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The systematic IUPAC name is not always the preferred IUPAC name, for example, lactic acid is a common, and also the preferred, name for what systematic rules call 2-hydroxypropanoic acid. This list is ordered by the number of carbon atoms in a carboxylic acid.
Disodium hydrogen arsenate is highly toxic. The salt is the conjugate base of arsenic acid. It is a white, water-soluble solid. [1] Being a diprotic acid, its acid-base properties is described by two equilibria: H 2 AsO − 4 + H 2 O ⇌ HAsO 2− 4 + H 3 O + (pK a2 = 6.94) HAsO 2− 4 + H 2 O ⇌ AsO 3− 4 + H 3 O + (pK a3 = 11.5)
Selenous acid is analogous to sulfurous acid, but it is more readily isolated. Selenous acid is easily formed upon the addition of selenium dioxide to water. As a crystalline solid, the compound can be seen as pyramidal molecules that are interconnected with hydrogen bonds. In solution it is a diprotic acid: [3] H 2 SeO 3 ⇌ H + + HSeO − 3 ...
This acid is diprotic (readily ionizes two protons), not triprotic as might be suggested by this formula. Phosphorous acid is an intermediate in the preparation of other phosphorus compounds. Organic derivatives of phosphorous acid, compounds with the formula RPO 3 H 2, are called phosphonic acids.
The fluorinated version of malonic acid is difluoromalonic acid. Chemical structure of the malonate dianion. Malonic acid is diprotic; that is, it can donate two protons per molecule. Its first is 2.8 and the second is 5.7. [2] Thus the malonate ion can be H OOCCH 2 COO − or C H 2 (COO) 2− 2.
Squaric acid, also called quadratic acid because its four carbon atoms approximately form a square, is a diprotic organic acid with the chemical formula C 4 O 2 (OH) 2. [4]The conjugate base of squaric acid is the hydrogensquarate anion HC 4 O − 4; and the conjugate base of the hydrogensquarate anion is the divalent squarate anion C 4 O 2− 4.
The acid itself is added to foods as an antioxidant E334 and to impart its distinctive sour taste. Naturally occurring tartaric acid is a useful raw material in organic chemical synthesis. Tartaric acid, an alpha-hydroxy-carboxylic acid, is diprotic and aldaric in acid characteristics and is a dihydroxyl derivative of succinic acid.
In organic chemistry, a dicarboxylic acid is an organic compound containing two carboxyl groups (−COOH). The general molecular formula for dicarboxylic acids can be written as HO 2 C−R−CO 2 H, where R can be aliphatic or aromatic. In general, dicarboxylic acids show similar chemical behavior and reactivity to monocarboxylic acids.