Oxoacids of Phosphorus *

Similar documents
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)

Chapter 18. Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition-Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

Chapter 18 Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition- Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

An Introduction to Carbohydrates

1/3/2011. Chapter 17 Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition- Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

Chapter 20: Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles شیمی آلی 2

Alehydes, Ketones and Carboxylic Acid

CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES: NUCLEOPHILIC ADDITION-ELIMINATION AT THE ACYL CARBON

10. CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES 10.1 Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acids 10.2 Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids 10.

An Introduction to Carbohydrates

Chapter 20: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution

Esters of Carboxylic Acids These are derivatives of carboxylic acids where the hydroxyl group is replaced by an alkoxy group.

Chemistry Chapter 19

Chapter 10. Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives. Naming Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives. Carboxylic Acids: RCOOH (RCO 2 H)

Carboxylic Acids. The Importance of Carboxylic Acids (RCO 2 H)

Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Chapter 17. Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives

Chapter 21 The Chemistry of Carboxylic Acid Deriva7ves

Chapter 19: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution 19.1: Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives (please read)

Chapter 15. Alcohols, Diols, and Thiols. B. Sources: there are two principal sources of simple aliphatic alcohols

Coupled, interconnecting reactions

Carboxylic Acids and their Derivatives I

Hydrolysis From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Official Journal of the European Communities. (Acts whose publication is obligatory) COMMISSION DIRECTIVE 2002/82/EC. of 15 October 2002

6. The catalytic mechanism of arylsulfatase A and its theoretical investigation

Chemistry 212 Fall Semester 1996 Examination #2

In any solution, a scientist can talk about the concentration of the atoms that are dissolved in the solvent.

Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry CHEM 109 For Students of Health Colleges Credit hrs.: (2+1)

C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O

Carboxylic Acids and Carboxylic Acid Deriva3ves. Nucleophilic Acyl Subs0tu0on (Addi0on- Elimina0on)

A carboxylic acid is an organic compound that contains a carboxyl group, COOH

Activity: Biologically Important Molecules

Chapter 27 Bioenergetics; How the Body Converts Food to Energy

ORGANIC SYNTHESIS VIA ENOLATES

The Structure and Function of Biomolecules

COMMISSION REGULATION (EU)

Cell Energy: Glycolysis *

Lecture 20. Herman Emil Fischer Nobel Prize 1902 Sugars, Esters and Purines. April 4, Chemistry 328N

Review Session 1. Control Systems and Homeostasis. Figure 1.8 A simple control system. Biol 219 Review Sessiono 1 Fall 2016

DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY AND CHEMICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY II 202-BZG-05 03

Chapter 3. Table of Contents. Section 1 Carbon Compounds. Section 2 Molecules of Life. Biochemistry

Chemistry 1120 Exam 1 Study Guide

PAPER No. : 16 Bioorganic and biophysical chemistry MODULE No. : 25 Coenzyme-I Coenzyme A, TPP, B12 and biotin

H O. rapidly reduces. They dissolve. because they can hydrogen bond to the water molecules.

Lecture 19. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Y - + X - Y X R C X. April 2, Chemistry 328N

Paper 9: ORGANIC CHEMISTRY-III (Reaction Mechanism-2) Module17: Reduction by Metal hydrides Part-II CHEMISTRY

Experiment 15: Fischer Esterification and Combinatorial Chemistry Phill Rasnick Introduction

From Atoms to Cells: Fundamental Building Blocks. Models of atoms. A chemical connection

Prelab 6: Carboxylic Acids

Chemistry 130. Acid and Base equilibria

Chapter Three (Biochemistry)

Chemical Formulas. Chemical Formula CH 3 COCHCHOCHClCHNH Lewis Dot Structure

Carboxylic Acids and Esters

EXPERIMENT 8 (Organic Chemistry II) Carboxylic Acids Reactions and Derivatives

Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles. Chapters 20, 21 Organic Chemistry, 8th Edition John McMurry

Chapter 2: Biochemistry

Carboxylic Acids, Esters and Acyl Chlorides

Review of Biochemistry

MONOMAGNESIUM PHOSPHATE TRISODIUM DIPHOSPHATE

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Reactions

Cells extract energy from their environment and use the energy for a host of biological activities including biosynthesis.

The effect of incubation time on the rate of an enzyme catalyzed reaction

(5) 1. List five unusual properties of water resulting from its hydrogen bonded structure

BIOCHEMISTRY. How Are Macromolecules Formed? Dehydration Synthesis or condensation reaction Polymers formed by combining monomers and removing water.

