Although isolated samples of methylidynephosphane are impractical, other derivatives have been well studied such as tert-butylphosphaacetylene.
Methylidynephosphane can be synthesised via the reaction of phosphine with carbon,[1] but it is extremely reactive and polymerises readily at temperatures above −120 °C.
However, several types of derivatives, with bulky groups, such as tert-butyl or trimethylsilyl, substituted for the hydrogen atom, are much more stable, and are useful reagents for the synthesis of various organophosphorus compounds.
[4] While the existence of the molecule had been discussed,[5] and early attempts had been made to prepare it, methylidynephosphane was first successfully synthesised in 1961, by T.E.
Methylidynephosphane may have contributed to an explosion that killed Vera Bogdanovskaia, an early chemist pursuing it, one of the first female chemists in Russia,[7] and perhaps the first woman to die from her own research.