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Hydrochloric acid

Hydrochloric acid, also known as muriatic acid or spirits of salt, is an aqueous solution of hydrogen chloride (HCl). It is a colorless solution with a distinctive pungent smell. It is classified as a strong acid. It is a component of the gastric acid in the digestive systems of most animal species, including humans. Hydrochloric acid is an important laboratory reagent and industrial chemical.[7][8]

Hydrochloric acid
3D model of hydrogen chloride
3D model of water
3D model of the chloride anion
3D model of the hydronium cation
Names
IUPAC name
Chlorane[3]
Other names
  • Muriatic acid[1]
  • Spirits of salt[2]
    Hydronium chloride
    Chlorhydric acid
Identifiers
  • 7647-01-0 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL1231821 N
ChemSpider
  • 307 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.210.665
EC Number
  • 231-595-7
E number E507 (acidity regulators, ...)
  • 313
UNII
  • QTT17582CB Y
UN number 1789
Properties
HCl(aq)
Molar mass 36.46 g·mol−1
Appearance Colorless, transparent liquid, fumes in air if concentrated
Odor Pungent characteristic
Density 0.81 g/cm3
Melting point Concentration-dependent – see table
Boiling point Concentration-dependent – see table
log P 0.00[4]
Acidity (pKa) −5.9 (HCl gas)[5]
Pharmacology
A09AB03 (WHO) B05XA13 (WHO)
Hazards
GHS labelling:
Danger[6]
H290, H314, H335[6]
P260, P280, P303+P361+P353, P305+P351+P338[6]
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Related compounds
Other anions
Related compounds
Hydrogen chloride
Supplementary data page
Hydrochloric acid (data page)
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Etymology edit

Because it was produced from rock salt according to the methods of Johann Rudolph Glauber, hydrochloric acid was historically called by European alchemists spirits of salt or acidum salis (salt acid). Both names are still used, especially in other languages, such as German: Salzsäure, Dutch: Zoutzuur, Swedish: Saltsyra, Finnish: Suolahappo, Spanish: Salfumán, Turkish: Tuz Ruhu, Polish: kwas solny, Hungarian: sósav, Czech: kyselina solná, and Chinese: 盐酸 (yánsuān).

Gaseous HCl was called marine acid air. The name muriatic acid has the same origin (muriatic means "pertaining to brine or salt", hence muriate means hydrochloride), and this name is still sometimes used.[1][9] The name hydrochloric acid was coined by the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in 1814.[10]

History edit

9th–10th century edit

In the early tenth century, the Persian physician and alchemist Abu Bakr al-Razi (c. 865–925, Latin: Rhazes) conducted experiments with sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride) and vitriol (hydrated sulfates of various metals), which he distilled together, thus producing the gas hydrogen chloride.[11] In doing so, al-Razi may have stumbled upon a primitive method for producing hydrochloric acid,[12] as perhaps manifested in the following recipe from his Kitāb al-Asrār ("The Book of Secrets"):

Take equal parts of sweet salt, Bitter salt, Ṭabarzad salt, Andarānī salt, Indian salt, salt of Al-Qilī, and salt of Urine. After adding an equal weight of good crystallised Sal-ammoniac, dissolve by moisture, and distil (the mixture). There will distil over a strong water, which will cleave stone (sakhr) instantly.[13]

However, it appears that in most of his experiments al-Razi disregarded the gaseous products, concentrating instead on the color changes that could be effected in the residue.[14] According to Robert P. Multhauf, hydrogen chloride was produced many times without clear recognition that, by dissolving it in water, hydrochloric acid may be produced.[15]

11th–13th century edit

Drawing on al-Razi's experiments, the De aluminibus et salibus ("On Alums and Salts"), an eleventh- or twelfth-century Arabic text falsely attributed to al-Razi and translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona (1144–1187), described the heating of metals with various salts, which in the case of mercury resulted in the production of mercury(II) chloride (corrosive sublimate).[16] In this process, hydrochloric acid actually started to form, but it immediately reacted with the mercury to produce corrosive sublimate. Thirteenth-century Latin alchemists, for whom the De aluminibus et salibus was one of the main reference works, were fascinated by the chlorinating properties of corrosive sublimate, and they soon discovered that when the metals are eliminated from the process of heating vitriols, alums, and salts, strong mineral acids can directly be distilled.[17]

14th–15th century edit

Aqua regia edit

One important invention that resulted from the discovery of the mineral acids is aqua regia, a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid in a 1:3 proportion, capable of dissolving gold. This was first described in pseudo-Geber's De inventione veritatis ("On the Discovery of Truth", after c. 1300), where aqua regia was prepared by adding ammonium chloride to nitric acid.[18] The fact that aqua regia typically is defined as a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid does not mean that hydrochloric acid was discovered before or simultaneously with aqua regia. The isolation of hydrochloric acid happened about 300 years later. The production of hydrochloric acid itself (i.e., as an isolated substance rather than as already mixed with nitric acid) depended on the use of more efficient cooling apparatus, which would only develop in subsequent centuries.[19]

16th–17th century edit

Isolation of hydrochloric acid edit

From the point of view of Western history of chemistry, hydrochloric acid was the last of the three well-known mineral acids for which the method of its production appeared in the literature.[20] Recipes for its production started to appear in the late sixteenth century. The earliest recipes for the production of hydrochloric acid are found in Giovanni Battista Della Porta's (1535–1615) Magiae naturalis ("Natural Magic") and in the works of other contemporary chemists like Andreas Libavius (c. 1550–1616), Jean Beguin (1550–1620), and Oswald Croll (c. 1563–1609).[21] Among the historians who have written about this are German chemists Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp (1845) and Edmund Oscar von Lippmann (1938), mining engineer (and future U.S. president) Herbert Hoover with his wife geologist Lou Henry Hoover (1912), Dutch chemist Robert Jacobus Forbes (1948), American chemist Mary Elvira Weeks (1956), and British chemists F. Sherwood Taylor (1957) and J. R. Partington (1960). Italian chemist Ladislao Reti have summarized the result of their efforts thus:[22]

The first clear instance of the preparation of hydrochloric acid appears in the writings of Della Porta, (1589 and 1608), Libavius (1597), pseudo-Basil (1604), van Helmont (1646) and Glauber (1648). Less convincing earlier references are found in the Plichto of Rosetti (1540) and in Agricola (1558). As for the first practical method of preparation from vitriol and common salt, there is no doubt that pseudo-Basil precedes Glauber, but the latter has the unquestionable merit of having indicated the way of producing the acid later to be adopted by the chemical industry for large-scale operations.

— Ladislao Reti, How Old Is Hydrochloric Acid?

