Yes.
Monopotassium phosphate is also called potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KDP) or monobasic potassiumphosphate (MKP).
Dihydrogen phosphate is H2PO4-, so it is a monopotassium salt.
Three potassium phosphates are known:
- Monopotassium phosphate: KH2PO4
- Dipotassium phosphate: K2HPO4
- Tripotassium phosphate: K3PO4
no. they are KH2PO4 and K2HPO4 respectively
yes they are much alike
Yes
Accord is a combination of sodium and potassium phosphate (per the package I have in front of me). Its useful as a binder in emulsified meat products to help them retain water.
Do you want that for Monopotassium phosphate, dipotassium phosphate, or tripotassium phosphate? --------------------------------- To clarify for the previous answerer, ionic compounds inherently don't use the mono-, di-, or tri- system used for molecular compounds. Instead, when a cation and an anion is supplied, the ionic compound assumes the number of cations and anions that will generate a neutral ionic compound. In this case, since K is 1+ and PO4 is 3-, the compound potassium phosphate always refers to K3PO4. Therefore: 3AgNO3 + K3PO4 -> 3KNO3 + Ag3PO4
Depends on the context. Technically, phosphorus is an element (P), and phosphate is a molecular anion (PO4_3-), part of phosphoric acid (H3PO4). In (medical) diagnostic testing, they're often used interchangeably, sometimes called "inorganic phosphorus." It's also an essential plant nutrient, so on fertilizers you'll see the phosphorus content expressed as a percentage (by weight) measured as P2O5, the anhydride of phosphoric acid.
Yes it is.!
No: KClO3 is the formula for potassium chlorate, but the formula for potassium chloride is simply KCl.
K3PO3 is potassium phosphite.This is not the same as K3PO4 postasium phosphate.
PO2(OH)2 is the same as H2PO4^- (note the negative charge). It would be dihydrogen phosphate.
Accord is a combination of sodium and potassium phosphate (per the package I have in front of me). Its useful as a binder in emulsified meat products to help them retain water.
No. Potassium silicate is not the same as potassium aluminum silicate.
the best conditions for atorvastatin calcium 10 mg tablets is as the following dissolution media is 0.05 potassium dihydrogen phosphate buffer PH is 6.8 use paddle II 75 rpm for 45 min make standard dilution in the same media and max abs. is almost at 243 nm for higher conc of atorvastatin use sodium lauryl sulphate 0.5 %
Do you want that for Monopotassium phosphate, dipotassium phosphate, or tripotassium phosphate? --------------------------------- To clarify for the previous answerer, ionic compounds inherently don't use the mono-, di-, or tri- system used for molecular compounds. Instead, when a cation and an anion is supplied, the ionic compound assumes the number of cations and anions that will generate a neutral ionic compound. In this case, since K is 1+ and PO4 is 3-, the compound potassium phosphate always refers to K3PO4. Therefore: 3AgNO3 + K3PO4 -> 3KNO3 + Ag3PO4
Depends on the context. Technically, phosphorus is an element (P), and phosphate is a molecular anion (PO4_3-), part of phosphoric acid (H3PO4). In (medical) diagnostic testing, they're often used interchangeably, sometimes called "inorganic phosphorus." It's also an essential plant nutrient, so on fertilizers you'll see the phosphorus content expressed as a percentage (by weight) measured as P2O5, the anhydride of phosphoric acid.
There isn't a difference becaue there both the same.
When the acid is "monobasic", that is, when each molecule of acid releases only one hydrogen ion as an acid.
The same, Potassium iodide
No, potassium carbonate (K2CO3) and potassium ascorbate (KC6H7O6) are two different substances.
(PO4) -3 which is the same as inorganic phosphate