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  2. Phosphite anion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphite_anion

    (NH 4) 2 HPO 3 ·H 2 O, CuHPO 3 ·H 2 O, SnHPO 3 and Al 2 (HPO 3) 3 ·4H 2 O. [4] The structure of HPO 2− 3 is approximately tetrahedral. [5] [6] HPO 2− 3 has a number of canonical resonance forms making it isoelectronic with bisulfite ion, HSO − 3, which has a similar structure. [7]

  3. Lewis structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_structure

    Expressing resonance when drawing Lewis structures may be done either by drawing each of the possible resonance forms and placing double-headed arrows between them or by using dashed lines to represent the partial bonds (although the latter is a good representation of the resonance hybrid which is not, formally speaking, a Lewis structure ...

  4. Phosphate phosphite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphate_phosphite

    A phosphate phosphite is a chemical compound or salt that contains phosphate and phosphite anions (PO 3 3-and PO 4 3-). These are mixed anion compounds or mixed valence compounds . Some have third anions.

  5. Resonance (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonance_(chemistry)

    Under the framework of valence bond theory, resonance is an extension of the idea that the bonding in a chemical species can be described by a Lewis structure. For many chemical species, a single Lewis structure, consisting of atoms obeying the octet rule, possibly bearing formal charges, and connected by bonds of positive integer order, is sufficient for describing the chemical bonding and ...

  6. Natural resonance theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_Resonance_Theory

    Below is an example of how NRT may generate a list of resonance structures. (1) Given an input wavefunction, NRT creates a list of reference Lewis structures. The LEWIS option tests each structure and rejects those that do not conform to the Lewis bonding theory (i.e., those that do not fulfill the octet rule, pose unreasonable formal charges ...

  7. Phosphoric acids and phosphates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphoric_acids_and...

    Likewise, tripolyphosphoric acid H 5 P 3 O 10 yields at least five anions [H 5−k P 3 O 10] k−, where k ranges from 1 to 5, including tripolyphosphate [P 3 O 10] 5−. Tetrapolyphosphoric acid H 6 P 4 O 13 yields at least six anions, including tetrapolyphosphate [P 4 O 13] 6−, and so on. Note that each extra phosphoric unit adds one extra ...

  8. Phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphate

    Phosphorus comprises 0.1% by mass of the average rock [12] (while, for perspective, its typical concentration in vegetation is 0.03% to 0.2%), [13] and consequently there are quadrillions of tons of phosphorus in Earth's 3×10 19-ton crust, [14] albeit at predominantly lower concentration than the deposits counted as reserves, which are ...

  9. Kosnarite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosnarite

    Kosnarite is an alkali zirconium phosphate mineral (KZr 2 (PO 4) 3) named after an expert of pegmatites Richard A. Kosnar. [2] Kosnarite contains potassium, oxygen, phosphorus, and zirconium with sodium, rubidium, hafnium, manganese and fluorine (Na, Rb, Hf, Mn, and F) being common impurities found in kosnarite.