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Question
Why does orthophosphoric acid form three types of salts? Explain its ionisation behaviour.
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Short Answer
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Solution
Orthophosphoric acid (H3PO4) forms three types of salts because it is a tribasic acid containing three ionisable \[\ce{-OH}\] groups attached to phosphorus.
It ionises stepwise, releasing three H+ ions:
First ionisation: \[\ce{H3PO4 <=> H+ + H2PO^-_4}\]
Second ionisation: \[\ce{H2PO^-_4 <=> H+ + HPO^{2-}_4}\]
Third ionisation: \[\ce{HPO^{2-}_4 <=> H+ + PO^{3-}_4}\]
This stepwise ionisation results in three series of salts: acidic, normal, and basic phosphates.
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Chapter 7: p-Block Elements - SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS [Page 447]
