Inorganic Chemistry. Part I²
When one reactant contains hydrogen atoms, a
reaction can take place by exchanging protons in acid-base chemistry. In a
more general definition, an acid can be any chemical species capable of
binding to electron pairs is called a Lewis acid; conversely any molecule
that tends to donate an electron pair is referred to as a Lewis base. As a
refinement of acid-base interactions, the HSAB theory takes into account
polarizability and size of ions.
Inorganic compounds are found in nature as minerals. Soil may contain iron
sulfide as pyrite or calcium sulfate as gypsum. Inorganic compounds are also
found multitasking as biomolecules: as electrolytes (sodium chloride), in
energy storage (ATP) or in construction (the polyphosphate backbone in DNA).
The first important man-made inorganic compound was ammonium nitrite for
soil fertilization through the Haber process. Inorganic compounds are
synthesized for use as catalysts such as vanadium(V) oxide and titanium(III)
chloride, or as reagents in organic chemistry such as lithium aluminium
hydride.
Subdivisions of inorganic chemistry are organometallic chemistry, cluster
chemistry and bioinorganic chemistry. These fields are active areas research
in inorganic chemistry, aimed toward new catalysts, superconductors, and
therapies.
Inorganic chemistry is a highly practical area of science. Traditionally,
the scale of a nation's economy could be evaluated by their productivity of
sulfuric acid. The top 20 inorganic chemicals manufactured in Canada, China,
Europe, Japan, and the US (2005 data): aluminium sulfate, ammonia, ammonium
nitrate, ammonium sulfate, carbon black, chlorine, hydrochloric acid,
hydrogen, hydrogen peroxide, nitric acid, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphoric acid,
sodium carbonate, sodium chlorate, sodium hydroxide, sodium silicate, sodium
sulfate, sulfuric acid, and titanium dioxide.