Orthosilicate
In chemistry, orthosilicate is the anion, or any of its salts and esters. It is one of the silicate anions. It is occasionally called the silicon tetroxide anion or group.
Orthosilicate salts, like sodium orthosilicate, are stable, and occur widely in nature as silicate minerals, being the defining feature of the nesosilicates. Olivine, a magnesium or iron orthosilicate, is the most abundant mineral in the upper mantle.
The orthosilicate anion is a strong base, the conjugate base of the extremely weak orthosilicic acid . This equilibrium is difficult to study since the acid tends to decompose into a hydrated silica condensate.
Structure
The orthosilicate ion or group has tetrahedral shape, with one silicon atom surrounded by four oxygen atoms.In the anion, each oxygen carries a unit negative charge. The Si–O bond is 162 pm long.
In organic compounds like tetramethyl orthosilicate, each oxygen is formally neutral and is connected to the rest of the molecule by a single covalent bond.