Deathunter88
National Hazard
Posts: 522
Registered: 20-2-2015
Location: Beijing, China
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Hydrochloric Acid: Mixture or Compound?
Greetings,
Today I took a quiz in chemistry class and one of the problems given was to label different things as: Heterogeneous mixture, homogeneous mixture,
element, or compound. For example, magnesium chloride would count as a compound and salt water could count as a homogeneous mixture.
One of the things we had to label was Hydrochloric Acid. I labeled it as a homogeneous mixture since hydrochloric acid is a solution of hydrogen
chloride in water.
However, my teacher marked it wrong and when I asked her about it she said "Because it does not say that it is dissolved in water, you cannot assume
that it is a solution."
Can you assume that when something says 'Hydrochloric Acid' that it is hydrogen chloride dissolved in water, or only when it says it is in solution?
Is it acceptable to call 'Hydrogen Chloride" hydrochloric acid?
Thanks in advance
|
|
kavu
Hazard to Others
Posts: 207
Registered: 11-9-2011
Location: Scandinavia
Member Is Offline
Mood: To understand is to synthesize
|
|
Your teacher is wrong and you are right. Hydrochloric acid is indeed the solution of dissociated and solvated hydrogen chloride in water, and thus
counts as a homogeneous mixture.
|
|
diddi
National Hazard
Posts: 723
Registered: 23-9-2014
Location: Victoria, Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: Fluorescent
|
|
I agree. your teacher should be dissolved in said acid
Beginning construction of periodic table display
|
|
Tsjerk
International Hazard
Posts: 3032
Registered: 20-4-2005
Location: Netherlands
Member Is Offline
Mood: Mood
|
|
It depends a bit, was the question asked in English? Then I would say hydrochloric acid is indeed HCl in water. If the question was hydrogen chloride,
then it is a compound.
|
|
woelen
Super Administrator
Posts: 8027
Registered: 20-8-2005
Location: Netherlands
Member Is Offline
Mood: interested
|
|
I agree with the others. Hydrochloric acid is a mixture, being an acidic liquid. Hydrogen chloride is a compound, being a colorless gas.
|
|
Volanschemia
Hazard to Others
Posts: 340
Registered: 16-1-2015
Location: Victoria, Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: Pretty much all of them!
|
|
Another vote of agreement from me as well. The name "Hydrochloric Acid" means a solution of Hydrogen Chloride. (And I must say,
diddi's suggestion sound like a good idea )
"The chemists are a strange class of mortals, impelled by an almost insane impulse to seek their pleasures amid smoke and
vapor, soot and flame, poisons and poverty; yet among all these evils I seem to live so sweetly that may I die if I were to change places with the
Persian king" - Johann Joachim Becher, 1635 to 1682.
|
|
aga
Forum Drunkard
Posts: 7030
Registered: 25-3-2014
Member Is Offline
|
|
No.
"Hydrochloric acid is a clear, colorless, highly pungent solution of hydrogen chloride (HCl) in water."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrochloric_acid
Dunno who they got doing the Smelling - doesn't smell much to me at all, never mind being 'highly pungent'.
Print out the wiki and ask for the Marks to be added back, as you were right, and she was wrong.
(this doesn't make you smarter than her - she still knows a whole universe more than you do - yet you still deserve those marks.).
|
|
szuko03
Hazard to Others
Posts: 188
Registered: 3-4-2015
Location: USA
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
I kind of understand both arguments. When you talk about the acid its almost convention to remove the water in the speech as it almost becomes part of
the acid. However, I agree with the OP and everyone from a technical stand point but did part of you at least know you were going to cause an issue? I
would have read it like the teacher kind of stated "it doesnt say anything about water so i wont include it in my thoughts"
However my mom use to say "if you tell him to get bread on the table for dinner you better tell him to cut it or he will take what you said and do
exactly what was said and not change it even if it would make sense" It causes problems in my normal life sometimes especially with the misses
Chemistry is a natural drive, not an interest.
|
|
Praxichys
International Hazard
Posts: 1063
Registered: 31-7-2013
Location: Detroit, Michigan, USA
Member Is Offline
Mood: Coprecipitated
|
|
Typical semantics problem. I can't even tell you how many times I got marked wrong by this kind of stuff.
Ex. In a Williamson Ether Synthesis, what haloalkene is reacted with sodium phenoxide to form phenoxymethylbenzene?
IUPAC names confuse everything. Just say sodium phenolate and benzyl phenyl ether, and we all know it's benzyl chloride. WRONG. It's
chlorophenylmethane.
I should have had her call up Sigma and try to order some. Would have gotten some strange looks for sure.
|
|
aga
Forum Drunkard
Posts: 7030
Registered: 25-3-2014
Member Is Offline
|
|
How do you get a strange look down a telephone ?
|
|
Darkstar
Hazard to Others
Posts: 279
Registered: 23-11-2014
Member Is Offline
Mood: Sleepy
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by aga | Dunno who they got doing the Smelling - doesn't smell much to me at all, never mind being 'highly pungent'. |
Oh, it's pungent alright. I once absent-mindedly opened a gallon of the 31.45%/10M stuff you buy at the hardware store and took a BIG whiff. Suffice
it to say, I've never made that mistake again. It was so bad that I could barely even breath for several minutes afterwards.