Dissolving metals edit

The knowledge of mineral acids such as hydrochloric acid would be of key importance to seventeenth-century chemists like Daniel Sennert (1572–1637) and Robert Boyle (1627–1691), who used their capability to rapidly dissolve metals in their demonstrations of the composite nature of bodies.[23]

Industrial developments edit

During the Industrial Revolution in Europe, demand for alkaline substances increased. A new industrial process developed by Nicolas Leblanc of Issoudun, France enabled cheap large-scale production of sodium carbonate (soda ash). In this Leblanc process, common salt is converted to soda ash, using sulfuric acid, limestone, and coal, releasing hydrogen chloride as a by-product. Until the British Alkali Act 1863 and similar legislation in other countries, the excess HCl was often vented into the air. An early exception was the Bonnington Chemical Works where, in 1830, the HCl began to be captured and the hydrochloric acid produced was used in making sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride).[24] After the passage of the act, soda ash producers were obliged to absorb the waste gas in water, producing hydrochloric acid on an industrial scale.[25][26]

In the 20th century, the Leblanc process was effectively replaced by the Solvay process without a hydrochloric acid by-product. Since hydrochloric acid was already fully settled as an important chemical in numerous applications, the commercial interest initiated other production methods, some of which are still used today. After 2000, hydrochloric acid is mostly made by absorbing by-product hydrogen chloride from industrial organic compounds production.[25][26][7]

Chemical properties edit

Gaseous hydrogen chloride is a molecular compound with a covalent bond between the hydrogen and chlorine atoms. In aqueous solutions dissociation is complete, with the formation of chloride ions and hydrated hydrogen ions (hydronium ions).[27] A combined IR, Raman, X-ray, and neutron diffraction study of concentrated hydrochloric acid showed that the hydronium ion forms hydrogen bonded complexes with other water molecules.[28] (See Hydronium for further discussion of this issue.)

The pKa value of hydrochloric acid in aqueous solution is estimated theoretically to be −5.9.[5] A solution of hydrogen chloride in water behaves as a strong acid: the concentration of HCl molecules is effectively zero.

Physical properties edit

Mass
fraction
Concentration Density Molarity pH Viscosity Specific
heat
Vapour
pressure
Boiling
point
Melting
point
kg HCl/kg  kg HCl/m3 Baumé kg/L mol/L mPa·s kJ/(kg·K) kPa °C °C
10% 104.80 6.6 1.048 2.87 −0.5 1.16 3.47 1.95 103 −18
20% 219.60 13 1.098 6.02 −0.8 1.37 2.99 1.40 108 −59
30% 344.70 19 1.149 9.45 −1.0 1.70 2.60 2.13 90 −52
32% 370.88 20 1.159 10.17 −1.0 1.80 2.55 3.73 84 −43
34% 397.46 21 1.169 10.90 −1.0 1.90 2.50 7.24 71 −36
36% 424.44 22 1.179 11.64 −1.1 1.99 2.46 14.5 61 −30
38% 451.82 23 1.189 12.39 −1.1 2.10 2.43 28.3 48 −26
The reference temperature and pressure for the above table are 20 °C and 1 atmosphere (101.325 kPa).
Vapour pressure values are taken from the International Critical Tables and refer to the total vapour pressure of the solution.
 
Melting temperature as a function of HCl concentration in water[29][30]

Physical properties of hydrochloric acid, such as boiling and melting points, density, and pH, depend on the concentration or molarity of HCl in the aqueous solution. They range from those of water at very low concentrations approaching 0% HCl to values for fuming hydrochloric acid at over 40% HCl.[31][32][33]

Hydrochloric acid as the binary (two-component) mixture of HCl and H2O has a constant-boiling azeotrope at 20.2% HCl and 108.6 °C (381.8 K; 227.5 °F). There are four constant-crystallization eutectic points for hydrochloric acid, between the crystal form of [H3O]Cl (68% HCl), [H5O2]Cl (51% HCl), [H7O3]Cl (41% HCl), [H3O]Cl·5H2O (25% HCl), and ice (0% HCl). There is also a metastable eutectic point at 24.8% between ice and the [H7O3]Cl crystallization.[33] They are all hydronium salts.

Production edit

Hydrochloric acid is usually prepared industrially by dissolving hydrogen chloride in water. Hydrogen chloride can be generated in many ways, and thus several precursors to hydrochloric acid exist. The large-scale production of hydrochloric acid is almost always integrated with the industrial scale production of other chemicals, such as in the chloralkali process which produces hydroxide, hydrogen, and chlorine, the latter of which can be combined to produce HCl.[31][32]

Hydrogen chloride is produced by combining chlorine and hydrogen:

 

As the reaction is exothermic, the installation is called an HCl oven or HCl burner. The resulting hydrogen chloride gas is absorbed in deionized water, resulting in chemically pure hydrochloric acid. This reaction can give a very pure product, e.g. for use in the food industry.

Industrial market edit

Hydrochloric acid is produced in solutions up to 38% HCl (concentrated grade). Higher concentrations up to just over 40% are chemically possible, but the evaporation rate is then so high that storage and handling require extra precautions, such as pressurization and cooling. Bulk industrial-grade is therefore 30% to 35%, optimized to balance transport efficiency and product loss through evaporation. In the United States, solutions of between 20% and 32% are sold as muriatic acid. Solutions for household purposes in the US, mostly cleaning, are typically 10% to 12%, with strong recommendations to dilute before use. In the United Kingdom, where it is sold as "Spirits of Salt" for domestic cleaning, the potency is the same as the US industrial grade.[25] In other countries, such as Italy, hydrochloric acid for domestic or industrial cleaning is sold as "Acido Muriatico", and its concentration ranges from 5% to 32%.

Major producers worldwide include Dow Chemical at 2 million tonnes annually (Mt/year), calculated as HCl gas, Georgia Gulf Corporation, Tosoh Corporation, Akzo Nobel, and Tessenderlo at 0.5 to 1.5 Mt/year each. Total world production, for comparison purposes expressed as HCl, is estimated at 20 Mt/year, with 3 Mt/year from direct synthesis, and the rest as secondary product from organic and similar syntheses. By far, most hydrochloric acid is consumed captively by the producer. The open world market size is estimated at 5 Mt/year.[25]

Applications edit

Hydrochloric acid is a strong inorganic acid that is used in many industrial processes such as refining metal. The application often determines the required product quality.[25] Hydrogen chloride, not hydrochloric acid, is used more widely in industrial organic chemistry, e.g. for vinyl chloride and dichloroethane.[8]

Pickling of steel edit

One of the most important applications of hydrochloric acid is in the pickling of steel, to remove rust or iron oxide scale from iron or steel before subsequent processing, such as extrusion, rolling, galvanizing, and other techniques.[25][7] Technical quality HCl at typically 18% concentration is the most commonly used pickling agent for the pickling of carbon steel grades.

