Potassium carbonate serves as a mild, water-soluble base widely used in biochemical and molecular protocols. It is particularly effective in lipid saponification, protein refolding under alkaline conditions (pH 10–11), and in bicarbonate buffer systems where potassium ions (K⁺) are preferred due to their compatibility with enzymatic assays.
Chemical Properties
Potassium carbonate (K₂CO₃, MW 138.21 g/mol) appears as white, deliquescent monoclinic crystals with a density of 2.43 g/cm³ and a melting point of 891°C. It consists of two K⁺ cations and a trigonal planar CO₃²⁻ anion arranged in an ionic lattice. The compound is highly soluble in water (138 g/L at 20°C) and hydrolyzes to form alkaline solutions (pH ~11.6 at 0.1 M) according to the equilibrium:
CO₃²⁻ + H₂O ⇌ HCO₃⁻ + OH⁻ (pKa₁ = 10.33).
It readily absorbs CO₂ from the atmosphere to form potassium bicarbonate (KHCO₃) and is insoluble in ethanol.
Biochemical Applications
In lipid analysis, potassium carbonate is used at concentrations of 0.5–2 M in methanol/water mixtures (1:1) to achieve complete saponification of glycerolipids into potassium soaps and glycerol (typically 2 hours at 60°C). This approach allows efficient fatty acid extraction without interference from sodium ions in flame photometry.
In protein chemistry, concentrations of 50–200 mM are applied for thermal denaturation and refolding of proteins from inclusion bodies under mildly alkaline conditions (optimal pH ~10.5), avoiding the use of denaturing detergents such as SDS.
In molecular biology, potassium carbonate is used in carbonate/bicarbonate buffer systems (e.g., K₂CO₃/NaHCO₃ at 15:35 mM, pH 9.6) for passive coating in ELISA assays, particularly for carbohydrates. In cell culture and nucleic acid workflows, low concentrations (~10 mM) can be used to selectively precipitate DNA from alkaline lysates.