I suppose it's technically the undissolved HCl vapors hovering above the solution that are "pungent," not so much the solution itself. The
disassociated HCl molecules in solution probably don't contribute much to its smell, which is kind of the main idea behind certain gas traps.
|
|
blogfast25
International Hazard
Posts: 10562
Registered: 3-2-2008
Location: Neverland
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Darkstar |
I suppose it's technically the undissolved HCl vapors hovering above the solution that are "pungent," not so much the solution itself. The
disassociated HCl molecules in solution probably don't contribute much to its smell, which is kind of the main idea behind certain gas traps.
|
Smelling hydrochloric vapours gives an idea of what pure hydrogen chloride must smell like, bearing in mind that the vapours are still much diluted
compared to pure hydrogen chloride.
|
|
Camroc37
Hazard to Others
Posts: 101
Registered: 4-8-2015
Location: USA
Member Is Offline
Mood: Must...Nitrate...EVERYTHING!
|
|
I believe HCl is a gas if it is 100%, so you wouldn't have a solution. HCl is usually 31.45% in a solution with water.
|
|
mayko
International Hazard
Posts: 1218
Registered: 17-1-2013
Location: Carrboro, NC
Member Is Offline
Mood: anomalous (Euclid class)
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Darkstar | Quote: Originally posted by aga | Dunno who they got doing the Smelling - doesn't smell much to me at all, never mind being 'highly pungent'. |
Oh, it's pungent alright. I once absent-mindedly opened a gallon of the 31.45%/10M stuff you buy at the hardware store and took a BIG whiff. Suffice
it to say, I've never made that mistake again. It was so bad that I could barely even breath for several minutes afterwards. |
aga, are you sure your HCl(aq) is 30%? I'd always found the smell to be quite noticeable, but a year or two ago I was at the hardware store and the
standard muriatic acid was sold out, but a 'low fume' variety was in stock. Customer service assured me it was the same concentration, and I've never
had need to measure it or had trouble with it for my purposes, but other customers have found it to be too dilute for their needs
al-khemie is not a terrorist organization
"Chemicals, chemicals... I need chemicals!" - George Hayduke
"Wubbalubba dub-dub!" - Rick Sanchez
|
|
Darkstar
Hazard to Others
Posts: 279
Registered: 23-11-2014
Member Is Offline
Mood: Sleepy
|
|
Technically, yes. Just to play Devil's advocate here, your teacher has a point, and wasn't wrong in marking your answer as incorrect. Sure, she should
have worded the question more clearly if she specifically meant hydrogen chloride gas. "Hydrochloric acid" has historically implied an aqueous
solution; however, the key word here is "implied." The name itself says nothing about it being a solution, and is based on an older naming system that
many common acids were named using. The prefix "hydro-" means that the molecule consists of only a hydrogen and one other atom. The suffix "-ic" means
that the anion, in this case chloride, ends in "-ide." The "acid" part, under the Brønsted-Lowry definition, simply means that it has an acidic
proton that can easily be removed. Thus, under that naming system, HCl becomes hydrochloric acid.
With that said, calling anhydrous hydrogen chloride gas "hydrochloric acid" is then no more incorrect than calling anhydrous HNO3 or
anhydrous H2SO4, "nitric acid" or "sulfuric acid," respectively. The anions of the latter two both end in "-ate" (nitrate and
sulfate) so they both get the "-ic" suffix as well. ("-ate" and "-ide" both become "-ic") And since these are named following the same rules as
hydrochloric acid, if it's not considered incorrect to call their pure forms the same name as their aqueous solutions, it shouldn't be incorrect for
HCl, either.
Anyway, just looking at this from a different angle than most in this thread. But I do agree that your teacher should have just said "hydrogen
chloride" if that's what she meant, or at least specified that it wasn't aqueous. And if you really want to get nice and proper, according to IUPAC
rules, the correct systematic name for a hydrochloric acid solution would actually be "aqueous hydrogen chloride."
[Edited on 8-27-2015 by Darkstar]
|
|
woelen
Super Administrator
Posts: 8027
Registered: 20-8-2005
Location: Netherlands
Member Is Offline
Mood: interested
|
|
If you really want to be sure, the pure gas HCl should be called chlorane, that is the real IUPAC name.
|
|
Sulaiman
International Hazard
Posts: 3721
Registered: 8-2-2015
Location: 3rd rock from the sun
Member Is Offline
|
|
deleted due to better answer above
[Edited on 27-8-2015 by Sulaiman]
|
|
nezza
Hazard to Others
Posts: 324
Registered: 17-4-2011
Location: UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: phosphorescent
|
|
Absolutely. Pure hydrogen chloride is a covalent, undissociated gas. To be called hydrochloric acid it must be a solution in water.
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
|
|