Physics:Monohydrogen phosphate

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Monohydrogen phosphate anion.

Monohydrogen phosphate is the inorganic ion with the formula [HPO4]2-. Its formula can also be written as [PO3(OH)]2-, which shows the presence of a O-H bond. Together with dihydrogen phosphate, monohydrogen phosphate occurs widely in natural systems. Their salts are used in fertilizers and in cooking.[1] Most monohydrogenphosphate salts are colorless, water soluble, and nontoxic.

Acid-base equilibria

Monohydrogenphosphate is an intermediate in the multistep conversion of phosphoric acid to phosphate:

Equilibrium Disassociation constant, pKa[2]
H3PO4H2PO4 + H+ pKa1 = 2.14[lower-alpha 1]
H2PO4HPO2−4 + H+ pKa2 = 7.20
HPO2−4PO3−4 + H+ pKa3 = 12.37
  1. Values are at 25 °C and 0 ionic strength.

Examples

References

  1. Schrödter, Klaus; Bettermann, Gerhard; Staffel, Thomas; Wahl, Friedrich; Klein, Thomas; Hofmann, Thomas (2008). "Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a19_465.pub3. 
  2. Powell, Kipton J.; Brown, Paul L.; Byrne, Robert H.; Gajda, Tamás; Hefter, Glenn; Sjöberg, Staffan; Wanner, Hans (2005). "Chemical speciation of environmentally significant heavy metals with inorganic ligands. Part 1: The Hg2+, Cl, OH, CO2−3, SO2−4, and PO3−4 aqueous systems". Pure Appl. Chem. 77 (4): 739–800. doi:10.1351/pac200577040739.