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Author: Subject: Gallium (III) Chloride
ChemistryGhost
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[*] posted on 20-2-2018 at 17:59
Gallium (III) Chloride


Hello!
I was wondering about a way to make gallium (III) chloride.
Maybe reacting gallium metal with nitric acid to make gallium nitrate.
Then heating to 250 degrees celsius to decompose the gallium nitrate to gallium oxide.
Then reacting the gallium oxide with hydrochloric acid to make gallium trichloride, also known as gallium (III) chloride.
Maybe reacting gallium metal and trichloroisocyanuric acid would work.




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Reboot
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[*] posted on 20-2-2018 at 18:03


Unless I'm missing something, you should be able to prepare it directly (by reacting gallium with hydrochloric acid). HCl does attack gallium, although slowly (so you might have to stick it out of the way for a few months while it does its magic.)

Molten gallium bubbling in HCl:

gallium.jpg - 248kB

Melting it didn't seem to greatly affect the reaction speed. It took a long time to go to completion, but unless it decomposes when I try to boil off the acid/water, I've got my GaCl3. :-) (If it does decompose, I'll crash it out with some alcohol or such.)

[Edited on 21-2-2018 by Reboot]
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[*] posted on 20-2-2018 at 18:09


I don't have specific knowledge here. But there are a couple of interesting ideas on Wikipedia.

You could react gallium directly with Cl2. You might want to look at my video on gold trichloride and adapt my setup. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AB56Z0rTKM

Wikipedia also says that Ga reacts slowly with HCl. You might consider heating and/or adding some peroxide to help things along. Alomg those lines adding a solvent immiscible with water and using some strong stirring might also help by removing the products as they are produced. (Ga2Cl6 dissolves in a wide range of organic sovents.)




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[*] posted on 21-2-2018 at 09:32


How similar is gallium chloride to aluminium chloride?

What I am getting at is there a big difference between anhydrous gallium chloride and the hydrated material prepared under aqueous conditions? Can the deliquescent hydrate be dehydrated without undergoing hydrolysis in the same way aluminium chloride hydrate does?
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[*] posted on 24-2-2018 at 02:29


Gallium + hydrochloric acid + H2O2 will often result in an exothermic runaway, it goes that fast. Or gallium and aqua regia, if peroxide isn't something you have on hand. Evaporating a solution of a metal dissolved in aqua regia tends to leave the chloride salt behind exclusively. I'm not sure if this is always true, but it's been true for every metal I've done this with.



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[*] posted on 26-2-2018 at 17:54


The hydrated form of gallium (III) chloride is fine.
It doesn't have to be anhydrous.




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