 

The spent acid has long been reused as iron(II) chloride (also known as ferrous chloride) solutions, but high heavy-metal levels in the pickling liquor have decreased this practice.

The steel pickling industry has developed hydrochloric acid regeneration processes, such as the spray roaster or the fluidized bed HCl regeneration process, which allow the recovery of HCl from spent pickling liquor. The most common regeneration process is the pyrohydrolysis process, applying the following formula:[25]

 

By recuperation of the spent acid, a closed acid loop is established.[7] The iron(III) oxide by-product of the regeneration process is valuable, used in a variety of secondary industries.[25]

Production of inorganic compounds edit

Akin to its use for pickling, hydrochloric acid is used to dissolve many metals, metal oxides and metal carbonates. The conversions are often depicted in simplified equations:

 
 
 

These processes are used to produce metal chlorides for analysis or further production.[31][32][7]

pH control and neutralization edit

Hydrochloric acid can be used to regulate the acidity (pH) of solutions.

 

In industry demanding purity (food, pharmaceutical, drinking water), high-quality hydrochloric acid is used to control the pH of process water streams. In less-demanding industry, technical quality hydrochloric acid suffices for neutralizing waste streams and swimming pool pH control.[7]

Regeneration of ion exchangers edit

High-quality hydrochloric acid is used in the regeneration of ion exchange resins. Cation exchange is widely used to remove ions such as Na+ and Ca2+ from aqueous solutions, producing demineralized water. The acid is used to rinse the cations from the resins.[25] Na+ is replaced with H+ and Ca2+ with 2 H+.

Ion exchangers and demineralized water are used in all chemical industries, drinking water production, and many food industries.[25]

Laboratory use edit

 
30% Hydrochloric acid

Of the common strong mineral acids in chemistry, hydrochloric acid is the monoprotic acid least likely to undergo an interfering oxidation-reduction reaction. It is one of the least hazardous strong acids to handle; despite its acidity, it contains the non-reactive and non-toxic chloride ion. Intermediate-strength hydrochloric acid solutions are quite stable upon storage, maintaining their concentrations over time. These attributes, plus the fact that it is available as a pure reagent, make hydrochloric acid an excellent acidifying reagent. It is also inexpensive.

Hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid in titration for determining the amount of bases. Strong acid titrants give more precise results due to a more distinct endpoint. Azeotropic, or "constant-boiling", hydrochloric acid (roughly 20.2%) can be used as a primary standard in quantitative analysis, although its exact concentration depends on the atmospheric pressure when it is prepared.[34]

Other edit

Hydrochloric acid is used for a large number of small-scale applications, such as leather processing, household cleaning,[35] and building construction.[7] Oil production may be stimulated by injecting hydrochloric acid into the rock formation of an oil well, dissolving a portion of the rock, and creating a large-pore structure. Oil well acidizing is a common process in the North Sea oil production industry.[25]

Hydrochloric acid has been used for dissolving calcium carbonate, e.g. such things as de-scaling kettles and for cleaning mortar off brickwork. When used on brickwork the reaction with the mortar only continues until the acid has all been converted, producing calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water:

 

Many chemical reactions involving hydrochloric acid are applied in the production of food, food ingredients, and food additives. Typical products include aspartame, fructose, citric acid, lysine, hydrolyzed vegetable protein as food enhancer, and in gelatin production. Food-grade (extra-pure) hydrochloric acid can be applied when needed for the final product.[25][7]

Presence in living organisms edit

 
Diagram of alkaline mucous layer in stomach with mucosal defense mechanisms

Gastric acid is one of the main secretions of the stomach. It consists mainly of hydrochloric acid and acidifies the stomach content to a pH of 1 to 2.[36][37] Chloride (Cl) and hydrogen (H+) ions are secreted separately in the stomach fundus region at the top of the stomach by parietal cells of the gastric mucosa into a secretory network called canaliculi before it enters the stomach lumen.[38]

Gastric acid acts as a barrier against microorganisms to prevent infections and is important for the digestion of food. Its low pH denatures proteins and thereby makes them susceptible to degradation by digestive enzymes such as pepsin. The low pH also activates the enzyme precursor pepsinogen into the active enzyme pepsin by self-cleavage. After leaving the stomach, the hydrochloric acid of the chyme is neutralized in the duodenum by bicarbonate.[36]

The stomach itself is protected from the strong acid by the secretion of a thick mucus layer, and by secretin induced buffering with sodium bicarbonate. Heartburn or peptic ulcers can develop when these mechanisms fail. Drugs of the antihistaminic and proton pump inhibitor classes can inhibit the production of acid in the stomach, and antacids are used to neutralize excessive existing acid.[36][39]

Safety edit

     

Being a strong acid, hydrochloric acid is corrosive to living tissue and to many materials, but not to rubber. Typically, rubber protective gloves and related protective gear are used when handling concentrated solutions.[8]

Vapors or mists are a respiratory hazard, which can be partially mitigated by use of a respirator equipped with cartridges specifically designed to capture hydrochloric acid. Airborne acid is an irritant to the eyes, and may require the use of protective goggles or a facemask.[citation needed]

Mass
fraction
Classification[40] List of
H-phrases
10% ≤ C < 25% Causes skin irritation, Causes serious eye irritation, H315, H319
C ≥ 10% May cause respiratory irritation H335
C ≥ 25% Causes severe skin burns and eye damage H314

