Abstract

Carbon dioxide and the related species bicarbonate and carbonate are known for centuries and are deeply involved with modern chemistry knowledge from the beginning. Carbonic acid, by its turn, was intuited more than a century before being synthesized for the first time, which was not obtained, however, without stumbles and mistakes. The equilibrium between HCO3– and CO32– in aqueous medium is free of disputes. However, the interconversion of the other three species is rather controversial. Several papers starting in the beginning of the 19th century until the present days are critically reviewed in order to understand the controversial history of the CO2/H2O system. Finally, experimental evidence and theoretical calculations allow us to place HCO3– as the central species as the conjugate acid for CO32– and conjugate base for two different acids: H2CO3 and CO2.

Full Text
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