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I am also not a chemist.

A (bronstead) acid is a proton donor. An atom that donates a proton becomes an (an)ion. The acid is not the anion; the anion is the conjugate base of the acid.

Not all acids form an anion; hydronium is an ion that becomes neutral when it donates a proton.

I do not know why the article used the term ion here. I am guessing it is because the abstract refers to IP6 as a polyanion. It is not referred to as an acid, because it is not participating in acid/base chemistry (though I tried reading the paper and the mechanism is well over my head).



> An atom that donates a proton

An atom can donate an electron (and become a cation), but how can an atom donate a proton? By nuclear fission?

edit: but, a molecule can donate a proton (an H+), and the molecule itself will become an anion


Good point, I meant to say molecule, not atom. I blame lack of coffee.




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