Sodium phosphate

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File:Monosodium phosphate.png
Sodium dihydrogen phosphate
File:Disodium hydrogen phosphate.png
Sodium hydrogen phosphate
File:Trisodium phosphate.png
Trisodium phosphate

A sodium phosphate is a generic variety of salts of sodium (Template:Chem2) and phosphate (Template:Chem2). Phosphate also forms families or condensed anions including di-, tri-, tetra-, and polyphosphates. Most of these salts are known in both anhydrous (water-free) and hydrated forms. The hydrates are more common than the anhydrous forms.[1]

Uses

Sodium phosphates have many applications in food and for water treatment. Sodium phosphates are often used as water-retaining agents for frozen food, thickening agents for processed food, and leavening agents for baked goods. It is also a source of the phosphate ion (an emulsifying agent) for processed cheese, where it chelates calcium, thereby allowing the casein in cheese to remain suspended and preventing separation during heating.[2] They are also used to control pH of processed foods.[3]

They are also used in medicine for constipation and to prepare the bowel for medical procedures, by acting as an osmotic laxative that draws water into the bowel.

Like other phosphate salts they are used in detergents to increase their activity in hard water. They are also used in water softeners in addition to regular sodium chloride.

They are also useful corrosion inhibitors for preventing rusting of metal pipes.

Adverse effects

Sodium phosphates are popular in commerce in part because they are inexpensive and because they are nontoxic at normal levels of consumption.[4] However, oral sodium phosphates when taken at high doses for bowel preparation for colonoscopy may in some individuals carry a risk of kidney injury under the form of phosphate nephropathy. There are several oral phosphate formulations which are prepared extemporaneously. Oral phosphate prep drugs have been withdrawn in the United States, although evidence of causality is equivocal.[5] Since safe and effective replacements for phosphate purgatives are available, several medical authorities have recommended general disuse of oral phosphates.[6]

Monophosphates

Three families of sodium monophosphates are common, those derived from orthophosphate (Template:Chem2), hydrogen phosphate (Template:Chem2), and dihydrogenphosphate (Template:Chem2). Some of the best known salts are shown in the following table.

name formula CAS registry number
monosodium phosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2 7558-80-7
monosodium phosphate monohydrate Template:Chem2 10049-21-5
monosodium phosphate dihydrate Template:Chem2 13472-35-0
disodium phosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2 7558–79–4
disodium phosphate dihydrate Template:Chem2 10028-24-7
disodium phosphate heptahydrate Template:Chem2 7782–85–6
disodium phosphate octahydrate Template:Chem2
disodium phosphate dodecahydrate Template:Chem2 10039–32–4
trisodium phosphate (anhydrous, hexagonal) Template:Chem2
trisodium phosphate (anhydrous, cubic) Template:Chem2 7601–54–9
trisodium phosphate hemihydrate Template:Chem2
trisodium phosphate hexahydrate Template:Chem2
trisodium phosphate octahydrate Template:Chem2
trisodium phosphate dodecahydrate Template:Chem2 10101-89-0

Di- and polyphosphates

In addition to these phosphates, sodium forms a number of useful salts with pyrophosphates (also called diphosphates), triphosphates and high polymers. Of these salts, those of the diphosphates are particularly common commercially.

name formula CAS Registry number
monosodium diphosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2
disodium diphosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2 7758-16-9
disodium diphosphate hexahydrate Template:Chem2
trisodium diphosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2
trisodium diphosphate monohydrate Template:Chem2
trisodium diphosphate nonahydrate Template:Chem2
tetrasodium diphosphate (anhydrous) Template:Chem2 7722-88-5
tetrasodium diphosphate decahydrate Template:Chem2 13472-36-1

Beyond the diphosphates, sodium salts are known triphosphates, e.g. sodium triphosphate and tetraphosphates. The cyclic polyphosphates, called metaphosphates, include the trimer sodium trimetaphosphate and the tetramer, Template:Chem2 and Template:Chem2, respectively.

Polymeric sodium phosphates are formed upon heating mixtures of Template:Chem2 and Template:Chem2, which induces a condensation reaction. The specific polyphosphate generated depends on the details of the heating and annealing. One derivative is the glassy (i.e., amorphous) Graham's salt (sodium hexametaphosphate). It is a cyclic polyphosphate with the formula Template:Chem2. Crystalline high molecular weight polyphosphates include Kurrol's salt and Maddrell's salt (CAS#10361-03-2). These species have the formula Template:Chem2 where n can be as great as 2000, and it is a white powder practically insoluble in water. In terms of their structures, these polymers consist of Template:Chem2 units, with the chains are terminated by protonated phosphates.[1][7]

References

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External links

  • <templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>Template:Citation/make link, Bell, Russel N, "Sodium Aluminum Phosphate Cheese Emulsifying Agent", published Script error: No such module "auto date formatter". Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
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Template:Sodium compounds Template:Phosphates