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  2. Calcium phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_phosphate

    The term calcium phosphate refers to a family of materials and minerals containing calcium ions (Ca 2+) together with inorganic phosphate anions. Some so-called calcium phosphates contain oxide and hydroxide as well. Calcium phosphates are white solids of nutritional value [2] and are found in many living organisms, e.g., bone mineral and tooth ...

  3. Dicalcium phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicalcium_phosphate

    Dicalcium phosphate is the calcium phosphate with the formula CaHPO 4 and its dihydrate. The "di" prefix in the common name arises because the formation of the HPO 4 2– anion involves the removal of two protons from phosphoric acid, H 3 PO 4. It is also known as dibasic calcium phosphate or calcium monohydrogen phosphate.

  4. Tricalcium phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tricalcium_phosphate

    Tricalcium phosphate (sometimes abbreviated TCP), more commonly known as Calcium phosphate, is a calcium salt of phosphoric acid with the chemical formula Ca 3 (PO 4) 2. It is also known as tribasic calcium phosphate and bone phosphate of lime (BPL). It is a white solid of low solubility.

  5. Phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphate

    The phosphate ion has a molar mass of 94.97 g/mol, and consists of a central phosphorus atom surrounded by four oxygen atoms in a tetrahedral arrangement. It is the conjugate base of the hydrogen phosphate ion H(PO 4) 2−, which in turn is the conjugate base of the dihydrogen phosphate ion H 2 (PO 4) −

  6. Allotropes of phosphorus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allotropes_of_phosphorus

    It would appear that violet phosphorus is a polymer of high relative molecular mass, which on heating breaks down into P 2 molecules. On cooling, these would normally dimerize to give P 4 molecules (i.e. white phosphorus) but, in a vacuum, they link up again to form the polymeric violet allotrope.

  7. Phosphoric acids and phosphates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Phosphoric_acids_and_phosphates

    The general formula of a phosphoric acid is H n−2x+2 P n O 3n−x+1, where n is the number of phosphorus atoms and x is the number of fundamental cycles in the molecule's structure; that is, the minimum number of bonds that would have to be broken to eliminate all cycles.

  8. Calcium pyrophosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_pyrophosphate

    Molar mass: 254.053 g/mol Appearance ... Calcium pyrophosphate refers to any member of a series of inorganic compound with the formula Ca 2 P 2 O 7 ...

  9. Calcium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium

    As an example of the wide range of solubility of calcium compounds, monocalcium phosphate is very soluble in water, 85% of extracellular calcium is as dicalcium phosphate with a solubility of 2.00 mM, and the hydroxyapatite of bones in an organic matrix is tricalcium phosphate with a solubility of 1000 μM. [59]