I would like to know the difference between carboxylate ions carboxyl groups? An example is is $\ce{COOH}$ and $\ce{COO}$.
1 Answers
Carboxyl
The carboxyl group $\ce{-COOH}$ is an organic functional group consisting of a carbon atom double bonded to an oxygen atom and single bonded to a hydroxyl group.
Compounds with a carboxyl group are called carboxylic acids (e.g. acetic acid, $\ce{CH2COOH}$).
Carboxylate
A carboxylate $\ce{-COO^-}$ is a salt or ester of a carboxylic acid. For example, acetic acid reacts with sodium bicarbonate to form sodium acetate.
Compounds with this group have the carboxy- prefix or -ate suffix (e.g. sodium acetate $\ce{CH3COONa}$). When these salts are ionised (e.g. dissolved in water), the anion with the carboxylate group is called a carboxylate ion.
The carboxylate ion is the negative ion (anion) formed as the conjugate base when a carboxylic acid loses a proton.
$$\ce{R-COOH -> R-COO^- + H+}$$
Being its conjugate base, sodium acetate mixed with acetic acid makes a useful buffer solution for many biochemical reactions where a 'mildly acidic' pH of 4-6 is desired.
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I suppose it must be hard not to see the big $\ce{H}$ difference. – Poutnik Mar 29 '19 at 12:49
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You mean answer: a proton – theo Apr 24 '19 at 00:16
