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This page looks at the structures of the chlorides of the
Period 3 elements (sodium to sulphur), their physical properties and their
reactions with water.
Chlorine and argon are omitted - chlorine because it is meaningless
to talk about "chlorine chloride", and argon because it doesn't
form a chloride.
A quick summary of the trends
The chlorides
The chlorides we'll be looking at are:
There are three chlorides of sulphur, but the only one
mentioned by any of the UK-based syllabuses (A level or its equivalents) is S2Cl2.
As you will see later, aluminium chloride exists in some
circumstances as a dimer, Al2Cl6.
The structures
Sodium chloride and magnesium chloride are ionic and
consist of giant ionic lattices at room temperature
Aluminium chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride are tricky!
They change their structure from ionic to covalent when the solid turns to a
liquid or vapour. There is much more about this later on this page.
The others are simple covalent molecules.
Melting and boiling points
Sodium and magnesium chlorides are solids with high
melting and boiling points because of the large amount of heat which is
needed to break the strong ionic attractions.
The rest are liquids or low melting point solids. Leaving
aside the aluminium chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride cases where the
situation is quite complicated, the attractions in the others will be much
weaker intermolecular forces such as van der Waals dispersion forces. These
vary depending on the size and shape of the molecule, but will always be far
weaker than ionic bonds.
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Note: Follow this link if you aren't sure
about intermolecular
attractions such as van der Waals dispersion forces.
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this page later.
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Electrical conductivity
Sodium and magnesium chlorides are ionic and so will
undergo electrolysis when they are molten. Electricity is
carried by the movement of the ions and their discharge at the electrodes.
In the aluminium chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride
cases, the solid doesn't conduct electricity because the ions aren't free to
move. In the liquid (where it exists - both of these sublime at ordinary
pressures), they have converted into a covalent form, and so don't conduct
either.
The rest of the chlorides don't conduct electricity either
solid or molten because they don't have any ions or any mobile electrons.
Reactions with water
As an approximation, the simple ionic chlorides (sodium
and magnesium chloride) just dissolve in water.
Tho other chlorides all react with water in a variety of
ways described below for each individual chloride. The reaction with water is
known as hydrolysis.
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Warning: The rest of this page contains quite
a lot of detail about the various chlorides, covering material from all the
UK A level (or its equivalent) syllabuses. It is very unlikely that you will
need all of this, and it is quite possible that your examiners will allow (or
even expect) simplifications in some cases.
It is essential to know what your examiners expect. You
should obviously check your syllabus, but you
also need to look at past papers and mark schemes so that you know what your
examiners are actually asking. If you are working towards a UK-based exam and
haven't got any of these things follow this link before you go any further to
find out how to get them.
It would also be useful to look at books written
specifically for your actual syllabus. These will have been checked by your
examiners, and they can hardly argue with anything you find in them. Look at
the text book
suggestions page to find some of the available books.
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The individual chlorides
Sodium chloride, NaCl
Sodium chloride is a simple ionic compound consisting of a
giant array of sodium and chloride ions.
A small representative bit of a sodium chloride lattice
looks like this:
This is normally drawn in an exploded form as:
The strong attractions between the positive and negative
ions need a lot of heat energy to break, and so sodium chloride has high melting
and boiling points.
It doesn't conduct electricity in the solid state because
it hasn't any mobile electrons and the ions aren't free to move. However,
when it melts it undergoes electrolysis.
Sodium chloride simply dissolves in water to give a neutral
solution.
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Note: You will find the structure
and physical properties of sodium chloride dealt with in a bit more
detail (including an explanation of how to draw the last diagram) by
following this link.
Use the BACK button on your browser to return quickly to
this page later.
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Magnesium chloride, MgCl2
Magnesium chloride is also ionic, but with a more
complicated arrangement of the ions to allow for having twice as many
chloride ions as magnesium ions. This structure isn't needed for UK A level
purposes.
Again, lots of heat energy is needed to overcome the
attractions between the ions, and so the melting and boiling points are again
high.
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Note: There is a problem here, though! You
would expect the attractions between magnesium ions and chloride ions to be
greater than those between sodium and chloride ions due to the extra charge
on the magnesium. However, magnesium chloride melts at a lower temperature
than sodium chloride, and the boiling points are almost identical (to within
one degree).
The most likely explanation for this is that magnesium
chloride is less purely ionic than we normally suggest, and shows some small
degree of covalency. That means that you can't make a simple comparison
between the melting and boiling points of magnesium chloride and the more
purely ionic sodium chloride.
The most purely ionic of the magnesium halides is
magnesium fluoride, because that has the greatest electronegativity
difference between the magnesium and the halogen. In fact, magnesium fluoride
has significantly higher melting and boiling points than sodium fluoride,
which is what you would expect from the greater attractions due to the extra
charge on the magnesium ion.
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Solid magnesium chloride is a non-conductor of electricity
because the ions aren't free to move. However, it undergoes electrolysis when
the ions become free on melting.
