tommykins said:
H2PO4- + H2O -> H3PO4 + OH-
negative charge, likley to accept proton, producing h3po4 and OH.
That's not the correct reason.
Afterall the hydrogen carbonate ion ( HCO3-) will favour the formation of an
acid in water, yet it also has a negative charge. In other words, it will donate not accept a proton.
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Let me explain:
The reason that dihydrogen phosphate is
more likely to accept a proton and therefore act as a base, can be explained by the Bronsted-Lowry theory.
That is that when phosphoric acid (H3PO4) is put into solution such as water, it is a strong acid, and will donate a proton.
H3PO4 + H20 <----> H2PO4- + H30+
strong acid weak base weak conjugate base strong conjugate acid
Phosphoric acid is a
strong acid and will therefore form a
weak conjugate base. So basically, that said, H2PO4- is
more inclined to act as a base, than an acid , so in water it will act as a base, by accepting a proton to go back to phosphoric acid. Though in a base, as it is amphiprotic, it will donate a proton, thereby acting as an acid.
The reason, would relate to the ionisation energies, and electronegativity (or something beyond the spectrum of the course, I'm sure exactly what). I.e. is it easier to make a base, or an acid? The way we can answer this though, without looking up the K value in a table, is by using the Bronsted-Lowry theory.
This is why carbonic acid (H2CO3), as an acid which is
not strong, will form an amphiprotic substance, namely hydrogen carbonate ion (HCO3-) which favours the formation of an acid in water, rather than many of the others, including the aforementioned dihydrogen phosphate, which favour the formation of a base. Again, this relates back to the original acid being weak and so forming a strong conjugate base.
Again though, if this hydrogren carbonate were placed in water, it would act as an acid, regardless of the fact that it has a negative charge. In a base it would act as an acid, and in an acid as a base (though this last sentence, is the definition of amphiprotic.)