Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1 Material Safety Data Sheet. 2 Structure and properties. 3 References. ... Hydrochloric acid . This page provides supplementary chemical data on Hydrochloric acid.
They range from those of water at very low concentrations approaching 0% HCl to values for fuming hydrochloric acid at over 40% HCl. [ 31 ] [ 32 ] [ 33 ] Hydrochloric acid as the binary (two-component) mixture of HCl and H 2 O has a constant-boiling azeotrope at 20.2% HCl and 108.6 °C (381.8 K; 227.5 °F).
1 kcal/(°C⋅mol) ("large calorie") = 4184 J⋅K −1 ⋅mol −1. The molar heat capacity of a substance has the same dimension as the heat capacity of an object; namely, L 2 ⋅M⋅T −2 ⋅Θ −1, or M(L/T) 2 /Θ. (Indeed, it is the heat capacity of the object that consists of an Avogadro number of molecules of the substance.)
Aqua regia (/ ˈ r eɪ ɡ i ə, ˈ r iː dʒ i ə /; from Latin, "regal water" or "royal water") is a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, optimally in a molar ratio of 1:3. [ b ] Aqua regia is a fuming liquid.
For example H 3 O + CuCl 2 − forms in concentrated hydrochloric acid. [15] Chloride is displaced by CN − and S 2 O 3 2−. [12] Solutions of CuCl in HCl absorb carbon monoxide to form colourless complexes such as the chloride-bridged dimer [CuCl(CO)] 2. The same hydrochloric acid solutions also react with acetylene gas to form [CuCl(C 2 H 2)].
In his 1803 publication about the quantity of gases absorbed by water, [1] William Henry described the results of his experiments: … water takes up, of gas condensed by one, two, or more additional atmospheres, a quantity which, ordinarily compressed, would be equal to twice, thrice, &c. the volume absorbed under the common pressure of the atmosphere.
An example of a negative azeotrope is hydrochloric acid at a concentration of 20.2% and 79.8% water (by mass). Hydrogen chloride boils at −85 °C and water at 100 °C, but the azeotrope boils at 110 °C, which is higher than either of its constituents. The maximum boiling point of any hydrochloric acid solution is 110 °C. Other examples:
Phosgene reacts with water to form carbon dioxide and HCl, [77] and the carbonate salt neutralizes the resulting acid. [ 78 ] Suspected samples can be tested for phosgene using filter paper which when treated with 5% diphenylamine , 5% dimethylaminobenzaldehyde in ethanol , and then dried, turns yellow in the presence of phosgene vapour. [ 79 ]