Legal status edit

Hydrochloric acid has been listed as a Table II precursor under the 1988 United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances because of its use in the production of heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.[41][42]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 15 October 2010. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  2. ^ "spirits of salt". Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  3. ^ Favre HA, Powell WH, eds. (2014). Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry: IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013. Cambridge: The Royal Society of Chemistry. p. 131.
  4. ^ "Hydrochloric acid". www.chemsrc.com.
  5. ^ a b Trummal A, Lipping L, Kaljurand I, Koppel IA, Leito I (May 2016). "Acidity of Strong Acids in Water and Dimethyl Sulfoxide". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 120 (20): 3663–9. Bibcode:2016JPCA..120.3663T. doi:10.1021/acs.jpca.6b02253. PMID 27115918. S2CID 29697201.
  6. ^ a b c Sigma-Aldrich Co., Hydrochloric acid.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Greenwood, Norman N.; Earnshaw, Alan (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.). Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 946–48. ISBN 978-0-08-037941-8.
  8. ^ a b c Austin, Severin; Glowacki, Arndt (2000). Hydrochloric Acid. doi:10.1002/14356007.a13_283. ISBN 3527306730.
  9. ^ (PDF). PPG Industries. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
  10. ^ Gay-Lussac (1814) "Mémoire sur l'iode" (Memoir on iodine), Annales de Chemie, 91 : 5–160. From page 9: " ... mais pour les distinguer, je propose d'ajouter au mot spécifique de l'acide que l'on considère, le mot générique de hydro; de sorte que le combinaisons acide de hydrogène avec le chlore, l'iode, et le soufre porteraient le nom d'acide hydrochlorique, d'acide hydroiodique, et d'acide hydrosulfurique; ... " (... but in order to distinguish them, I propose to add to the specific suffix of the acid being considered, the general prefix hydro, so that the acidic combinations of hydrogen with chlorine, iodine, and sulfur will bear the name hydrochloric acid, hydroiodic acid, and hydrosulfuric acid; ...)
  11. ^ Multhauf 1966, pp. 141–142.
  12. ^ Stapleton, Henry E.; Azo, R.F.; Hidayat Husain, M. (1927). "Chemistry in Iraq and Persia in the Tenth Century A.D." Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. VIII (6): 317–418. OCLC 706947607. p. 333.
  13. ^ Stapleton, Azo & Hidayat Husain 1927, p. 333 (for a glossary of the terms used in this recipe, see p. 322). German translation of the same passage in Ruska, Julius (1937). Al-Rāzī's Buch Geheimnis der Geheimnisse. Mit Einleitung und Erläuterungen in deutscher Übersetzung. Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften und der Medizin. Vol. VI. Berlin: Springer. p. 182, §5. An English translation of Ruska 1937's translation can be found in Taylor, Gail Marlow (2015). The Alchemy of Al-Razi: A Translation of the "Book of Secrets". CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781507778791. pp. 139–140.
  14. ^ Multhauf, Robert P. (1966). The Origins of Chemistry. London: Oldbourne. OCLC 977570829. pp. 141–142.
  15. ^ Multhauf 1966, p. 142. Multhauf refers to a number of recipes from the Kitāb al-Asrār translated by Ruska 1937, pp. 103–110, but does not seem to have noted the existence of the recipe in Ruska 1937, p. 182, §5 quoted above.
  16. ^ Multhauf 1966, pp. 160–162.
  17. ^ Multhauf 1966, pp. 162–163.
  18. ^ Karpenko, Vladimír; Norris, John A. (2002). "Vitriol in the History of Chemistry". Chemické listy. 96 (12): 997–1005. p. 1002.
  19. ^ Multhauf 1966, p. 204.
  20. ^ Reti 1965, p. 11.
  21. ^ Multhauf 1966, p. 208, note 29; cf. p. 142, note 79.
  22. ^ Reti, L. (1965). "How Old Is Hydrochloric Acid?". Chymia. 10: 11–23. doi:10.2307/27757245. JSTOR 27757245.
  23. ^ Newman, William R. (2006). Atoms and Alchemy: Chymistry and the Experimental Origins of the Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226576961. p. 98.
  24. ^ Ronalds BF (2019). "Bonnington Chemical Works (1822-1878): Pioneer Coal Tar Company". International Journal for the History of Engineering & Technology. 89 (1–2): 73–91. doi:10.1080/17581206.2020.1787807. S2CID 221115202.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Hydrochloric Acid". Chemicals Economics Handbook. SRI International. 2001. pp. 733.4000A–733.3003F.
  26. ^ a b Aftalion F (1991). A History of the International Chemical Industry. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-1297-6.
  27. ^ Petrucci, Ralph H.; Harwood, William S.; Herring, F. Geoffrey (2002). General chemistry: principles and modern applications. Prentice Hall. pp. 668–669. ISBN 978-0-13-014329-7.
  28. ^ Agmon N (January 1998). "Structure of Concentrated HCl Solutions". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 102 (1): 192–199. Bibcode:1998JPCA..102..192A. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.78.3695. doi:10.1021/jp970836x. ISSN 1089-5639.
  29. ^ "Systemnummer 6 Chlor". Gmelins Handbuch der Anorganischen Chemie. Chemie Berlin. 1927.
  30. ^ "Systemnummer 6 Chlor, Ergänzungsband Teil B – Lieferung 1". Gmelins Handbuch der Anorganischen Chemie. Chemie Weinheim. 1968.
  31. ^ a b c Lide D (2000). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (81st ed.). CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-0481-1.
  32. ^ a b c Perry R, Green D, Maloney J (1984). Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook (6th ed.). McGraw-Hill Book Company. ISBN 978-0-07-049479-4.
  33. ^ a b Aspen Properties. binary mixtures modeling software (calculations by Akzo Nobel Engineering ed.). Aspen Technology. 2002–2003.
  34. ^ Mendham J, Denney RC, Barnes JD, Thomas MJ, Denney RC, Thomas MJ (2000). Vogel's Quantitative Chemical Analysis (6th ed.). New York: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-582-22628-9.
  35. ^ Simhon R (13 September 2003). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 23 February 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  36. ^ a b c Maton A, Hopkins J, McLaughlin CW, Johnson S, Warner MQ, LaHart D, Wright JD (1993). Human Biology and Health. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-981176-0.
  37. ^ Haas E (6 December 2000). "Digestive Aids: Hydrochloric acid". healthy.net.
  38. ^ Arthur C, Guyton MD, Hall JE (2000). Textbook of Medical Physiology (10th ed.). W.B. Saunders Company. ISBN 978-0-7216-8677-6.
  39. ^ Bowen R (18 March 2003). "Control and Physiologic Effects of Secretin". Colorado State University. Retrieved 16 March 2009.
  40. ^ "Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008 of the European Parliament and of Council of 16 December 2008 on classification, labelling and packaging of substances and mixtures, amending and repealing Directives 67/548/EEC and 1999/45/EC, and amending Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006". EUR-lex. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
  41. ^ (PDF) (Eleventh ed.). International Narcotics Control Board. January 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-27.
  42. ^ Chemicals Required for the Illicit Manufacture of Drugs (PDF) (Report). UNDOC. 1998. Retrieved July 20, 2022.

