Principal compounds
Phosphorus is used almost entirely in the form of compounds, usually in the oxidation states of +3, +5, and −3. Unlike nitrogen and various other members of the family, phosphorus tends to exhibit a preference for the +5 state.
Of considerable economic significance is phosphine, or hydrogen phosphide, PH3. This gaseous compound is produced either by the action of a strong base (or hot water) on white phosphorus or by the hydrolysis of a metal phosphide. Phosphine is used mainly as a starting material in the synthesis of various organic phosphorus compounds, as a doping agent for solid-state electronics components, and as a fumigant.
Among the most commercially important phosphorus compounds are the oxides and acids. Much of the industrially produced white phosphorus is burned to form phosphorus pentoxide, P4O10. Sometimes called phosphoric anhydride, or diphosphorus pentoxide, this compound can be obtained in the form of a soft white powder or colourless crystalline solid. It is widely used in chemical analysis as a dehydrating agent and in organic synthesis as a condensing agent. Large quantities are treated with water to make orthophosphoric acid (H3PO4), commonly called phosphoric acid, which has diverse industrial applications, including the production of phosphates, salts that contain the phosphate ion (PO43−), the hydrogen phosphate ion (HPO42−), or the dihydrogen phosphate ion (H2PO4−). Such salts are used as leavening agents in baking, as abrasives in toothpaste, and sometimes as additives to detergents. Another salt, prepared by the action of phosphoric acid on phosphate rock, is calcium dihydrogen phosphate, or superphosphate, Ca(H2PO4)2, the most widely used phosphate fertilizer.
With the halogen elements phosphorus forms various halides; PX3 (in which X is F, Cl, Br, or I) and PX5 (in which X is F, Cl, or Br) are the two simple series. Interestingly, the solids PCl5 and PBr5 contain PX4+ cations and PX6− anions rather than PX5 molecules. These halides are used to synthesize organic phosphorus chemicals. Phosphorus reacts with sulfur to form several sulfides that are used in the manufacture of organic chemicals and matches. It reacts with many metals and metalloids to form phosphides.
Phosphorus atoms can bond with oxygen atoms to form ester groups. These can bond with carbon atoms, yielding a large number of organic phosphorus chemicals. These are found in many important biological processes. The phosphoglycerides, for example, are required for fermentation. The adenosine phosphates are essential in photosynthesis and for muscle action; adenosine triphosphate (ATP) plays a central role in metabolism and is found in the cells of all living things. Industrially important organic phosphorus compounds include plasticizers and gasoline additives. Certain highly toxic forms are employed in insecticides of the parathion type. Poisonous organic derivatives of phosphorus have been used as nerve gas, a key weapon of chemical warfare.
Analytical chemistry
Elemental phosphorus can be detected by its phosphorescence. It can also be converted to phosphine with boiling sodium hydroxide solution or with zinc and sulfuric acid; the phosphine is identified by means of test paper containing either silver nitrate or mercuric chloride, both of which are reduced to the free metal by phosphine, thereby darkening the paper. Phosphorus vapour also readily darkens silver nitrate test paper. Phosphorus is determined quantitatively by oxidation to phosphate, followed by any of several standard procedures. Phosphate, for example, may be precipitated as the magnesium ammonium salt, MgNH4PO4, converted by ignition to magnesium pyrophosphate, Mg2P2O7, and weighed. Alternatively, phosphate may be precipitated as ammonium phosphomolybdate; this can be weighed as such, converted to magnesium pyrophosphate and weighed, or titrated directly with sodium hydroxide solution.
Biological and physiological significance
Phosphorus is an important constituent of bones and teeth, and it is essential to the growth of living organisms. In organisms the element usually appears as phosphate. In its other forms phosphorus is likely to prove very toxic. White phosphorus attacks the skin and, when ingested, causes a necrosis of the jawbone, called “phossy jaw.” Certain organic esters of phosphoric acid, used as lubricating-oil additives, have been found to cause permanent paralysis when accidentally ingested. Phosphine is extremely toxic, as are its organic derivatives. Some of the most toxic substances known to man, collectively termed nerve gas, are organic derivatives of phosphorus.
Phosphorus is present in the fluids within cells of living tissues as the phosphate ion, PO43−, one of the most important mineral constituents for cellular activity. The genes, which direct heredity and other cellular functions and are found in the nucleus of each cell, are molecules of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which all contain phosphorus. Cells store the energy obtained from nutrients in molecules of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Calcium phosphate is the principal inorganic constituent of teeth and bones.