Dictionary Definition
hydroxide
Noun
1 a compound of an oxide with water [syn:
hydrated
oxide]
2 a chemical compound containing the hydroxyl
group
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An univalent anion (OH-1) based on the hydroxyl functional group.
- Any substance containing such an anion.
Derived terms
- aluminium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide
- ammonium hydroxide
- barium hydroxide
- beryllium hydroxide
- caesium hydroxide, cesium hydroxide
- cadmium hydroxide
- calcium hydroxide
- gallium hydroxide
- indium hydroxide
- iron hydroxide
- lithium hydroxide
- magnesium hydroxide
- methylmercury hydroxide
- nickel hydroxide
- plumbic hydroxide
- potassium hydroxide
- quaternary ammonium hydroxide
- radium hydroxide
- rubidium hydroxide
- sodium hydroxide
- stannic hydroxide
- stannous hydroxide
- strontium hydroxide
- thallium hydroxide
- zinc chromate hydroxide
- zinc hydroxide
- zirconium hydroxide
Translations
Extensive Definition
In chemistry, hydroxide is the
most common name for the diatomic
anion OH−, consisting of
oxygen and hydrogen atoms, usually derived from the
dissociation
of a base. It
is one of the simplest diatomic ions known.
Inorganic
compounds that contain the hydroxyl group are referred to
as hydroxides. Common hydroxides include:
- Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)
- Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
- Calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2)
Hydroxide as a base
Most compounds containing hydroxide are bases.An Arrhenius
base is a substance that produces hydroxide ions when dissolved
in aqueous
solution. One example would be ammonia, NH3:
NH3(g) + H2O(l) NH4+(aq) + OH−(aq)
Thus, hydroxide ions are heavily involved in
acid-base
reactions as well as the special double displacement reaction
called neutralization.
Salts containing hydroxide are called base salts.
Base salts will dissociate into a cation and one or more hydroxide
ions in water, making the solution basic. Base salts will undergo
neutralisation
reactions with acids.
In general acid-alkali
reactions can be simplified to
by omitting spectator
ions.
Solubility
Most inorganic hydroxide salts are insoluble in water, except for
those with cations from Group I,
NH4+,
Ba2+,
Sr2+,
Ca2+
(little) or Tl+.
Applications
Hydroxides and hydroxide ions are relatively common. Many useful chemicals and chemical processes involve hydroxides or hydroxide ions. Sodium hydroxide (lye) is used in industry as a strong base, potassium hydroxide is used in agriculture, and iron hydroxide minerals such as goethite and limonite have been used as low grade brown iron ore. The aluminium ore bauxite is composed largely of aluminium hydroxides.Ligand
The hydroxide ion is a kind of ligand. It donates lone pairs of electrons, behaving as a Lewis base. Examples of complexes containing such a ligand include the aluminate ion [Al(OH)4]− and aurate ion [Au(OH)4]−.hydroxide in Catalan: Grup hidroxil
hydroxide in Czech: Hydroxid
hydroxide in Danish: Hydroxid
hydroxide in German: Hydroxidion
hydroxide in Spanish: Hidróxido
hydroxide in Esperanto: Hidroksila grupo
hydroxide in French: Groupement hydroxyle
hydroxide in Croatian: Hidroksidi
hydroxide in Indonesian: Hidroksida
hydroxide in Icelandic: Hýdroxýl
hydroxide in Italian: Idrossido
hydroxide in Hebrew: הידרוקסיל
hydroxide in Latin: Hydroxydatum
hydroxide in Lithuanian: Hidroksidas
hydroxide in Macedonian: Хидроксид
hydroxide in Dutch: Hydroxylgroep
hydroxide in Japanese: 水酸化物
hydroxide in Polish: Anion wodorotlenowy
hydroxide in Portuguese: Hidroxila
hydroxide in Russian: Гидроксиды
hydroxide in Slovak: Hydroxid
hydroxide in Serbian: Хидроксид
hydroxide in Finnish: Hydroksidi
hydroxide in Swedish: Hydroxidjon
hydroxide in Tagalog: Hydroxide
hydroxide in Ukrainian: Гідроксид
hydroxide in Vietnamese: Hiđrôxít
hydroxide in Chinese: 氢氧根