Everything about Anhydrous totally explained
As a general term, a substance is said to be
anhydrous if it contains no
water. The way of achieving the anhydrous form differs from one substance to another.
Solvents
In many cases, the presence of water can prevent a reaction from happening, or form undesirable products. To prevent this, anhydrous solvents must be used when performing certain reactions. Examples of reactions requiring the use of anhydrous solvents are the
Grignard reaction and the
Wurtz reaction.
Solvents are commonly rendered anhydrous by boiling them in the presence of a hygroscopic substance; metallic
sodium is one of the most common metals used. Other methods include the addition of
molecular sieves or alkali bases such as
potassium hydroxide or
barium oxide. Column solvent purification devices (generally referred to as Grubb's columns) recently became available, reducing the hazards (water reactive substances, heat) from the classical dehydrating methods.
Ionic crystals
An example of anhydration can be seen in
copper(II) sulfate. If the
water of crystallization
is removed from blue crystals of copper (II) sulfate, a white powder (anhydrous copper(II) sulfate) is formed.
The formula for anhydration of pentahydrate copper (II) sulfate (CuSO
4·5H
2O) is as follows:
CuSO
4·5H
2O + heat → CuSO
4 + 5H
2O
Another example is in the heating of
magnesium sulfate heptahydrate, MgSO
4·7H
2O. On heating, it undergoes the following reaction:
MgSO
4·7H
2O + heat → MgSO
4 + 7H
2O
Gases
Several substances that exist as gases at
standard conditions of temperature and pressure are commonly used as concentrated aqueous solutions. To clarify that it's the gaseous form that's being referred to, the term
anhydrous is prefixed to the name of the substance:
- gaseous ammonia is generally referred to as anhydrous ammonia to distinguish it from household ammonia, which is an ammonium hydroxide aqueous solution.
- gaseous hydrogen chloride is generally referred to as anhydrous to distinguish it from the more commonly used 37% w/w solution in water.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Anhydrous'.
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