Objectives. Carbon Bonding. Carbon Bonding, continued. Carbon Bonding

MUSCLE METABOLISM. Honors Anatomy & Physiology

ADP, ATP and Cellular Respiration

CH 3. Lipids CHAPTER SUMMARY

Alcohols, Phenols, Ethers And Thiols Lec:3

Masatoshi Shibuya,Takahisa Sato, Masaki Tomizawa, and Yoshiharu Iwabuchi* Department of Organic Chemistry, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences,

3. Hydrogen bonds form between which atoms? Between an electropositive hydrogen and an electronegative N, O or F.

Biomolecules. Macromolecules Proteins Nucleic acids Polysaccharides Lipids

Metabolism Energy Pathways Biosynthesis. Catabolism Anabolism Enzymes

Chemistry B11 Chapters 14 Amines, aldehydes, ketones and carboxylic acids

METABOLISM -Introduction- Serkan SAYINER, DVM PhD. Assist. Prof.

BIOLOGICAL MOLECULES REVIEW-UNIT 1 1. The factor being tested in an experiment is the A. data. B. variable. C. conclusion. D. observation. 2.

Energy and life. Generation of Biochemical Energy Chapter 21. Energy. Energy and biochemical reactions: 4/5/09

Loudon Chapter 21 Review: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives Jacquie Richardson, CU Boulder Last updated 3/20/2018

Factors to Consider in the Study of Biomolecules

WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT?

ATP: Adenosine Triphosphate

Acid-Base Balance * OpenStax

Chapter 2 Part 3: Organic and Inorganic Compounds

Chapter 17 Carboxylic Acids, Esters, and Amides Prepared by Andrea D. Leonard University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Great Lakes Generation

Biology 12 - Biochemistry Practice Exam

Midterm 1 Last, First

PURE BRAZIL BRAND PRODUCTS

Introduction to Metabolism Cell Structure and Function

Chapter 22 Carbohydrates

Ch. 21: CARBOXYLIC ACID DERIVATIVES AND NUCLEOPHILIC ACYL SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives:

Chapter 20 Carbohydrates Chapter 20

CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 OH

Supporting Information. Phosphatase mediated hydrolysis of linear polyphosphates. Rixiang Huang, Biao Wan, Margot Hultz, Julia M. Diaz, Yuanzhi Tang

The Chemical Level of Organization

Reading. Learning Objectives. How are macromolecules assembled? 8. Macromolecules I. Contents

Experiment 12 Lipids. Structures of Common Fatty Acids Name Number of carbons

University of Groningen. Magnesium and zinc hydride complexes Intemann, Julia

A. Incorrect! No, this statement is accurate so is not the correct selection to the question.

PowerPoint Lecture Slides prepared by Janice Meeking, Mount Royal College. CHAPTER Chemistry. Part B. Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Cell Compounds and Biological Molecules. Biology 12 Unit 2 Cell Compounds and Biological Molecules Inquiry into Life pages 20-44

Transcription:

OpenStax-CNX module: m35001 1 Oxoacids of Phosphorus * Andrew R. Barron This work is produced by OpenStax-CNX and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 Phosphorous pentoxide (P 2 O 5 ) is an excellent drying agent, and its action is a result of the formation of a range of oxoacids. 1 Hypophosphorous acid Hypophosphorous acid, H 3 PO 2, is easily prepared pure buy the reaction of white phosphorous with base, followed by acidication, (1). The pure acid is a solid (Mp = 27 C) and very soluble in water. The structure of H 3 PO 2 is determined by X-ray crystallography to be tetrahedral with two hydride ligands and a hydroxide (Figure 1a). The presence of two hydrides is conrmed by NMR spectroscopy. The 1 H NMR resonance shows an OH line and a doublet from the P-H with a large one-bond coupling constant to the 31 P nucleus. The non-decoupled 31 P NMR spectrum shows a triplet (δ = 13 ppm, JP-H = 530 Hz) due to the two hydrides. (1) Figure 1: Oxoacids of phosphorous: (a) hypophosphorous acid, (b), phosphorous acid, and (c) phosphoric acid. In water hypophosphorous acid is a monobasic acid (pk = 1.2), (2), and it forms a wide range of salts. It is also a powerful reducing agent, but its reaction kinetics is slow. * Version 1.1: Aug 6, 2010 8:01 am -0500 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (2)

