If you intend to reduce a calcium salt, it may be much easier to use the chloride salt.
Calcium oxide has fairly high entropy of formation, due to higher lattice energy, and also not unlikely due to some mild covalent character between
the calcium and oxide ions. What many may not realize here is that reduction potentials can greatly change depending on the anion.
Metallic sodium could easily reduce molten CaCl2. Aluminum certainly would not be able to reduce it. The reactivities of these 3 metallic elements
would probably be the reverse if it was the oxide rather than the chloride.
To give you some idea of the general trends:
6 KOH + 2 Al --> Al2O3 + 6 K + 3 H2
K + NaCl --> KCl + Na
AlCl3 + 3 Na --> 3 NaCl + Al
CaCl2 + 2 Na --> 2 NaCl + Ca
Aluminum is not really as powerful of a reducing agent, it just has a strong affinity for oxygen.
While this may seem inexplicable, it can actually be understood in terms of Lewis "acidity" and "basicity" of various ions. Bare Al3+ ions
are actually quite acidic, whereas O2- ions are basic. So the bonding has a very covalent character.
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