'Sodium monofluorophosphate' (also 'disodium monofluorophosphate' or 'MFP') is a chemical with the formula Na
2FPO
3. Its molecular weight is 143.95 g/mol. Typical for a salt, MFP is odorless, colorless, and water-soluble. It melts at 625 ºC.
Uses of MFP
MFP is best known as an ingredient in
toothpastes for both humans and animals. It is claimed to protect tooth enamel from attack by bacteria that cause
dental caries (cavities). Though developed by a chemist at Procter and Gamble, its use in toothpaste (
Colgate toothpaste) was patented by
Colgate-Palmolive, as
Procter and Gamble was engaged in the marketing of
Crest toothpaste (containing
stannous fluoride, marketed as "Fluoristan"). In the early 1980s, Crest was reformulated to use MFP, under the trademark "Fluoristat."
MFP is also used in some medications for the treatment of
osteoporosis.
In 1991, sodium monofluorophosphate was found by
Calgon to inhibit the solubility of
lead in drinking water when used in concentrations between 0.1 mg/L and 500 mg/L.
[1]
Tooth decay
Tooth decay is caused by bacteria normally present in one's mouth. These bacteria form a sticky, colorless soft film on the teeth called
plaque. When foods containing
carbohydrates, (
starches, and
sugars) are eaten, the bacteria that form plaque use the sugar as a form of energy. They also turn it into a glue-like substance that helps them stick to the surface of the tooth. The plaque produces
acid , which attacks the
enamel.
[2]
Chemistry of decay
Tooth enamel consists mostly of calcium hydroxyphosphate, Ca
5(PO
4)
3OH, also known as the mineral
apatite. Apatite is a hard, insoluble compound. Acid (H
+), produced especially after a high-sugar meal, attack the apatite:
:Ca
5(PO
4)
3OH
(s) + H
+(aq) → Ca
5(PO
4)
3+(aq) + H
2O
(l)
Chemistry of enamel fluoridation
The degradation of apatite by loss of OH
- causes the enamel to dissolve. The process is reversible as saliva supplies back OH
- to reform apatite. If fluoride, F
-, ions are present in saliva,
fluorapatite, Ca
5(PO
4)
3F, also forms.
:Ca
5(PO
4)
3+(aq) + F
-(aq) → Ca
5(PO
4)
3F
(s)
Fluorapatite resists attacks by acids better than apatite itself, so the tooth enamel resists decay better than enamel containing no fluoride.
[3]
Preparation
MFP is prepared by heating a difluorophosphate solution in dilute
sodium hydroxide.
:PO
2F
22-(aq) + 2 NaOH
(aq) → Na
2PO
3F
(aq) + 2 HF
(aq)
Discovery and development
Sodium monofluorophosphate was first described in 1929 by the German chemist Dr.
Willy Lange, who was then with the University of Berlin. His fruitless attempts to prepare the free monofluorophosphoric acid led him to check the stability of its esters. Together with Gerda von Krueger, one of his students, Lange thus synthesized diethyl fluorophosphate and some analogs, which proved to be quite toxic; the first nerve agents were discovered. In the 1930's,
Gerhard Schrader, working for the German company
IG Farben, tried to develop synthetic
insecticide. His work focused on esters of phosphoric acid and resulted in an accidental discovery of some other nerve agents such as DFP (= di-isopropyl fluorophosphate),
Tabun, Soman, and Sarin. In the meantime, Lange -who was married to a Jewish woman- emigrated from Germany to the United States and started work for
Procter and Gamble Company. In 1947, he and
Ralph Livingston of
Monsanto Company published
reports on the preparation of the free fluorophosphoric acids and mentioned the use of some toxic esters of monofluorophosphoric acid (like DFP) in the treatment of
glaucoma and
myasthenia gravis. The well known toxicity of these esters led to fears that the simple salts might also be toxic, and such fears precluded any large scale commercial use of the salts. In 1950, under sponsorship of the manufacturer of the compounds,
Ozark Chemical Company, the toxicity of sodium monofluorophosphate was studied by
Harold C. Hodge at the
University of Rochester who included anti-cavity testing. In 1967
Colgate-Palmolive filed several patents on the use of sodium monofluorophosphate in toothpaste.
[1]
Content and toxicity
The usual content of MFP in toothpaste is 0.76%. It is not used for water fluoridation. Currently accepted research indicates that by using such toothpaste, cavities may be reduced 17-38%.
The compound is not very toxic. (
LD50 in rats = 0.9 g/kg).
Structure of fluorophosphate
The structure of the fluorophosphate anion consists of
phosphorus at the center of a tetrahedron defined by three
oxygen atoms and one
fluorine. Formal representations depict a double bond between one oxygen atom and phosphorus, with single bonds for the other two oxygen atoms and the fluorine. In this very formal depiction, negative charge is localized on the O atoms of the single P-O bonds. MFP is similar to and
isoelectronic with Na
2SO
4.
References
1. Peter Meiers Monofluorophosphate History
2. Healthy Teeth [1]
3. Davis, R. E., Ph.D., Metcalfe, H. C., Williams, J. E., Castka, J. F. (1999). ''Modern Chemistry''. Austin, TX: Harcourt Brace & Company.
4. Peter Meiers Monofluorophosphate History