I'm working with several problems, which can have special unsatisfiable configurations. For example, consider the simple function $f(x,y)=x+y+2$ with $n$-bit unsigned inputs and $(n+2)$-bit unsigned output. This function can be easily expressed as a SAT problem.
Note, that the outputs $f(x,y)=0$ and $f(x,y)=1$ are not possible.
For my problems, I'm specifically interested in such impossible configurations. The usual method for finding such configurations, is to try possible configurations and check if they are UNSAT instances. However, this has the obvious drawback, that it is computational intensive (for my problems confirming UNSAT is much more expensive than finding SAT solutions) and relies on a certain density of the impossible configurations in the problem space (or external knowledge to narrow down the possible candidates).
This leads to my question: Is there some way to reformulate/convert/transform a SAT problem, of the form as described above into another SAT problem, where the satisfiable solutions are the impossible configurations I'm interested in?
Intuitively it should be possible, but all ways I could come up with, will simply output impossible solutions like $x=1, y=1, f(x,y)=3$.
Some paper searches also did not turn up anything useful.
Does anyone have ideas or pointers how to tackle this problem? Also, any pointers to impossibility results that show this approach is not feasible are welcome.