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Sodium trimetaphosphate has served as a buffering agent and sodium hexametaphosphate as a corrosion inhibitor.<ref name=Lanigan/> Both of these sodium metaphosphates are staight chains.<ref name=Lanigan/> Because of the corrosive nature of each of these sodium metaphosphates, these ingredients can be used safely if each formulation is prepared to avoid skin irritation.<ref name=Lanigan/>
Sodium trimetaphosphate has served as a buffering agent and sodium hexametaphosphate as a corrosion inhibitor.<ref name=Lanigan/> Both of these sodium metaphosphates are staight chains.<ref name=Lanigan/> Because of the corrosive nature of each of these sodium metaphosphates, these ingredients can be used safely if each formulation is prepared to avoid skin irritation.<ref name=Lanigan/>
=Transition metal metaphosphates=
[[Thyroxine]] has a catalytic effect on the oxidation of As(III) by Mn(III) metaphosphate, wherein the reaction rate can be increased by the presence of orthophosphoric acid.<ref name=Pastor>{{ cite journal |author=Pastor FT, Milovanović GA, Todorović M |title=Kinetic method for the determination of traces of thyroxine by its catalytic effect on the Mn(III) metaphosphate-As(III) reaction |journal=Talanta. |year=2008 |month=Feb |volume=74 |issue=5 |pages=1556-61 |pmid=18371817 }}</ref>


=References=
=References=

Revision as of 23:56, 23 April 2009

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A metaphosphate is a salt or an ester of metaphosphoric acid, HPO3. Metaphosphates are condensation products of orthophosphoric acid (H3PO4) with the sum formula (M'PO3)n, where n=1, 2, 3, ..., (M': univalent cation). In contrast to polyphosphates, metaphosphates store themselves to ring molecules together. As an example the 6-Ring of the trimetaphosphate is represented. Tetrametaphosphates form a similar 8-Ring.

Trimetaphosphates were used in former times in detergents; today due to the fertilization effect of the phosphates zeolites (stand silicates, as e.g. zeolite A) are used.

Sodium metaphosphates

Although sodium metaphosphate is the general term for any polyphosphate salt with four or more phosphate units, the four-phosphate unit version of sodium metaphosphate has been used commercially as an oral care agent; i.e., a chelating agent in cosmetic formulations.[1] The four-phosphate unit version is cyclic.[1]

Sodium trimetaphosphate has served as a buffering agent and sodium hexametaphosphate as a corrosion inhibitor.[1] Both of these sodium metaphosphates are staight chains.[1] Because of the corrosive nature of each of these sodium metaphosphates, these ingredients can be used safely if each formulation is prepared to avoid skin irritation.[1]

Transition metal metaphosphates

Thyroxine has a catalytic effect on the oxidation of As(III) by Mn(III) metaphosphate, wherein the reaction rate can be increased by the presence of orthophosphoric acid.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lanigan RS (2001). "Final report on the safety assessment of Sodium Metaphosphate, Sodium Trimetaphosphate, and Sodium Hexametaphosphate". Int J Toxicol. 20 (Suppl 3): 75–89. PMID 11766135.
  2. Pastor FT, Milovanović GA, Todorović M (2008). "Kinetic method for the determination of traces of thyroxine by its catalytic effect on the Mn(III) metaphosphate-As(III) reaction". Talanta. 74 (5): 1556–61. PMID 18371817. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

Sources

http://translate.google.com/translate?sourceid=navclient-menuext&hl=en&u=http%3A//de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphosphate (in English)

Von „http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphosphate“ (German page)

de:Metaphosphate