Desiccant
From Sciencemadness Wiki
A desiccant is a chemical which is hygroscopic enough to absorb water from hydrated compounds in the same sealed environment.
Common desiccants
- Calcium
- Calcium chloride
- Calcium oxide
- Concentrated sulfuric acid
- Copper sulfate (anhydrous)
- Lanthanide chlorides and nitrates
- Magnesium sulfate
- Phosphorus pentoxide
- Silica gel
- Sodium and other alkali metals
- Sodium hydroxide
- Sodium oxide
Comparison
Substance1 | pH | Water capacity | Effectiveness | Reversible | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acetonitrile | High | High | Yes | Rarely used | |
Activated alumina | Medium | High | Yes | Can also be used to absorb fluorides | |
Activated charcoal | Medium | Medium | Yes | Will also absorb other gasses | |
Aerogel | High | High | Yes | Expensive | |
Aluminium nitrate | Medium | Medium | No | ||
Bentonite clay | |||||
Benzophenone | |||||
Cadmium nitrate | |||||
Calcium | High | Very high | No | Reaction with water releases large amounts of hydrogen | |
Calcium chloride | Neutral | High | Medium | Yes | Deliquescent; often used in drying tubes |
Calcium hydride | High | Very high | No | ||
Calcium nitrate | Neutral | Medium | Medium | Yes | |
Calcium oxide | High | High | No | ||
Calcium sulfate | Neutral | Low | High | Yes | Very fast and efficient drying agent, but a lot of drying agent might be necessary |
Cement (Portland) | Alkaline | Medium | Medium | No | Used in dessicators, cannot be used directly |
Cerium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Cerium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Cesium | No | Expensive; reaction with water is highly explosive | |||
Cobalt(II) chloride | Yes | Mostly used as water indicator | |||
Copper(II) sulfate | Neutral | Low | Medium | Yes | Mostly used as water indicator |
Dysprosium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Dysprosium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Erbium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Erbium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Europium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Europium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Gadolinium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Gadolinium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Holmium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Holmium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Lanthanum(III) chloride | No | ||||
Lanthanum(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Lithium | High | High | No | Expensive; reaction with water releases hydrogen; least violent reaction of all alkaline metals | |
Lithium bromide | High | High | Yes | ||
Lithium chloride | Neutral | Yes | Drying must be done in a stream of hydrogen chloride | ||
Luthetium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Luthetium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Magnesium | No | Reaction is very slow, rarely used | |||
Magnesium sulfate | Neutral | High | Medium | Yes | Good multipurpose drying agent; exists in powder and granular form; has the ability to absorb a lot of water |
Magnesium chloride | Neutral | High | Medium | Yes | Deliquescent |
Molecular sieves | High | High | Yes | ||
Neodymium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Neodymium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Phosphorus pentoxide | No | ||||
Potassium | No | ||||
Potassium carbonate | Alkaline | Low | Medium | Yes | Only for alkaline compounds |
Potassium hydroxide | Alkaline | High | High | Yes | Very effective for basic compounds, such as amines; caustic |
Praseodymium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Praseodymium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Rubidium | No | Expensive; reaction with water is highly explosive | |||
Samarium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Samarium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Silica gel | Yes | ||||
Sodium | No | ||||
Sodium hydroxide | Alkaline | High | High | Yes | Very effective for basic compounds, such as amines; caustic |
Sodium oxide | No | ||||
Sodium sulfate | Neutral | High | Low | Yes | Used to dry solvents; Requires lots of it; only good for predrying; |
Sulfur trioxide | High | Very high | No | Tends to form a mist of sulfuric acid in contact with moist air | |
Sulfuric acid (concentrated) | Acidic | High | High | No | Used in desiccators, cannot be used to dry solutions directly |
Terbium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Terbium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Thulium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Thulium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Ytterbium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Ytterbium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Yttrium(III) chloride | No | ||||
Yttrium(III) nitrate | No | ||||
Zinc chloride | Yes | Drying must be done in a stream of hydrogen chloride |
1All compounds are considered anhydrous.