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phosphorus
(redirected from inorganic phosphorus)

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phosphorus

Highly reactive, non-metallic element, atomic number 15, relative atomic mass 30.9738. It occurs in nature as phosphates (commonly in the form of the mineral apatite), and is essential to all life, because phosphate groups are an essential part of DNA. Compounds of phosphorus are used in fertilizers, various organic chemicals, for matches and fireworks, and in glass and steel.

Phosphorus was first identified in 1674 by German alchemist Hennig Brand (born c. 1630), who prepared it from urine. The element has three allotropic forms (see allotropy): a black powder; a white-yellow, waxy solid that ignites spontaneously in air to form the poisonous gas phosphorus pentoxide; and a red-brown powder that neither ignites spontaneously nor is poisonous.



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Winstanley believes reducing dissolved inorganic phosphorus loading by 30%, or about 13,000 metric tons, might reduce the size of the hypoxic zone.
The low-phytic-acid corn is correspondingly high in inorganic phosphorus, the form that one-stomached animals like pigs, chickens or farm-raised fish can readily absorb and use.
This process also produces lactic acid and a drop in pH, which can be measured with NMR by noting the distance between NMR peaks of inorganic phosphorus and
 
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