Is ammonium ion a radical?

1 Answer
Mar 16, 2017

"Ammonium ion" is not a radical species............

Explanation:

The ammonia molecule, :NH_3 is conceived to have a lone pair of electrons localized on the nitrogen centre.

In aqueous solution, this lone pair is conceived to donate to an hydrogen ion in an acid base reaction as shown:

NH_3(aq) + H_2O(l) rightleftharpoons NH_4^(+) + HO^-

All chemical reactions conserve charge. Has charge been conserved here?

Certainly, we can measure the extent of this equilibrium reaction (conveniently by measuring the pH of the solution:)

K_"eq"=([NH_4^+][HO^-])/([NH_3])=10^(-4.75)=1.78xx10^-5.

In ammonium cation, there are SIX electrons associated with nitrogen, rather than the 7 required for neutrality. The nitrogen in ammonia is (so-called) quaternized, and thus bears a positive charge. Certainly, we can use ammonium salts such as NH_4Cl, and (NH_4)_2SO_4 in the lab.

"Ammonium nitrate", when mixed with fuel oil, is a potent high explosive.