External links edit

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  • NIST WebBook, general link
  • Hydrochloric Acid – Part One and Hydrochloric Acid – Part Two at The Periodic Table of Videos (University of Nottingham)
  • Calculators: surface tensions, and densities, molarities and molalities of aqueous HCl

General safety information edit

  • NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards

Pollution information edit

  • National Pollutant Inventory – Hydrochloric Acid Fact Sheet

hydrochloric, acid, this, article, about, solution, hydrogen, chloride, also, known, muriatic, acid, spirits, salt, aqueous, solution, hydrogen, chloride, colorless, solution, with, distinctive, pungent, smell, classified, strong, acid, component, gastric, aci. This article is about the solution For the gas see hydrogen chloride Hydrochloric acid also known as muriatic acid or spirits of salt is an aqueous solution of hydrogen chloride HCl It is a colorless solution with a distinctive pungent smell It is classified as a strong acid It is a component of the gastric acid in the digestive systems of most animal species including humans Hydrochloric acid is an important laboratory reagent and industrial chemical 7 8 Hydrochloric acid 3D model of hydrogen chloride 3D model of water3D model of the chloride anion 3D model of the hydronium cationNamesIUPAC name Chlorane 3 Other names Muriatic acid 1 Spirits of salt 2 Hydronium chlorideChlorhydric acidIdentifiersCAS Number 7647 01 0 YChEMBL ChEMBL1231821 NChemSpider 307 YECHA InfoCard 100 210 665EC Number 231 595 7E number E507 acidity regulators PubChem CID 313UNII QTT17582CB YUN number 1789PropertiesChemical formula HCl aq Molar mass 36 46 g mol 1Appearance Colorless transparent liquid fumes in air if concentratedOdor Pungent characteristicDensity 0 81 g cm3Melting point Concentration dependent see tableBoiling point Concentration dependent see tablelog P 0 00 4 Acidity pKa 5 9 HCl gas 5 PharmacologyATC code A09AB03 WHO B05XA13 WHO HazardsGHS labelling PictogramsSignal word Danger 6 Hazard statements H290 H314 H335 6 Precautionary statements P260 P280 P303 P361 P353 P305 P351 P338 6 NFPA 704 fire diamond 301ACIDRelated compoundsOther anions Hydrofluoric acidHydrobromic acidHydroiodic acidRelated compounds Hydrogen chlorideSupplementary data pageHydrochloric acid data page Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 9th 10th century 2 2 11th 13th century 2 3 14th 15th century 2 3 1 Aqua regia 2 4 16th 17th century 2 4 1 Isolation of hydrochloric acid 2 4 2 Dissolving metals 2 5 Industrial developments 3 Chemical properties 4 Physical properties 5 Production 5 1 Industrial market 6 Applications 6 1 Pickling of steel 6 2 Production of inorganic compounds 6 3 pH control and neutralization 6 4 Regeneration of ion exchangers 6 5 Laboratory use 6 6 Other 7 Presence in living organisms 8 Safety 9 Legal status 10 See also 11 References 12 External links 12 1 General safety information 12 2 Pollution informationEtymology editBecause it was produced from rock salt according to the methods of Johann Rudolph Glauber hydrochloric acid was historically called by European alchemists spirits of salt or acidum salis salt acid Both names are still used especially in other languages such as German Salzsaure Dutch Zoutzuur Swedish Saltsyra Finnish Suolahappo Spanish Salfuman Turkish Tuz Ruhu Polish kwas solny Hungarian sosav Czech kyselina solna and Chinese 盐酸 yansuan Gaseous HCl was called marine acid air The name muriatic acid has the same origin muriatic means pertaining to brine or salt hence muriate means hydrochloride and this name is still sometimes used 1 9 The name hydrochloric acid was coined by the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay Lussac in 1814 10 History edit9th 10th century edit In the early tenth century the Persian physician and alchemist Abu Bakr al Razi c 865 925 Latin Rhazes conducted experiments with sal ammoniac ammonium chloride and vitriol hydrated sulfates of various metals which he distilled together thus producing the gas hydrogen chloride 11 In doing so al Razi may have stumbled upon a primitive method for producing hydrochloric acid 12 as perhaps manifested in the following recipe from his Kitab al Asrar The Book of Secrets Take equal parts of sweet salt Bitter salt Ṭabarzad salt Andarani salt Indian salt salt of Al Qili and salt of Urine After adding an equal weight of good crystallised Sal ammoniac dissolve by moisture and distil the mixture There will distil over a strong water which will cleave stone sakhr instantly 13 However it appears that in most of his experiments al Razi disregarded the gaseous products concentrating instead on the color changes that could be effected in the residue 14 According to Robert P Multhauf hydrogen chloride was produced many times without clear recognition that by dissolving it in water hydrochloric acid may be produced 15 11th 13th century edit Drawing on al Razi s experiments the De aluminibus et salibus On Alums and Salts an eleventh or twelfth century Arabic text falsely attributed to al Razi and translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona 1144 1187 described the heating of metals with various salts which in the case of mercury resulted in the production of mercury II chloride corrosive sublimate 16 In this process hydrochloric acid actually started to form but it immediately reacted with the mercury to produce corrosive sublimate Thirteenth century Latin alchemists for whom the De aluminibus et salibus was one of the main reference works were fascinated by the chlorinating properties of corrosive sublimate and they soon discovered that when the metals are eliminated from the process of heating vitriols alums and salts strong mineral acids can directly be distilled 17 14th 15th century edit Aqua regia edit One important invention that resulted from the discovery of the mineral acids is aqua regia a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid in a 1 3 proportion capable of dissolving gold This was first described in pseudo Geber s De inventione veritatis On the Discovery of Truth after c 1300 where aqua regia was prepared by adding ammonium chloride to nitric acid 18 The fact that aqua regia typically is defined as a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid does not mean that hydrochloric acid was discovered before or simultaneously with aqua regia The isolation of hydrochloric acid happened about 300 years later The production of hydrochloric acid itself i e as an isolated substance rather than as already mixed with nitric acid depended on the use of more efficient cooling apparatus which would only develop in subsequent centuries 19 16th 17th century edit Isolation of hydrochloric acid edit From the point of view of Western history of chemistry hydrochloric acid was the last of the three well known mineral acids for which the method of its production appeared in the literature 20 Recipes for its production started to appear in the late sixteenth century The earliest recipes for the production of hydrochloric acid are found in Giovanni Battista Della Porta s 1535 1615 Magiae naturalis Natural Magic and in the works of other contemporary chemists like Andreas Libavius c 1550 1616 Jean Beguin 1550 1620 and Oswald Croll c 1563 1609 21 Among the historians who have written about this are German