Everything about Carbonate totally explained
In
chemistry, a
carbonate is a
salt or
ester of
carbonic acid.
Applications
To test for the presence of the carbonate anion in a salt, the addition of dilute mineral acid (for example
hydrochloric acid) will yield carbon dioxide gas.
Carbonate-containing
salts are industrially and
mineralogically ubiquitous. The term "carbonate" is also commonly used to refer to one of these salts or
carbonate minerals. Most common is
calcite, or
calcium carbonate, the chief constituent of
limestone. The process of removing carbon dioxide from these salts by heating is called
calcination.
The term is also used as a verb, to describe the process of raising carbonate and
bicarbonate concentrations in soda, see also
carbonated water, either by the introduction under pressure of
carbon dioxide gas into the bottle, or by dissolving carbonate or bicarbonate salts into the water.
Chemical properties
The
carbonate ion is a
polyatomic anion with the
empirical formula CO32− and a molecular mass of 60.01
daltons; it consists of one central carbon
atom surrounded by three identical oxygen atoms in a
trigonal planar arrangement. The carbonate ion carries a negative two
formal charge and is the
conjugate base of the
hydrogen carbonate ion, HCO
3−, which is the conjugate base of H
2CO
3, carbonic acid.
A carbonate salt forms when a positively charged ion attaches to the negatively charged oxygen atoms of the ion, forming an ionic
compound. Most carbonate salts are
insoluble in
water at
standard temperature and pressure, with
solubility constants of less than 1×10
−8. Exceptions include
sodium,
potassium and
ammonium carbonates.
In
aqueous solution, carbonate, bicarbonate, carbon dioxide, and carbonic acid exist together in a
dynamic equilibrium. In strongly basic conditions, the carbonate ion predominates, while in weakly basic conditions, the
bicarbonate ion is prevalent. In more acid conditions, aqueous
carbon dioxide, CO
2(aq), is the main form, which, with water, H
2O, is in equilibrium with carbonic acid - the equilibrium lies strongly towards carbon dioxide. Thus
sodium carbonate is basic,
sodium bicarbonate is weakly basic, while carbon dioxide itself is a weak acid.
Carbonated water is formed by dissolving CO
2 in water under pressure. When the partial pressure of CO
2 is reduced, for example when a can of soda is opened, the equilibrium for each of the forms of carbonate (carbonate, bicarbonate, carbon dioxide, and carbonic acid) shifts until the concentration of CO
2 in the solution is equal to the solubility of CO
2 at that temperature and pressure. In living systems an enzyme,
carbonic anhydrase, speeds the interconversion of CO
2 and carbonic acid.
In organic chemistry a carbonate can also refer to a
functional group within a larger molecule that contains a carbon atom bound to three oxygen atoms, one which is double bonded. The
VSEPR shape of the carbonate ion is trigonal planar or triplanar.
Acid-base chemistry
The carbonate ion (CO
32−) is a moderately strong base. It is a conjugate base of the weakly acidic
bicarbonate (
IUPAC name
hydrogen carbonate HCO
3−), itself a moderately strong conjugate base of the still weakly acidic
carbonic acid. As such in aqueous solution, the carbonate ion seeks to reclaim hydrogen atoms.
Biological Significance
It works as a buffer in the blood as follows:
when pH is too low, the concentration of hydrogen ions is too high, so you exhale CO
2. This will cause the equation to shift left, essentially decreasing the concentration of H
+ ions, causing a more basic pH.
When pH is too high, the concentration of hydrogen ions in the blood is too low, so the kidneys excrete bicarbonate (HCO
3−). This causes the equation to shift right, essentially increasing the concentration of hydrogen ions, causing a more acidic pH.
Carbonate salts
History
It is generally thought that the presence of carbonates in
rock is unequivocal evidence for the presence of liquid water. Recent observations of the
Planetary nebula NGC 6302 shows evidence for carbonates in space, where aqueous alteration similar to that on Earth is unlikely. Other minerals have been proposed which would fit the observations.
Significant
carbonate deposits have not been found on Mars via remote sensing or in situ missions, even though Martian meteorites contain small amounts and groundwater may have existed at both Gusev and Meridiani Planum.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Carbonate'.
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