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Amphoteric
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Amphoteric" .
In chemistry , an amphoteric substance is one that can react as either an acid or base . The word is derived from the Greek prefix ampho- (αμφί-) which means both and the suffix -ic (-ικός) which means the attribute that the given substance has to react either as acid or as base.
Examples
Examples include amino acids , proteins , and water . Many metals (such as zinc , tin , lead , aluminium , and beryllium ) and most metalloids have amphoteric oxides.
For example, zinc oxide (Zn O ) reacts differently depending on the pH of the solution:
In acids: ZnO + 2H+ → Zn2+ + H2 O
In bases: ZnO + H2 O + 2OH- → [Zn(OH)4 2-
This effect can be used to separate different cations , such as zinc from manganese .
There are many other examples of chemical compounds which are also amphoteric, for the simplest example water:
Base (proton acceptor): H2 O + HCl → H3 O+ + Cl−
Acid (proton donor): H2 O + NH3 → NH4 + + OH−
(It can do both at once: 2H2 O → H3 O+ + OH− )
Aluminium hydroxide is as well:
Base (neutralizing an acid): Al(OH)3 + 3HCl → AlCl3 + 3H2 O
Acid (neutralizing a base): Al(OH)3 + NaOH → Na[Al(OH)4
Some other examples include:
Beryllium hydroxide
with Acid: Be(OH)2 + 2HCl → BeCl2 + 2H2 O
with Base: Be(OH)2 + 2NaOH → Na2 Be(OH)4
Lead oxide
with acid: PbO + 2HCl → PbCl2 + H2 O
with base: PbO + Ca(OH)2 +H2 O → Ca2+ [Pb(OH)4 2-
Zinc oxide
with acid: ZnO + 2HCl → ZnCl2 + H2 O
with base: ZnO + 2NaOH +H2 O → Na2 2+ [Zn(OH)4 2-
Some elements not mentioned that are able to form amphoteric oxides: Si,Ti,V,Fe,Co,Zn,Ge,Zr,Ag,Sn,Au[1]
See also
References