chemists Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp 1845 and Edmund Oscar von Lippmann 1938 mining engineer and future U S president Herbert Hoover with his wife geologist Lou Henry Hoover 1912 Dutch chemist Robert Jacobus Forbes 1948 American chemist Mary Elvira Weeks 1956 and British chemists F Sherwood Taylor 1957 and J R Partington 1960 Italian chemist Ladislao Reti have summarized the result of their efforts thus 22 The first clear instance of the preparation of hydrochloric acid appears in the writings of Della Porta 1589 and 1608 Libavius 1597 pseudo Basil 1604 van Helmont 1646 and Glauber 1648 Less convincing earlier references are found in the Plichto of Rosetti 1540 and in Agricola 1558 As for the first practical method of preparation from vitriol and common salt there is no doubt that pseudo Basil precedes Glauber but the latter has the unquestionable merit of having indicated the way of producing the acid later to be adopted by the chemical industry for large scale operations Ladislao Reti How Old Is Hydrochloric Acid Dissolving metals edit The knowledge of mineral acids such as hydrochloric acid would be of key importance to seventeenth century chemists like Daniel Sennert 1572 1637 and Robert Boyle 1627 1691 who used their capability to rapidly dissolve metals in their demonstrations of the composite nature of bodies 23 Industrial developments edit During the Industrial Revolution in Europe demand for alkaline substances increased A new industrial process developed by Nicolas Leblanc of Issoudun France enabled cheap large scale production of sodium carbonate soda ash In this Leblanc process common salt is converted to soda ash using sulfuric acid limestone and coal releasing hydrogen chloride as a by product Until the British Alkali Act 1863 and similar legislation in other countries the excess HCl was often vented into the air An early exception was the Bonnington Chemical Works where in 1830 the HCl began to be captured and the hydrochloric acid produced was used in making sal ammoniac ammonium chloride 24 After the passage of the act soda ash producers were obliged to absorb the waste gas in water producing hydrochloric acid on an industrial scale 25 26 In the 20th century the Leblanc process was effectively replaced by the Solvay process without a hydrochloric acid by product Since hydrochloric acid was already fully settled as an important chemical in numerous applications the commercial interest initiated other production methods some of which are still used today After 2000 hydrochloric acid is mostly made by absorbing by product hydrogen chloride from industrial organic compounds production 25 26 7 Chemical properties editGaseous hydrogen chloride is a molecular compound with a covalent bond between the hydrogen and chlorine atoms In aqueous solutions dissociation is complete with the formation of chloride ions and hydrated hydrogen ions hydronium ions 27 A combined IR Raman X ray and neutron diffraction study of concentrated hydrochloric acid showed that the hydronium ion forms hydrogen bonded complexes with other water molecules 28 See Hydronium for further discussion of this issue The pKa value of hydrochloric acid in aqueous solution is estimated theoretically to be 5 9 5 A solution of hydrogen chloride in water behaves as a strong acid the concentration of HCl molecules is effectively zero Physical properties editMass fraction Concentration Density Molarity pH Viscosity Specificheat Vapourpressure Boilingpoint Meltingpointkg HCl kg kg HCl m3 Baume kg L mol L mPa s kJ kg K kPa C C10 104 80 6 6 1 048 2 87 0 5 1 16 3 47 1 95 103 1820 219 60 13 1 098 6 02 0 8 1 37 2 99 1 40 108 5930 344 70 19 1 149 9 45 1 0 1 70 2 60 2 13 90 5232 370 88 20 1 159 10 17 1 0 1 80 2 55 3 73 84 4334 397 46 21 1 169 10 90 1 0 1 90 2 50 7 24 71 3636 424 44 22 1 179 11 64 1 1 1 99 2 46 14 5 61 3038 451 82 23 1 189 12 39 1 1 2 10 2 43 28 3 48 26The reference temperature and pressure for the above table are 20 C and 1 atmosphere 101 325 kPa Vapour pressure values are taken from the International Critical Tables and refer to the total vapour pressure of the solution nbsp Melting temperature as a function of HCl concentration in water 29 30 Physical properties of hydrochloric acid such as boiling and melting points density and pH depend on the concentration or molarity of HCl in the aqueous solution They range from those of water at very low concentrations approaching 0 HCl to values for fuming hydrochloric acid at over 40 HCl 31 32 33 Hydrochloric acid as the binary two component mixture of HCl and H2O has a constant boiling azeotrope at 20 2 HCl and 108 6 C 381 8 K 227 5 F There are four constant crystallization eutectic points for hydrochloric acid between the crystal form of H3O Cl 68 HCl H5O2 Cl 51 HCl H7O3 Cl 41 HCl H3O Cl 5H2O 25 HCl and ice 0 HCl There is also a metastable eutectic point at 24 8 between ice and the H7O3 Cl crystallization 33 They are all hydronium salts Production editHydrochloric acid is usually prepared industrially by dissolving hydrogen chloride in water Hydrogen chloride can be generated in many ways and thus several precursors to hydrochloric acid exist The large scale production of hydrochloric acid is almost always integrated with the industrial scale production of other chemicals such as in the chloralkali process which produces hydroxide hydrogen and chlorine the latter of which can be combined to produce HCl 31 32 Hydrogen chloride is produced by combining chlorine and hydrogen Cl 2 H 2 2 HCl displaystyle ce Cl2 H2 gt 2 HCl nbsp As the reaction is exothermic the installation is called an HCl oven or HCl burner The resulting hydrogen chloride gas is absorbed in deionized water resulting in chemically pure hydrochloric acid This reaction can give a very pure product e g for use in the food industry Industrial market edit Hydrochloric acid is produced in solutions up to 38 HCl concentrated grade Higher concentrations up to just over 40 are chemically possible but the evaporation rate is then so high that storage and handling require extra precautions such as pressurization and cooling Bulk industrial grade is therefore 30 to 35 optimized to balance transport efficiency and product loss through evaporation In the United States solutions of between 20 and 32 are sold as muriatic acid Solutions for household purposes in the US mostly cleaning are typically 10 to 12 with strong recommendations to dilute before use In the United Kingdom where it is sold as Spirits of Salt for domestic cleaning the potency is the same as the US industrial grade 25 In other countries such as Italy hydrochloric acid for domestic or industrial cleaning is sold as Acido Muriatico and its concentration ranges from 5 to 32 Major producers worldwide include Dow Chemical at 2 million tonnes annually Mt year calculated as HCl gas Georgia Gulf Corporation Tosoh Corporation Akzo Nobel and Tessenderlo at 0 5 to 1 5 Mt year each Total world production for comparison purposes expressed as HCl is estimated at 20 Mt year with 3 Mt year from direct synthesis and the rest as secondary product from organic and similar syntheses By far most hydrochloric acid is consumed captively by the producer The open world market size is estimated at 5 Mt year 25 Applications editMain article Hydrogen chloride Hydrochloric acid is a strong inorganic acid that is used in many industrial