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Bisulfide (or bisulphide in British English) is an inorganic with the HS (also written as SH). It contributes no color to bisulfide salts, and its salts may have a distinctive putrid smell. It is a strong base. Bisulfide solutions are corrosive and attack the skin.

It is an important chemical reagent and an industrial chemical, mainly used in paper pulp industry (), textiles, synthetic flavors, coloring brasses, and iron control.


Properties
A variety of salts are known, including sodium hydrosulfide and potassium hydrosulfide. Ammonium hydrosulfide, a component of "stink bombs" has not been isolated as a pure solid. Some compounds described as salts of the dianion contain primarily hydrosulfide. For example, the hydrated form of , nominally with the formula , is better described as .

Aqueous bisulfide absorbs light at around 230 nm in the UV–visible spectrum. Using this approach, bisulfide has been detected in the ocean and in sewage. Bisulfide should not be confused with the dianion, , or S–S.


Basicity
At physiological pH, hydrogen sulfide is fully ionized to bisulfide (HS). Therefore, in biochemical settings, "hydrogen sulfide" is often used to mean, bisulfide. Hydrosulfide has been identified as the third gasotransmitter along with nitric oxide and carbon monoxide.J. W. Pavlik, B. C. Noll, A. G. Oliver, C. E. Schulz, W. R. Scheidt, “Hydrosulfide (HS) Coordination in Iron Porphyrinates”, Inorganic Chemistry, 2010, vol. 49(3), 1017-1026.

The bisulfide anion can accept a proton:

Because of its affinity to accept a (H+), bisulfide has a basic character. In aqueous solution, it has a corresponding p Ka value of 6.9. Its is (). However, bisulfide's basicity stems from its behavior as an . A solution containing spectator-only counter ions, has a basic pH according to the following acid-base reaction:


Chemical reactions
Upon treatment with an acid, bisulfide converts to . With strong acids, it can be doubly protonated to give . Oxidation of bisulfide gives sulfate. When strongly heated, bisulfide salts decompose to produce salts and hydrogen sulfide.

SH is a anionic that forms complexes with most metal ions. Examples include Au(SH)2 and (C5H5)2Ti(SH)2, derived from gold(I) chloride and titanocene dichloride, respectively.


Safety
Bisulfide salts are , strongly alkaline and release toxic hydrogen sulfide upon acidification.


See also

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