Dictionary Definition
phosphate
Noun
1 a salt of phosphoric acid [syn: orthophosphate, inorganic
phosphate]
2 carbonated drink with fruit syrup and a little
phosphoric acid
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any salt or ester of phosphoric acid.
Derived terms
- ammonium phosphate
- cadmium phosphate
- calcium dihydrogen phosphate
- calcium phosphate
- diammonium phosphate
- dihydrogen phosphate
- diphosphate
- disodium phosphate
- ferric phosphate
- ferrous phosphate
- fluophosphate
- fluorophosphate
- high energy phosphate
- hydrogen phosphate
- hypophosphate
- inorganic phosphate
- inositol phosphate
- iron phosphate
- metaphosphate
- monocalcium phosphate
- monophosphate
- monopotassium phosphate
- organphosphate
- orthophosphate
- phosphagen
- phosphataemia, phosphatemia
- phosphatase
- phosphate bond
- phosphated
- phosphate glass
- phosphate island
- phosphate rock
- phosphatic
- phosphatide
- phosphaturia
- potassium titanyl phosphate
- pyrophosphate
- silicophosphate
- sodium dithiophosphate
- sodium hexametaphosphate
- sodium monofluorophosphate
- sodium phosphate
- sodium phosphate tribasic
- sodium trimetaphosphate
- sodium tripolyphosphate
- superphosphate
- tricalcium phosphate
- triphosphate
- trisodium phosphate
- trisodium phosphate
- trisodium phosphate dodecahydrate
- uranium phosphate
- uranyl phosphate
- vanadious phosphate
Translations
French
Noun
fr-noun mExtensive Definition
A phosphate, in inorganic
chemistry, is a salt of
phosphoric
acid. Inorganic phosphates are mined to obtain phosphorus for use in
industry.
In organic
chemistry, a phosphate, or organophosphate, is an
ester of phosphoric acid.
Organic phosphates are important in biochemistry and biogeochemistry.
Chemical properties
The phosphate ion is a polyatomic
ion with the empirical
formula PO43− and a molar mass of
94.973 g/mol; it consists of one central phosphorus atom surrounded by
four identical oxygen atoms in a tetrahedral arrangement. The
phosphate ion carries a negative three formal charge and is the
conjugate
base of the hydrogenphosphate ion, HPO42−, which is the
conjugate base of H2PO4−, the dihydrogen phosphate ion, which in
turn is the conjugate base of H3PO4, phosphoric
acid. It is a hypervalent
molecule (the phosphorus atom has 10 electrons in its valence
shell). Phosphate is also an organophosphorus
compound with the formula OP(OR)3
A phosphate salt forms when a positively-charged
ion attaches to the negatively-charged oxygen atoms of the ion,
forming an ionic compound.
Many phosphates are not soluble in water at
standard temperature and pressure.
In dilute aqueous solution, phosphate exists in
four forms. In strongly-basic conditions, the phosphate ion (PO43−)
predominates, whereas in weakly-basic conditions, the hydrogen
phosphate ion (HPO42−) is prevalent. In weakly-acid conditions, the
dihydrogen phosphate ion (H2PO4−) is most common. In strongly-acid
conditions, aqueous phosphoric acid (H3PO4) is the main form.
More precisely, considering the following three
equilibrium reactions:
- H3PO4 H+ + H2PO4−
- H2PO4− H+ + HPO42−
- HPO42− H+ + PO43−
the corresponding constants at 25°C (in mol/L)
are (see phosphoric
acid):
- K_=\frac\simeq 7.5\times10^
- K_=\frac\simeq 6.2\times10^
- K_=\frac\simeq 2.14\times10^
For a strongly-basic pH (pH=13), we find
- \frac\simeq 7.5\times10^ \mbox\frac\simeq 6.2\times10^5 \mbox \frac\simeq 2.14
showing that only PO43− and HPO42− are in
significant amounts.
For a neutral pH (for example the cytosol
pH=7.0), we find
- \frac\simeq 7.5\times10^4 \mbox\frac\simeq 0.62 \mbox \frac\simeq 2.14\times10^
so that only H2PO4− and HPO42− ions are in
significant amounts (62% H2PO4−, 38% HPO42−). Note that in the
extracellular fluid (pH=7.4), this proportion is inverted (61%
HPO42−, 39% H2PO4−).
For a strongly-acid pH (pH=1), we find
- \frac\simeq 0.075 \mbox\frac\simeq 6.2\times10^ \mbox \frac\simeq 2.14\times10^
showing that H3PO4 is dominant with respect to
H2PO4−. HPO42− and PO43− are
practically absent.
Phosphate can form many polymeric ions such as
diphosphate (also
pyrophosphate),
P2O74−, and triphosphate, P3O105−. The
various metaphosphate ions have an
empirical formula of PO3− and are found in many compounds.
Phosphate deposits can contain significant
amounts of naturally occurring uranium. Uptake of these
substances by plants can lead to high uranium concentrations in
crops.
Cellular function
Phosphate is useful in animal cells as a buffering
agent. The kinds of phosphate that are useful as buffers
include NaH2PO4- and H2PO4-.
See also
- organophosphorus compounds
- Phosphine - PR3
- Phosphine oxide - OPR3
- Phosphinite - P(OR)R2
- Phosphonite - P(OR)2R
- Phosphite - P(OR)3
- Phosphinate - OP(OR)R2
- Phosphonate - OP(OR)2R
- Phosphate - OP(OR)3, such as triphenyl phosphate
Further reading
- Schmittner Karl-Erich and Giresse Pierre, 1999. Micro-environmental controls on biomineralization: superficial processes of apatite and calcite precipitation in Quaternary soils, Roussillon, France. Sedimentology 46/3: 463-476.
- http://www.fluoridealert.org/phosphate/overview.htm#9, discusses environmental hazards of the phosphate fertilizer industry
References
External links
phosphate in Arabic: فوسفات
phosphate in Bosnian: Fosfat
phosphate in Bulgarian: Фосфат
phosphate in Catalan: Fosfat
phosphate in Czech: Fosfát
phosphate in Danish: Fosfat
phosphate in German: Phosphate
phosphate in Estonian: Fosfaadid
phosphate in Spanish: Fosfato
phosphate in Esperanto: Fosfato
phosphate in French: Phosphate
phosphate in Indonesian: Fosfat
phosphate in Italian: Gruppo fosfato
phosphate in Hebrew: זרחה
phosphate in Malay (macrolanguage): Fosfat
phosphate in Dutch: Fosfaat
phosphate in Japanese: リン酸塩
phosphate in Norwegian: Fosfat
phosphate in Occitan (post 1500): Fosfat
phosphate in Polish: Fosforany
phosphate in Portuguese: Fosfato
phosphate in Russian: Фосфаты
phosphate in Simple English: Phosphate
phosphate in Slovak: Fosforečnan
phosphate in Finnish: Fosfaatti
phosphate in Swedish: Fosfat
phosphate in Thai: ฟอสเฟต
phosphate in Turkish: Fosfat
phosphate in Ukrainian: Фосфати
phosphate in Chinese: 磷酸鹽