processes such as refining metal The application often determines the required product quality 25 Hydrogen chloride not hydrochloric acid is used more widely in industrial organic chemistry e g for vinyl chloride and dichloroethane 8 Pickling of steel edit One of the most important applications of hydrochloric acid is in the pickling of steel to remove rust or iron oxide scale from iron or steel before subsequent processing such as extrusion rolling galvanizing and other techniques 25 7 Technical quality HCl at typically 18 concentration is the most commonly used pickling agent for the pickling of carbon steel grades Fe 3 O 4 Fe 8 HCl 4 FeCl 2 4 H 2 O displaystyle ce Fe3O4 Fe 8 HCl gt 4 FeCl2 4 H2O nbsp The spent acid has long been reused as iron II chloride also known as ferrous chloride solutions but high heavy metal levels in the pickling liquor have decreased this practice The steel pickling industry has developed hydrochloric acid regeneration processes such as the spray roaster or the fluidized bed HCl regeneration process which allow the recovery of HCl from spent pickling liquor The most common regeneration process is the pyrohydrolysis process applying the following formula 25 4 FeCl 2 4 H 2 O O 2 8 HCl 2 Fe 2 O 3 displaystyle ce 4 FeCl2 4 H2O O2 gt 8 HCl 2 Fe2O3 nbsp By recuperation of the spent acid a closed acid loop is established 7 The iron III oxide by product of the regeneration process is valuable used in a variety of secondary industries 25 Production of inorganic compounds edit Akin to its use for pickling hydrochloric acid is used to dissolve many metals metal oxides and metal carbonates The conversions are often depicted in simplified equations Zn 2 HCl ZnCl 2 H 2 displaystyle ce Zn 2 HCl gt ZnCl2 H2 nbsp NiO 2 HCl NiCl 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce NiO 2 HCl gt NiCl2 H2O nbsp CaCO 3 2 HCl CaCl 2 CO 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce CaCO3 2 HCl gt CaCl2 CO2 H2O nbsp These processes are used to produce metal chlorides for analysis or further production 31 32 7 pH control and neutralization edit Hydrochloric acid can be used to regulate the acidity pH of solutions HO HCl H 2 O Cl displaystyle ce HO HCl gt H2O Cl nbsp In industry demanding purity food pharmaceutical drinking water high quality hydrochloric acid is used to control the pH of process water streams In less demanding industry technical quality hydrochloric acid suffices for neutralizing waste streams and swimming pool pH control 7 Regeneration of ion exchangers edit High quality hydrochloric acid is used in the regeneration of ion exchange resins Cation exchange is widely used to remove ions such as Na and Ca2 from aqueous solutions producing demineralized water The acid is used to rinse the cations from the resins 25 Na is replaced with H and Ca2 with 2 H Ion exchangers and demineralized water are used in all chemical industries drinking water production and many food industries 25 Laboratory use edit nbsp 30 Hydrochloric acidOf the common strong mineral acids in chemistry hydrochloric acid is the monoprotic acid least likely to undergo an interfering oxidation reduction reaction It is one of the least hazardous strong acids to handle despite its acidity it contains the non reactive and non toxic chloride ion Intermediate strength hydrochloric acid solutions are quite stable upon storage maintaining their concentrations over time These attributes plus the fact that it is available as a pure reagent make hydrochloric acid an excellent acidifying reagent It is also inexpensive Hydrochloric acid is the preferred acid in titration for determining the amount of bases Strong acid titrants give more precise results due to a more distinct endpoint Azeotropic or constant boiling hydrochloric acid roughly 20 2 can be used as a primary standard in quantitative analysis although its exact concentration depends on the atmospheric pressure when it is prepared 34 Other edit Hydrochloric acid is used for a large number of small scale applications such as leather processing household cleaning 35 and building construction 7 Oil production may be stimulated by injecting hydrochloric acid into the rock formation of an oil well dissolving a portion of the rock and creating a large pore structure Oil well acidizing is a common process in the North Sea oil production industry 25 Hydrochloric acid has been used for dissolving calcium carbonate e g such things as de scaling kettles and for cleaning mortar off brickwork When used on brickwork the reaction with the mortar only continues until the acid has all been converted producing calcium chloride carbon dioxide and water CaCO 3 2 HCl CaCl 2 CO 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce CaCO3 2 HCl gt CaCl2 CO2 H2O nbsp Many chemical reactions involving hydrochloric acid are applied in the production of food food ingredients and food additives Typical products include aspartame fructose citric acid lysine hydrolyzed vegetable protein as food enhancer and in gelatin production Food grade extra pure hydrochloric acid can be applied when needed for the final product 25 7 Presence in living organisms edit nbsp Diagram of alkaline mucous layer in stomach with mucosal defense mechanismsGastric acid is one of the main secretions of the stomach It consists mainly of hydrochloric acid and acidifies the stomach content to a pH of 1 to 2 36 37 Chloride Cl and hydrogen H ions are secreted separately in the stomach fundus region at the top of the stomach by parietal cells of the gastric mucosa into a secretory network called canaliculi before it enters the stomach lumen 38 Gastric acid acts as a barrier against microorganisms to prevent infections and is important for the digestion of food Its low pH denatures proteins and thereby makes them susceptible to degradation by digestive enzymes such as pepsin The low pH also activates the enzyme precursor pepsinogen into the active enzyme pepsin by self cleavage After leaving the stomach the hydrochloric acid of the chyme is neutralized in the duodenum by bicarbonate 36 The stomach itself is protected from the strong acid by the secretion of a thick mucus layer and by secretin induced buffering with sodium bicarbonate Heartburn or peptic ulcers can develop when these mechanisms fail Drugs of the antihistaminic and proton pump inhibitor classes can inhibit the production of acid in the stomach and antacids are used to neutralize excessive existing acid 36 39 Safety edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Being a strong acid hydrochloric acid is corrosive to living tissue and to many materials but not to rubber Typically rubber protective gloves and related protective gear are used when handling concentrated solutions 8 Vapors or mists are a respiratory hazard which can be partially mitigated by use of a respirator equipped with cartridges specifically designed to capture hydrochloric acid Airborne acid is an irritant to the eyes and may require the use of protective goggles or a facemask citation needed Mass fraction Classification 40 List of H phrases10 C lt 25 Causes skin irritation Causes serious eye irritation H315 H319C 10 May cause respiratory irritation H335C 25 Causes severe skin burns and eye damage H314Legal status editHydrochloric acid has been listed as a Table II precursor under the 1988 United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances