polyphosphatetype
Polyphosphatetype refers to polymers and oligomers that contain repeating phosphate units linked by phosphorus–oxygen–phosphorus (P–O–P) bonds. The concept covers linear, cyclic, and branched architectures in which phosphate groups form the dominant backbone, with various end groups or counterions that cap the chain. The term is used across inorganic, organic, and biological contexts.
Chemically, these compounds are built from phosphate units (PO4) connected through phosphoanhydride-type linkages. The phosphorus centers
Classification includes linear polyphosphate chains, cyclic metaphosphates, and branched or network-forming varieties. Substituents, such as organic
In biology, polyphosphate-type materials occur as intracellular granules (polyphosphate or volutin) that serve as phosphate stores
Applications under study include phosphate storage and sequestration, water treatment as scale inhibitors, and potential roles