2O3}$, conc. solution in $ce{HCl}$ at $433~mathrm{K}$ [1].


    There is also a few dozens of lithium borophosphates with addenda metals, to name a few:





    • $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$, lithium cadmium diaqua catena-[monoborodiphosphate]- monohydrate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{CdCl2 · 2.5 H2O}$, $ce{LiOH}$, $ce{H3BO3}$ and $85%$ $ce{H3PO4}$ in deionized water at $443~mathrm{K}$ [2].


    • $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$, trilithium divanadium(III) borophosphate hydrogenphosphate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{VCl3}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$, $ce{LiCl}$ in deionized water at $553~mathrm{K}$ [3].


    • $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$, lithium dicopper hihydroxoboro-bis(phosphate(V)). Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{Cu(OAc)2·H2O}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$ in deionized water at $473~mathrm{K}$ [4].


    As you can see, all methods use less volatile precursors and hydrothermal conditions. Feel free to practice with writing and balancing chemical reactions for these real syntheses.



    References




    1. Hauf, C.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Catena-[Monoboro-Mono-Dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate), $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 1997, 212 (1), 313–314. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.313. (Open Access)

    2. Ge, M.-H.; Mi, J.-X.; Huangm, Y.-X.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Cadmium Diaqua Catena-[Monoborodiphosphate]- Monohydrate, $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2003, 218 (JG), 295–296. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2003.218.jg.295. (Open Access)

    3. Lin, Z.-S.; Hoffmann, S.; Huang, Y.-X.; Prots, Y.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Trilithium Divanadium(III) Borophosphate Hydrogenphosphate, $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2014, 225 (1), 3–4. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2010.0002. (Open Access)

    4. Yang, M.; Li, X.; Yu, J.; Zhu, J.; Liu, X.; Chen, G.; Yan, Y. $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$: A Chiral Open-Framework Copper Borophosphate via Spontaneous Asymmetrical Crystallization. Dalton Trans. 2013, 42 (18), 6298–6301. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3DT50591J.






    share|improve this answer














    I've never stumbled upon a "balancing" website that would be checking the correctness of the reaction. This one doesn't even seem to take oxidation state of any element into account as the charges are not balanced (-3 from $ce{PO4^3-}$ on the left and -1 from $ce{LiB2PO4H7^-}$ on the right).



    Also, as it's been already ruled out in other answer, these precursors would unlikely result in any borophosphates. However, there is at least one compound characterized that consists of $ce{H,Li,B,O,P}$ only:





    • $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$, catena-[monoboro-mono-dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate]. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{LiOH · 2 H2O}$, $ce{P2O5}$ and $ce{B2O3}$, conc. solution in $ce{HCl}$ at $433~mathrm{K}$ [1].


    There is also a few dozens of lithium borophosphates with addenda metals, to name a few:





    • $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$, lithium cadmium diaqua catena-[monoborodiphosphate]- monohydrate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{CdCl2 · 2.5 H2O}$, $ce{LiOH}$, $ce{H3BO3}$ and $85%$ $ce{H3PO4}$ in deionized water at $443~mathrm{K}$ [2].


    • $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$, trilithium divanadium(III) borophosphate hydrogenphosphate. Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{VCl3}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$, $ce{LiCl}$ in deionized water at $553~mathrm{K}$ [3].


    • $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$, lithium dicopper hihydroxoboro-bis(phosphate(V)). Hydrothermal synthesis from $ce{H3BO3}$, $ce{Cu(OAc)2·H2O}$, $ce{LiH2PO4}$ in deionized water at $473~mathrm{K}$ [4].


    As you can see, all methods use less volatile precursors and hydrothermal conditions. Feel free to practice with writing and balancing chemical reactions for these real syntheses.



    References




    1. Hauf, C.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Catena-[Monoboro-Mono-Dihydrogendiboratemonohydrogenphosphate), $ce{Li[B3PO6(OH)3]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 1997, 212 (1), 313–314. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.313. (Open Access)

    2. Ge, M.-H.; Mi, J.-X.; Huangm, Y.-X.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Lithium Cadmium Diaqua Catena-[Monoborodiphosphate]- Monohydrate, $ce{LiCd(H2O)2[BP2O8] · H2O}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2003, 218 (JG), 295–296. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2003.218.jg.295. (Open Access)

    3. Lin, Z.-S.; Hoffmann, S.; Huang, Y.-X.; Prots, Y.; Zhao, J.-T.; Kniep, R. Crystal Structure of Trilithium Divanadium(III) Borophosphate Hydrogenphosphate, $ce{Li3V2[BP3O12(OH)][HPO4]}$. Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 2014, 225 (1), 3–4. https://doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.2010.0002. (Open Access)

    4. Yang, M.; Li, X.; Yu, J.; Zhu, J.; Liu, X.; Chen, G.; Yan, Y. $ce{LiCu2[BP2O8(OH)2]}$: A Chiral Open-Framework Copper Borophosphate via Spontaneous Asymmetrical Crystallization. Dalton Trans. 2013, 42 (18), 6298–6301. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3DT50591J.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 21 hours ago

























    answered yesterday









    andseliskandselisk

    13.8k647102




    13.8k647102








    • 1




      Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
      – kasperd
      21 hours ago






    • 1




      @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
      – andselisk
      21 hours ago
















    • 1




      Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
      – kasperd
      21 hours ago






    • 1




      @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
      – andselisk
      21 hours ago










    1




    1




    Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
    – kasperd
    21 hours ago




    Why are you saying "1 H on the left"? I see 6 + 1 + 0 which is 7.
    – kasperd
    21 hours ago




    1




    1




    @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
    – andselisk
    21 hours ago






    @kasperd Because I should've paid more attention when I wrote the answer. Must've been thinking about something else. Thank you, I'm going to fix it.
    – andselisk
    21 hours ago













    2














    This ion is most likely not the correct product, like the answers say, especially since it is not. However, IUPAC has methods on how to name compounds like these. Take a look at this page in the IUPAC red book.



    However, if you were to just name the compound, ignoring the fact that its charge does not balance, you would get something along the lines of:



    Lithium diboron phosphate heptahydride.






    share|improve this answer


























      2














      This ion is most likely not the correct product, like the answers say, especially since it is not. However, IUPAC has methods on how to name compounds like these. Take a look at this page in the IUPAC red book.



      However, if you were to just name the compound, ignoring the fact that its charge does not balance, you would get something along the lines of:



      Lithium diboron phosphate heptahydride.






      share|improve this answer
























        2












        2








        2






        This ion is most likely not the correct product, like the answers say, especially since it is not. However, IUPAC has methods on how to name compounds like these. Take a look at this page in the IUPAC red book.



        However, if you were to just name the compound, ignoring the fact that its charge does not balance, you would get something along the lines of:



        Lithium diboron phosphate heptahydride.






        share|improve this answer












        This ion is most likely not the correct product, like the answers say, especially since it is not. However, IUPAC has methods on how to name compounds like these. Take a look at this page in the IUPAC red book.



        However, if you were to just name the compound, ignoring the fact that its charge does not balance, you would get something along the lines of:



        Lithium diboron phosphate heptahydride.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        chemN00bchemN00b

        519




        519















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