Magnesium chloride dissolves in water to give a faintly
acidic solution (pH = approximately 6).
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Note: This is one point when you need to know
exactly what your examiners want you to say about this by looking at your syllabus, past papers
and mark schemes.
Some examiners simply say that magnesium chloride just
dissolves in water. However, that wouldn't account for the slightly lowered
pH. On the other hand, there is no point in learning a complicated bit of
chemistry if all you need is a simplification. Be aware that it is a
simplification, though.
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When magnesium ions are broken off the solid lattice and
go into solution, there is enough attraction between the 2+ ions and the
water molecules to get co-ordinate (dative covalent) bonds formed between the
magnesium ions and lone pairs on surrounding water molecules.
Hexaaquamagnesium ions are formed, [Mg(H2O)6]2+.
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Note: You will find the bonding in ions of
this sort discussed with reference to the corresponding aluminium ion on the
page about co-ordinate
(dative covalent) bonding. The magnesium case is exactly the same.
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Ions of this sort are acidic - the degree of acidity
depending on how much the electrons in the water molecules are pulled towards
the metal at the centre of the ion. The hydrogens are made rather more
positive than they would otherwise be, and more easily pulled off by a base.
In the magnesium case, the amount of distortion is quite
small, and only a small proportion of the hydrogen atoms are removed by a
base - in this case, by water molecules in the solution.
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Note: The reason for the colour-coding is to
try to avoid confusion between the water molecules attached to the ion and
those in the solution.
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The presence of the hydroxonium ions in the solution
causes it to be acidic. The fact that there aren't many of them formed (the
position of equilibrium lies well to the left), means that the solution is
only weakly acidic.
You may also find the last equation in a simplified form:
Hydrogen ions in solution are hydroxonium ions. If
you use this form, it is essential to include the state symbols.
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Note: You will find lots more about the acidity
of hexaaqua ions by following this link.
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this page later.
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Aluminium chloride, AlCl3
Electronegativity increases as you go across the period
and, by the time you get to aluminium, there isn't enough electronegativity
difference between aluminium and chlorine for there to be a simple ionic
bond.
Aluminium chloride is complicated by the way its structure
changes as temperature increases.
At room temperature, the aluminium in aluminium chloride
is 6-coordinated. That means that each aluminium is surrounded by 6
chlorines. The structure is an ionic lattice - although with a lot of
covalent character.
At ordinary atmospheric pressure, aluminium chloride
sublimes (turns straight from solid to vapour) at about 180°C. If the
pressure is raised to just over 2 atmospheres, it melts instead at a
temperature of 192°C.
Both of these temperatures, of course, are completely
wrong for an ionic compound - they are much too low. They suggest
comparatively weak attractions between molecules - not strong attractions
between ions.
The coordination of the aluminium changes at these
temperatures. It becomes 4-coordinated - each aluminium now being surrounded
by 4 chlorines rather than 6.
What happens is that the original lattice has converted
into Al2Cl6 molecules. If you have read the page on
co-ordinate bonding mentioned above, you will have seen that the structure of
this is:
This conversion means, of course, that you have completely
lost any ionic character - which is why the aluminium chloride vaporises or
melts (depending on the pressure).
There is an equilibrium between these dimers and simple
AlCl3 molecules. As the temperature increases further, the
position of equilibrium shifts more and more to the right.
Summary
Solid aluminium chloride doesn't conduct electricity at
room temperature because the ions aren't free to move. Molten aluminium
chloride (only possible at increased pressures) doesn't conduct electricity
because there aren't any ions any more.
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Note: One very reliable source says that
although solid aluminium chloride has zero conductivity at room temperature,
it conducts just below the melting point. I haven't at the moment been able
to confirm this - neither do I have any idea why it might happen.
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The reaction of aluminium chloride with water is dramatic.
If you drop water onto solid aluminium chloride, you get a violent reaction
producing clouds of steamy fumes of hydrogen chloride gas.
If you add solid aluminium chloride to an excess of water,
it still splutters, but instead of hydrogen chloride gas being given off, you
get an acidic solution formed. A solution of aluminium chloride of ordinary
concentrations (around 1 mol dm-3, for example) will have a pH
around 2 - 3. More concentrated solutions will go lower than this.
The aluminium chloride reacts with the water rather than
just dissolving in it. In the first instance, hexaaquaaluminium ions are
formed together with chloride ions.
You will see that this is very similar to the magnesium
chloride equation given above - the only real difference is the charge on the
ion.
That extra charge pulls electrons from the water molecules
quite strongly towards the aluminium. That makes the hydrogens more positive
and so easier to remove from the ion. In other words, this ion is much more
acidic than in the corresponding magnesium case.
These equilibria (whichever you choose to write) lie
further to the right, and so the solution formed is more acidic - there are
more hydroxonium ions in it.
or, more simply:
We haven't so far accounted for the burst of hydrogen
chloride formed if there isn't much water present.
