Hexafluorophosphoric acid refers to a family of salts produced by combining phosphorus pentafluoride and hydrofluoric acid. The idealized chemical formula for hexafluorophosphoric acidis, which also is written .[1] Hexafluorophosphoric acid is only stable in solution, decomposing to HF and PF5 when dry. It exothermically reacts with water to produce oxonium hexafluorophosphate and hydrofluoric acid. Additionally, such solutions often contain products derived from hydrolysis of the P-F bonds, including,, and, and their conjugate bases.[2] Hexafluorophosphoric acid attacks glass. Upon heating, it decomposes to generate HF. Crystalline has been obtained as the hexahydrate, wherein is enclosed in truncated octahedral cages defined by the water and protons. NMR spectroscopy indicates that solutions derived from this hexahydrate contain significant amounts of HF.
Whereas a species with the formula HPF6 remains unknown, the analogous molecular hexafluoroarsenic acid (HAsF6) has been crystallized.[3]