The stability and reactivity of phosphate raw materials, including two water-soluble phosphates, ethylene glycol-conjugated phosphate (EG-P), and polyethylene glycol-conjugated phosphate (PEG-P) developed by our group, were examined with the aim of synthesizing phosphates with high functionalities. EG-P was found to gradually hydrolyze in an aqueous solution, resulting in the formation of H 3 PO 4 , while PEG-P was stable for more than two months. EG-P and PEG-P did not form insoluble materials in aqueous solution in the presence of many other cations, while precipitates were often observed using conventional phosphate raw materials. In particular, there were no precipitates in an aqueous solution of PEG-P in the presence of Ca 2+ and Li + ions, which easily formed insoluble phosphates in a given aqueous condition. Consequently, single-phase LiCaPO 4 with high luminescence properties could be obtained by a polymerizable complex method employing PEG-P, while impurity phases were formed using other P sources, and KSrPO 4 was formed as a single phase using EG-P and PEG-P.