OpenStax-CNX module: m35001 2 2 Phosphorous acid The reaction of P 4 O 6 or PCl 3 with water yields phosphorous acid, H 3 PO 3 ; which like hypophosphorous acid is a solid (Mp = 70.1 C) and very soluble in water. The structure is shown by X-ray crystallography to be comprised of a tetrahedral phosphorus with one hydride and two hydroxides (Figure 1b). 31 P NMR spectroscopy demonstrates the presence of a single hydride by the presence of a doublet as a consequence of the phosphorous center being split by a single hydride (δ = 4 ppm, JP-H = 700 Hz). The 1 H NMR spectrum shows a doublet for the hydride and a single resonance of twice the intensity for the hydroxide. As expected, in water phosphorous acid is dibasic, (3). The acid (and the anions) are strong reducing agents, yielding phosphoric acid. They actually react very slowly, and it is thought that this may be due to the reaction being in the tautomeric form, P(OH) 3. Although this has not been isolated, the trialkyl derivatives exist in both forms, i.e., esters of phosphoric acids (Figure 3a) and trialkyl phosphates (Figure 3b). (3) Structures of two tautomeric forms; (a) an ester of phosphoric acid and (b) a trialkyl phos- Figure 3: phate. 3 Ortho phosphoric acid Orthophosphoric acid (H 3 PO 4 ) is the most common oxoacid of phosphorus (Figure 1c). The term acid phosphoric acid is commonly used. It is made from the reaction of phosphates with sulfuric acid (H 2 SO 4 ), or from the hydrolysis of P 4 O 10. The pure acid is a colorless crystalline solid (Mp = 42.35 C) with extensive hydrogen bonding. The inter-phosphoric acid hydrogen bonding is partially maintained in aqueous solutions above 50% solutions. Phosphoric acid is very stable and shows no oxidation chemistry below 350 C. As expected, phosphoric acid is tribasic, (4). The anions H 2 PO - 4 and HPO 2-4 have particular names, dihydrogen phosphate and monohydrogen phosphate, respectively. Many salts of are known for all three anions; those with phosphate (PO 4 2- ) are often insoluble in water. Many coordination complexes are known, especially with M 3+ and M 4+ ions. (4)

OpenStax-CNX module: m35001 3 3.1 Phosphorous esters The alkyl and aryl homologs of phosphoric acid (i.e., the phosphate triester O=P(OR) 3 ) are prepared by the reaction of P 4 O 10 with the appropriate alcohol. The triesters are good solvents and Lewis basic ligands with coordination via the oxide moiety. The diesters and monoesters can also be made, and they are important in biochemical processes. Phosphite triesters, P(OR) 3, may be made by the reaction of PCl 3 with alcohols or phenols in the presence of an organic base as the acceptor for the HCl formed. Alternatively, they can be prepared directly from white phosphorous, (5). Phosphite triesters are readily oxidized to the appropriate phosphate triester, (6). They also react with alkyl halides to form the dialkyl phosphonate via the Michaelis-Arbusov reaction, (7). (5) (6) (7) 3.2 Polyphosphates Polyphosphates contain the PO 4 unit, and the simplest example (pyrophosphate or diphosphate, Figure 8a) can be considered as condensation products of monohydrogen phosphate, (8). Longer chains can be formed, e.g., the triphosphate P 3 O 10 5- (Figure 8b). The formation and reverse (hydrolysis) reaction are slow, but are readily catalyzed, e.g., by enzymes. (8) Figure 8: The structures of the (a) diphosphate and (b) triphosphate anions. The monoesters of the diphosphate and triphosphate are very important in biological processes. In particular the conversion of the triphosphate ATP (adenosine triphosphate) to the diphosphate ADP (adenosine

OpenStax-CNX module: m35001 4 diphosphate) by the transfer of a phosphate group, (9), is important in the energetics of biological reactions. (9) 3.3 Cyclic polyphosphates Also known as meta phosphates, cyclic phosphates are also made from fused PO 4 units. The simplest, P 3 O 9 3-, is shown in Figure 9. Slow addition of water to P 4 O 10 results in the formation of the tetrameric polyphosphate, P 4 O 12 4- (Figure 9), which is known as calgon due to its ability to complex Ca 2+ as well as other metals. Figure 9: The structure of P 3O 9 3-. Phosphorus atoms are represented by the large spheres, and oxygen atoms by the small spheres (Copyright: Karl Harrison, 2005).

OpenStax-CNX module: m35001 5 Figure 9: The structure of P 4O 12 4- calgon. Phosphorus atoms are represented by the large spheres, and oxygen atoms by the small spheres (Copyright: Karl Harrison, 2005).