hypophosphoric acid
A chemist carefully handles a sample of hypophosphoric acid in the laboratory.
Noun: A crystalline, tetrabasic acid with the chemical formula H₄P₂O₆. It is an oxyacid of phosphorus in which the phosphorus atoms are linked directly to each other (P-P bond), placing it in an intermediate oxidation state.
Hypophosphoric acid is a technical term used primarily in the fields of inorganic chemistry and phosphorus chemistry. It refers to a specific, well-defined chemical compound. - It is used to describe the acid itself, its properties, or its salts (hypophosphates). - It is often discussed in contrast to other phosphorus oxyacids like phosphoric acid (H₃PO₄) or hypophosphorous acid (H₃PO₂).
- Noun:
- The synthesis of hypophosphoric acid requires careful control of temperature and pH.
- Hypophosphoric acid is less common in industrial applications than orthophosphoric acid.
- The structure of hypophosphoric acid features a direct bond between two phosphorus atoms.
- Salts: The term is the root for naming its salts, which are called hypophosphates. For example, sodium hypophosphate (Na₄P₂O₆).
- Isomerism: can exist in different isomeric forms based on the arrangement of its hydrogen atoms.
- Hypophosphate (noun): A salt or ester of hypophosphoric acid.
- Hypophosphorous acid (noun): A different oxyacid of phosphorus with the formula H₃PO₂, where phosphorus is in a lower oxidation state.
- Diphosphoric(IV) acid: A systematic name indicating the oxidation state.
- Tetrahydroxydiphosphanedione: A name based on its structural formula.
This term has a single, specific meaning in scientific nomenclature. It does not have common idiomatic or figurative uses outside of chemistry.
A chemist carefully handles a sample of hypophosphoric acid in the laboratory.
- a crystalline tetrabasic acid (H4P2O6)