{{Image frame|width=280|content=<chem>[R-\overset{\oplus}N{\equiv}\overset{\ominus}C{:} <-> R-\ddot{N}=C{:}]</chem>|caption=Example of a dipolar compound, represented by a resonance structure (isocyanide)}}
In organic chemistry, a '''dipolar compound''' or simply '''dipole''' is an electrically neutral molecule carrying a positive and a negative charge in at least one canonical description. In most dipolar compounds the charges are delocalized.<ref name='dipolar compounds'>{{GoldBookRef|title=dipolar compounds|file=D01753}}</ref> Unlike salts, dipolar compounds have charges on separate atoms, not on positive and negative ions that make up the compound. Dipolar compounds exhibit a dipole moment.
Dipolar compounds can be represented by a resonance structure. Contributing structures containing charged functional groups are denoted as zwitterions. Therefore, while all zwitterions are dipolar compounds, not all dipolar compounds are zwitterions because many polar molecules achieve their dipole moment through partial charges rather than full, discrete ionic functional groups.<ref>Braida et al.: [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20481497 ''A clear correlation between the diradical character of 1,3-dipoles and their reactivity toward ethylene or acetylene.'']; J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 2010 Jun 9;132(22):7631-7</ref><ref>Hartmann and Heuschmann: [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.198912671/abstract ''Isolation of a Zwitterion in a Diels–Alder Reaction with Inverse Electron Demand'']; Angewandte Chemie; september 1989; Volume 28, Issue 9, pages 1267–1268</ref><ref name =Takahisa>{{cite journal|last1=MacHiguchi|first1=Takahisa|last2=Okamoto|first2=Junko|last3=Takachi|first3=Junpei|last4=Hasegawa|first4=Toshio|last5=Yamabe|first5=Shinichi|last6=Minato|first6=Tsutomu|title=Exclusive Formation of α-Methyleneoxetanes in Ketene−Alkene Cycloadditions. Evidence for Intervention of Both an α-Methyleneoxetane and the Subsequent 1,4-Zwitterion|journal=Journal of the American Chemical Society|volume=125|issue=47|pages=14446–8|year=2003|pmid=14624592|doi=10.1021/ja030191g|bibcode=2003JAChS.12514446M }}</ref><ref name='PIN'>Preferred IUPAC Names: [http://old.iupac.org/reports/provisional/abstract04/BB-prs310305/Chapter7.pdf "CHAPTER 7: RADICALS, IONS, AND RELATED SPECIES"], September 2004, pp. 56-70</ref><ref>Rolf Huisgen (IUPAC): [http://www.iupac.org/publications/pac/52/10/2283/pdf/ ''Cycloaddition mechanism and the solvent dependence of rate'']; Pure Appl. Chem.; 1980, Vol.52, pp.2283—2302.</ref> Some dipolar compounds, e.g. amides, can have an uncharged canonical form.{{Citation needed|date=November 2025}}
==Types of dipolar compounds==
*'''1,2-dipolar compounds''' have the opposite charges on adjacent atoms. *'''1,3-dipolar compounds''' have the charges separated over three atoms.<ref name='dipolar compounds' /> They are reactants in 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions. *Also 1,4-dipolars,<ref name =Takahisa/> 1,5-dipolars, and so on exist.
== Examples == <gallery> File:Triphenyl phosphonium ylide.svg|Phosphonium ylide File:Diazomethane.svg|Diazomethane File:Carbonyl oxide (Criegee zwitterion).svg|Carbonyl oxide </gallery>
==See also==
*Zwitterion *Ylide *1,3-dipole *1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition *Betaine
==References== <references/>
Category:Organic chemistry