Hydrochloric acid
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Hydrochloric acid, also known as muriatic acid or spirits of salt, is a watery solution made from a gas called hydrogen chloride. It looks clear and has a sharp, strong smell.
Our bodies use hydrochloric acid to help digest food. It is part of the stomach acid that breaks down what we eat. Outside the body, hydrochloric acid is useful. Scientists use it in labs for experiments, and factories use it to make many everyday products. It is powerful and must be handled with care, but it plays an important role in both nature and industry.
Etymology
Hydrochloric acid was once called "spirits of salt" or "salt acid" because it came from rock salt. A scientist named Johann Rudolph Glauber made it. In German, it is called "Salzsäure." It was also known as "marine acid air." The name "muriatic acid" means "pertaining to salt." The name "hydrochloric acid" was given by a French chemist, Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, in 1814.
History
9th–10th century
In the early 900s, a scientist named Abu Bakr al-Razi mixed different salts and chemicals. He made a gas called hydrogen chloride and might have made hydrochloric acid.
11th–13th century
Later scientists used al-Razi’s work. They heated metals with salts and made a chemical called mercury(II) chloride. They also found that heating some salts could make strong acids, including hydrochloric acid.
14th–15th century
Aqua regia
Scientists found a special mix of acids called aqua regia. It can dissolve gold and uses nitric acid and hydrochloric acid.
16th–17th century
In the late 1500s, recipes for making hydrochloric acid appeared in books by scientists like Giovanni Battista Della Porta.
Industrial developments
During the Industrial Revolution, factories made a lot of hydrogen chloride as a by-product. They learned to capture this gas and dissolve it in water to make hydrochloric acid. Later, new methods were created to produce it more efficiently.
Chemical properties
Hydrogen chloride is a gas made from hydrogen and chlorine atoms. When you add it to water, it splits apart. This creates chloride ions and special water molecules called hydronium ions.
Hydrochloric acid is a very strong acid. This means it splits apart almost completely when you put it in water, leaving almost no whole hydrogen chloride molecules.
Physical properties
The physical features of hydrochloric acid, like how hot it boils and how cold it freezes, its thickness, and its sourness, change depending on how much hydrogen chloride it contains. These features range from being like water when there is very little hydrogen chloride to being much different when there is a lot, like over 40%.
Hydrochloric acid mixed with water can boil at a steady temperature when it contains 20.2% hydrogen chloride. There are also special points where the acid and water freeze together at different amounts of hydrogen chloride, from 68% down to none at all. These points involve special crystal forms of the acid mixed with water.
| Mass fraction | Concentration | Density | pH | Viscosity | Specific heat | Vapor pressure | Boiling point | Melting point | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kg HCl/kg | kg HCl/m3 | mol/L | Baumé | kg/L | mPa·s | kJ/(kg·K) | kPa | °C | °C | |
| 10% | 104.80 | 2.87 | 6.6 | 1.048 | −0.5 | 1.16 | 3.47 | 1.95 | 103 | −18 |
| 20% | 219.60 | 6.02 | 13 | 1.098 | −0.8 | 1.37 | 2.99 | 1.40 | 108 | −59 |
| 30% | 344.70 | 9.45 | 19 | 1.149 | −1.0 | 1.70 | 2.60 | 2.13 | 90 | −52 |
| 32% | 370.88 | 10.17 | 20 | 1.159 | −1.0 | 1.80 | 2.55 | 3.73 | 84 | −43 |
| 34% | 397.46 | 10.90 | 21 | 1.169 | −1.0 | 1.90 | 2.50 | 7.24 | 71 | −36 |
| 36% | 424.44 | 11.64 | 22 | 1.179 | −1.1 | 1.99 | 2.46 | 14.5 | 61 | −30 |
| 38% | 451.82 | 12.39 | 23 | 1.189 | −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). Vapor pressure values are taken from the International Critical Tables and refer to the total vapor pressure of the solution. | ||||||||||
Production
Hydrochloric acid is made by mixing hydrogen chloride with water. Hydrogen chloride can be created in different ways, often when making other chemicals, like in the chloralkali process. This process also makes hydroxide, hydrogen, and chlorine.
Hydrogen chloride is formed by combining chlorine and hydrogen:
Cl2 + H2 → 2 HCl
Because this reaction gives off heat, special equipment called an HCl oven or HCl burner is used. The hydrogen chloride gas is then mixed with deionized water to make hydrochloric acid.
Hydrochloric acid comes in different strengths for different uses. In industry, it is usually around 30% to 35% HCl. For household cleaning, weaker solutions are used, often between 10% and 12% strength. Different countries may sell it under different names and in different strengths.
Applications
Main article: Hydrogen chloride
Hydrochloric acid is a strong acid used in many jobs. It helps clean steel by removing rust before the steel is shaped or coated. It can also dissolve metals and minerals to make useful products.
It is used to control how sour water is in factories, especially when making food and medicine. It is also used in labs to help measure things in a mix. Plus, it helps clean things like bricks and kettles, and it is used in making some foods and food additives.
Presence in animals
Gastric acid is one of the main things our stomach makes. It is mostly made of hydrochloric acid and helps break down food.
The stomach is safe from this strong acid because of a thick layer of mucus and other natural protections. Special medicines can help reduce too much acid in the stomach.
Safety
Hydrochloric acid is a strong acid that can hurt living things and many materials, but it does not hurt rubber. When handling it, people usually wear rubber gloves and other protective gear.
The vapors or mists from hydrochloric acid can be dangerous to breathe, so a special respirator can help. The acid in the air can also irritate the eyes, so protective goggles or a facemask may be needed.
| Mass fraction | Classification | List of H-phrases |
|---|---|---|
| 10% ≤ C | 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
Hydrochloric acid is watched by international law because it can be used to make some illegal substances. It is listed under a special agreement from 1988 made by many countries to stop the wrong use of drugs.
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