Carboxylate anion

A carboxylate anion is an ion with negative charge that contains the group -COO&minus;. It is the conjugate base of a carboxylic acid.

Carboxylic acids dissociate into a carboxylate ion and a positively-charged hydrogen ion (proton) much more readily than alcohols dissociate (into an alkoxide ion and a proton), because the carboxylate ion is more stable: the negative charge that is left behind when a proton leaves the carboxylate group is 'shared' between the two electronegative oxygen atoms in a resonance structure. This delocalization of the electron cloud means that neither of the oxygen atoms is so strongly negatively charged, and thus less readily attracts the positively-charged proton back to the carboxylate group once it has left. On the other hand, an alkoxide ion, once formed, would have a strong negative charge on the oxygen atom, which would make it difficult for the proton to escape. Thus, the carboxylate ion is more stable - this is also why carboxylic acids have a lower pH than alcohols: the higher the number of protons that escape into solution, the lower the pH.

Examples

 * formate ion, HCOO&minus;
 * acetate ion, CH3COO&minus;

See category for a bigger list.

Discussion
See carboxylic acid for info.