Phosphate
In
chemistry, a
phosphate is a
polyatomic ion or
radical consisting of one
phosphorus atom and four
oxygen. In the ionic form, it carries a -3 formal charge, and is denoted PO
43-.
In a biochemical setting, a free phosphate ion in solution is called
inorganic phosphate, to distinguish it from phosphates bound in the form of
ATP, or perhaps in
DNA or
RNA. Inorganic phosphate is generally denoted
Pi. Inorganic phosphate can be formed by the reactions of
ATP, or
ADP, with the formation of the corresponding
ADP or
AMP, and the release of phosphate ion. Similar reactions exist for the other
nucleoside triphosphates and diphosphates.
In living systems, phosphate ions can also be created by the hydrolysis of a larger ion called
pyrophosphate, which has the structure P
2O
74-, and is denoted
PPi.
Energy stored by phosphate bonds in the form of
ADP or
ATP, or other
nucleoside diphosphates or triphosphates, or the phosphagens in muscle tissues, is generally referred to as
high energy phosphate.
In
mineralogy and
geology, it refers to a rock or ore containing phosphate ions.
In ecological terms, phosphate is often a limiting reagent in many environments--the availability of phosphate governs the rate of growth of many organisms. Introduction of non-naturally occurring levels of phosphate to those environments causes an ecological disequilibrium, leading to booms in the population of some organisms and subsequent busts in the populations of others deprived of other nutrients or essential elements by the rapid growth and consumption by the booming population.
Phosphates are a component of certain types of
detergent, but because of boom-bust cycles tied to emission of phosphates into watersheds, phosphate detergent sale or usage is restricted in some areas.
In
agriculture phosphate refers to one of the three primary
plant nutrients, and it is a component of
fertilizers.
Rock phosphate is
quarried from phosphate beds in sedimentary rocks. In former times it was simply crushed and used as is, but the crude form is now used only in
organic farming. Normally it is chemically treated to make superphosphate, which has a higher concentration of phosphate and is also more
soluble, therefore more quickly usable by plants.
Fertilizer grades normally have three numbers; the first is the available
nitrogen, the second is the available phosphate, and the third is the available
potash. Thus a 10-10-10 fertilizer would contain ten percent of each, with the remainder being filler.
The largest rock phosphate deposits in
North America are in
North Carolina and
Florida. The largest in the world are in
Nauru, which used to have phosphate of best quality.
Leaching of phosphates from fertilized farmland can be a cause of phosphate
pollution of surface water, causing
algal bloom and consequent
oxygen deficit for
fish in the same manner as phosphate-based detergents.