because of its use in the production of heroin cocaine and methamphetamine 41 42 See also editChloride inorganic salts of hydrochloric acid Hydrochloride organic salts of hydrochloric acid Aqua regiaReferences edit a b Hydrochloric Acid Archived from the original on 15 October 2010 Retrieved 16 September 2010 spirits of salt Retrieved 29 May 2012 Favre HA Powell WH eds 2014 Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013 Cambridge The Royal Society of Chemistry p 131 Hydrochloric acid www chemsrc com a b Trummal A Lipping L Kaljurand I Koppel IA Leito I May 2016 Acidity of Strong Acids in Water and Dimethyl Sulfoxide The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 120 20 3663 9 Bibcode 2016JPCA 120 3663T doi 10 1021 acs jpca 6b02253 PMID 27115918 S2CID 29697201 a b c Sigma Aldrich Co Hydrochloric acid a b c d e f g h Greenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann pp 946 48 ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 a b c Austin Severin Glowacki Arndt 2000 Hydrochloric Acid doi 10 1002 14356007 a13 283 ISBN 3527306730 Muriatic Acid PDF PPG Industries 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 2 July 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2010 Gay Lussac 1814 Memoire sur l iode Memoir on iodine Annales de Chemie 91 5 160 From page 9 mais pour les distinguer je propose d ajouter au mot specifique de l acide que l on considere le mot generique dehydro de sorte que le combinaisons acide de hydrogene avec le chlore l iode et le soufre porteraient le nom d acide hydrochlorique d acide hydroiodique et d acide hydrosulfurique but in order to distinguish them I propose to add to the specific suffix of the acid being considered the general prefix hydro so that the acidic combinations of hydrogen with chlorine iodine and sulfur will bear the name hydrochloric acid hydroiodic acid and hydrosulfuric acid Multhauf 1966 pp 141 142 Stapleton Henry E Azo R F Hidayat Husain M 1927 Chemistry in Iraq and Persia in the Tenth Century A D Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal VIII 6 317 418 OCLC 706947607 p 333 Stapleton Azo amp Hidayat Husain 1927 p 333 for a glossary of the terms used in this recipe see p 322 German translation of the same passage in Ruska Julius 1937 Al Razi s Buch Geheimnis der Geheimnisse Mit Einleitung und Erlauterungen in deutscher Ubersetzung Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften und der Medizin Vol VI Berlin Springer p 182 5 An English translation of Ruska 1937 s translation can be found in Taylor Gail Marlow 2015 The Alchemy of Al Razi A Translation of the Book of Secrets CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 9781507778791 pp 139 140 Multhauf Robert P 1966 The Origins of Chemistry London Oldbourne OCLC 977570829 pp 141 142 Multhauf 1966 p 142 Multhauf refers to a number of recipes from the Kitab al Asrar translated by Ruska 1937 pp 103 110 but does not seem to have noted the existence of the recipe in Ruska 1937 p 182 5 quoted above Multhauf 1966 pp 160 162 Multhauf 1966 pp 162 163 Karpenko Vladimir Norris John A 2002 Vitriol in the History of Chemistry Chemicke listy 96 12 997 1005 p 1002 Multhauf 1966 p 204 Reti 1965 p 11 Multhauf 1966 p 208 note 29 cf p 142 note 79 Reti L 1965 How Old Is Hydrochloric Acid Chymia 10 11 23 doi 10 2307 27757245 JSTOR 27757245 Newman William R 2006 Atoms and Alchemy Chymistry and the Experimental Origins of the Scientific Revolution Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226576961 p 98 Ronalds BF 2019 Bonnington Chemical Works 1822 1878 Pioneer Coal Tar Company International Journal for the History of Engineering amp Technology 89 1 2 73 91 doi 10 1080 17581206 2020 1787807 S2CID 221115202 a b c d e f g h i j k l Hydrochloric Acid Chemicals Economics Handbook SRI International 2001 pp 733 4000A 733 3003F a b Aftalion F 1991 A History of the International Chemical Industry Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 1297 6 Petrucci Ralph H Harwood William S Herring F Geoffrey 2002 General chemistry principles and modern applications Prentice Hall pp 668 669 ISBN 978 0 13 014329 7 Agmon N January 1998 Structure of Concentrated HCl Solutions The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 102 1 192 199 Bibcode 1998JPCA 102 192A CiteSeerX 10 1 1 78 3695 doi 10 1021 jp970836x ISSN 1089 5639 Systemnummer 6 Chlor Gmelins Handbuch der Anorganischen Chemie Chemie Berlin 1927 Systemnummer 6 Chlor Erganzungsband Teil B Lieferung 1 Gmelins Handbuch der Anorganischen Chemie Chemie Weinheim 1968 a b c Lide D 2000 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 81st ed CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 0481 1 a b c Perry R Green D Maloney J 1984 Perry s Chemical Engineers Handbook 6th ed McGraw Hill Book Company ISBN 978 0 07 049479 4 a b Aspen Properties binary mixtures modeling software calculations by Akzo Nobel Engineering ed Aspen Technology 2002 2003 Mendham J Denney RC Barnes JD Thomas MJ Denney RC Thomas MJ 2000 Vogel s Quantitative Chemical Analysis 6th ed New York Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 582 22628 9 Simhon R 13 September 2003 Household plc really filthy bathroom The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 23 February 2009 Retrieved 31 March 2010 a b c Maton A Hopkins J McLaughlin CW Johnson S Warner MQ LaHart D Wright JD 1993 Human Biology and Health Englewood Cliffs New Jersey USA Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 981176 0 Haas E 6 December 2000 Digestive Aids Hydrochloric acid healthy net Arthur C Guyton MD Hall JE 2000 Textbook of Medical Physiology 10th ed W B Saunders Company ISBN 978 0 7216 8677 6 Bowen R 18 March 2003 Control and Physiologic Effects of Secretin Colorado State University Retrieved 16 March 2009 Regulation EC No 1272 2008 of the European Parliament and of Council of 16 December 2008 on classification labelling and packaging of substances and mixtures amending and repealing Directives 67 548 EEC and 1999 45 EC and amending Regulation EC No 1907 2006 EUR lex Retrieved 16 December 2008 List of precursors and chemicals frequently used in the illicit manufacture of narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances under international control PDF Eleventh ed International Narcotics Control Board January 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 27 Chemicals Required for the Illicit Manufacture of Drugs PDF Report UNDOC 1998 Retrieved July 20 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hydrochloric acid Listen to this article 20 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 23 April 2005 2005 04 23 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles NIST WebBook general link Hydrochloric Acid Part One and Hydrochloric Acid Part Two at The Periodic Table of Videos University of Nottingham Calculators surface tensions and densities molarities and molalities of aqueous HClGeneral safety information edit EPA Hazard Summary Hydrochloric acid MSDS by Georgia Institute of Technology NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical HazardsPollution information edit National Pollutant Inventory Hydrochloric Acid Fact Sheet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hydrochloric acid amp oldid 1204630998, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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