Diving deeper into the mathematical inner workings of quantum mechanics: The set of unitary operators on the Hilbert space $\mathcal{H}$ forms a group. While for finite-dimensional Hilbert spaces, this group is essentially the matrix Lie group $U(n)$ and everything is well-known, in the infinite-dimensional case, this does not seem to be the case. Wikipedia says this group is sometimes referred to as Hilbert group, is this the standard terminology?
Main question: are there unitary operators in this group, that cannot be written as $$U=e^{-iHt}$$ for some Hamiltonian $H$?
Secondly, I would like to understand how those Hamiltonians might look. Really, the only thing you get to see in standard QM are Hamiltonians $H$ which are polynomials of the canonical operators $X$ and $P$ or equivalently can be written as polynomials of annihilation and creation operators. Do these Hamiltonians induce a subgroup of the (Hilbert) group mentioned above, are there other known subgroups?