Difference between revisions of "Aluminium chloride"
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Revision as of 02:40, 14 June 2015
Aluminium chloride, or aluminium trichloride, is a chemical compound of aluminium and chlorine, with the formula AlCl3.
Contents
Properties
Chemical
Aluminium chloride has a high affinity for water. Hydrated aluminium chloride cannot be turned back anhydrous via heating heating as HCl is lost leaving aluminium hydroxide or alumina (aluminium oxide):
- Al(H2O)6Cl3 → Al(OH)3 + 3 HCl + 3 H2O
Physical
Aluminium chloride is a white hygroscopic salt. It melts at 192.4 °C (anhydrous form). The hydrated form, which is much less useful as a reagent, appears as grainy, oily beads which are often yellow due to even the smallest of iron impurities.
Availability
Aluminium chloride, both anhydrous and hydrated can be purchased from chemical suppliers.
Preparation
Aluminium chloride can be prepared by reacting aluminium metal with chlorine or hydrogen chloride gas in a water-free medium, at temperatures between 650 to 750 °C:
- 2 Al + 3 Cl2 → 2 AlCl3
- 2 Al + 6 HCl → 2 AlCl3 + 3 H2
Projects
- Friedel–Crafts reactions
- Organoaluminium compounds
Handling
Safety
Aluminium chloride is irritant to skin, eyes and respiratory system. It is a known neurotoxin.
Storage
Anhydrous AlCl3 must be stored in sealed containers, to prevent it from hydrolyzing.
Disposal
Aluminium chloride will hydrolyze into aluminium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid. The acid is easy to neutralize and dispose of, but aluminium hydroxide is harmful to environment. Since is insoluble in water, it can easily be separated, purified and recovered.