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protonation

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Did you mean: protonation (in chemistry), protonate (chemistry), protonate

 
 
protonation (prō'tənā'shən) , in chemistry, addition of a proton to an atom, molecule, or ion. The proton is the nucleus of the hydrogen atom; the positive hydrogen ion, H+, consists of a single proton. An example of protonation is the formation of the ammonium group NH4+ from ammonia, NH3. Protonation often occurs in the reaction of an acid with a base to form a salt (see acids and bases; salts). Protonation differs from hydrogenation in that during protonation a change in charge of the protonated species occurs, whereas the charge is unaffected during hydrogenation.


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Wikipedia: Protonation
 

In chemistry, protonation is the addition of a proton (H+) to an atom, molecule, or ion. Protonation is possibly the most fundamental chemical reaction and is a step in many stoichiometric and catalytic processes. Some ions and molecules can undergo more than one protonation and are labeled polybasic. This is true of many biological macromolecules. Molecules which can be deprotonated are acids, or polyacids if more than one proton can be removed.

Upon protonating a substrate, the mass and the charge of the species each increase by one unit. Protonating or deprotonating a molecule or ion alters many chemical properties beyond the change in the charge and mass: hydrophilicity, reduction potential, optical properties, among others. Protonation is also an essential step in certain analytical procedures such as electrospray mass spectrometry.

Protonation and deprotonation occur in most acid-base reactions; they are the core of most acid-base reaction theories. A Bronsted-Lowry acid is defined as a chemical substance that protonates another substance.

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Rates of protonation and deprotonation

Protonations are often rapid, in part because of the high mobility of protons in water. The rate of protonation is related to the acidity of the protonated species. Weak acids protonate more slowly than strong acids. The rates of protonation and deprotonation can be especially slow when protonation induces significant structural changes.

Reversibility and catalysis

Usually, protonations are reversible and the conjugate base is unchanged by being protonated. In some cases, however, protonation causes isomerization. Cis-alkenes can be converted to trans-alkenes using a catalytic amount of protonating agent. Many enzymes, such as the serine hydrolases operate by mechanisms that involve reversible protonations of substrates.

IUPAC recommendation

Formally, the term "hydronation" is recommended by the IUPAC, just as "hydron" is recommended in place of "proton" because only 99.999% of natural hydrogen nuclei are protons; the rest are deuterons and rare tritons. In fact, few chemists actually use the terms "hydron", "hydronation", and "dehydronation". (However all chemists use the term "hydride", which could be considered inconsistent.)

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Redirected from "Protonate"

Did you mean: protonation (in chemistry), protonate (chemistry), protonate

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Protonation" Read more