Sulfuric(IV) acid (United Kingdom spelling: sulphuric(IV) acid), also known as sulfurous (UK: sulphurous) acid and thionic acid, is the chemical compound with the chemical formula .
Raman spectra of solutions of sulfur dioxide in water show only signals due to the molecule and the bisulfite ion, . The intensities of the signals are consistent with the following equilibrium:
17O NMR spectroscopy provided evidence that solutions of sulfurous acid and protonated sulfites contain a mixture of isomers, which is in equilibrium:
Attempts to concentrate the solutions of sulfurous acid simply reverse the equilibrium, producing sulfur dioxide and water vapor. A clathrate with the formula has been crystallised. It decomposes above 7 °C.
History and production
Sulfurous acid is commonly known not to exist in its free state, and owing to this, it is stated in textbooks that it cannot be isolated in the water-free form.
However, the molecule has been detected in the gas phase in 1988 by the dissociative ionization of
diethyl sulfite.
The conjugate bases of this elusive acid are, however, common anions,
bisulfite (or hydrogen sulfite) and
sulfite. Sulfurous acid is an intermediate species in the formation of
acid rain from sulfur dioxide.
Uses
Aqueous solutions of sulfur dioxide, which sometimes are referred to as sulfurous acid, are used as
and as disinfectants, as are solutions of
bisulfite and
sulfite salts. They are
oxidisation to
sulfuric acid or
sulfate by accepting another
oxygen atom.
[L. Kolditz, Anorganische Chemie, VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin 1983, S. 476.]
See also