All that happens is that because of the heat produced in
the reaction and the concentration of the solution formed, hydrogen ions and
chloride ions in the mixture combine together as hydrogen chloride molecules
and are given off as a gas. With a large excess of water, the temperature
never gets high enough for that to happen - the ions just stay in solution.
Silicon tetrachloride, SiCl4
Silicon tetrachloride is a simple no-messing-about
covalent chloride. There isn't enough electronegativity difference between
the silicon and the chlorine for the two to form ionic bonds.
Silicon tetrachloride is a colourless liquid at room
temperature which fumes in moist air. The only attractions between the
molecules are van der Waals dispersion forces.
It doesn't conduct electricity because of the lack of ions
or mobile electrons.
It fumes in moist air because it reacts with water in the
air to produce hydrogen chloride. If you add water to silicon tetrachloride,
there is a violent reaction to produce silicon dioxide and fumes of hydrogen
chloride. In a large excess of water, the hydrogen chloride will, of course,
dissolve to give a strongly acidic solution containing hydrochloric acid.
The phosphorus chlorides
There are two phosphorus chlorides - phosphorus(III) chloride,
PCl3, and phosphorus(V) chloride, PCl5.
Phosphorus(III) chloride (phosphorus trichloride),
PCl3
This is another simple covalent chloride - again a fuming
liquid at room temperature.
It is a liquid because there are only van der Waals
dispersion forces and dipole-dipole attractions between the molecules.
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Note: The phosphorus(III) chloride molecule
has a permanent dipole, which is why dipole-dipole attractions are possible.
There is a discussion about polar molecules and polar bonds on the page about
electronegativity.
The phosphorus(III) chloride case is rather similar to CHCl3
(discussed on that page), except that there is a lone pair of electrons at
the top of the molecule rather than a hydrogen atom.
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It doesn't conduct electricity because of the lack of ions
or mobile electrons.
Phosphorus(III) chloride reacts violently with water. You
get phosphorous acid, H3PO3, and fumes of hydrogen
chloride (or a solution containing hydrochloric acid if lots of water is
used).
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Note: Phosphorous acid is also known as
orthophosphorous acid or as phosphonic acid. Notice the "-ous"
ending in the first two names. That's not a spelling mistake - it's for real!
It is used to distinguish it from phosphoric acid which is quite different
(see below).
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Phosphorus(V) chloride (phosphorus pentachloride),
PCl5
Unfortunately, phosphorus(V) chloride is structurally more
complicated.
Phosphorus(V) chloride is a white solid which sublimes at
163°C. The higher the temperature goes above that, the more the phosphorus(V)
chloride dissociates (splits up reversibly) to give phosphorus(III) chloride
and chlorine.
Solid phosphorus(V) chloride contains ions - which is why
it is a solid at room temperature. The formation of the ions involves two
molecules of PCl5.
A chloride ion transfers from one of the original
molecules to the other, leaving a positive ion, [PCl4]+,
and a negative ion, [PCl6]-.
At 163°C, the phosphorus(V) chloride converts to a simple
molecular form containing PCl5 molecules. Because there are only
van der Waals dispersion forces between these, it then vaporises.
Solid phosphorus(V) chloride doesn't conduct electricity
because the ions aren't free to move.
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Note: Phosphorus(V) chloride does, however,
undergo electrolysis in a suitable solvent which it doesn't react with. For
example, Inorganic Chemistry by Heslop and Robinson quotes it as
conducting electricity in solution in methyl nitrite, CH3ONO.
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Phosphorus(V) chloride has a violent reaction with water
producing fumes of hydrogen chloride. As with the other covalent chlorides,
if there is enough water present, these will dissolve to give a solution
containing hydrochloric acid.
The reaction happens in two stages. In the first, with
cold water, phosphorus oxychloride, POCl3, is produced along with
HCl.
If the water is boiling, the phosphorus(V) chloride reacts
further to give phosphoric(V) acid and more HCl. Phosphoric(V) acid is also
known just as phosphoric acid or as orthophosphoric acid.
The overall equation in boiling water is just a
combination of these:
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Note: I'm not entirely happy about the
conditions for these reactions. Several sources mention the need for boiling
water for the second half of the reaction, but some don't quote any temperature.
All of the safety data sheets available on the web talk about phosphorus
oxychloride reacting strongly with water without any suggestion that it needs
to be heated.
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Disulphur dichloride, S2Cl2
Disulphur dichloride is just one of three sulphur
chlorides, but is the only one mentioned by any of the UK A level syllabuses.
This is possibly because it is the one which is formed when chlorine reacts
with hot sulphur.
Disulphur dichloride is a simple covalent liquid - orange
and smelly!
The shape is surprisingly difficult to draw convincingly!
The atoms are all joined up in a line - but twisted:
The reason for drawing the shape is to give a hint about
what sort of intermolecular attractions are possible. There is no plane of
symmetry in the molecule and that means that it will have an overall
permanent dipole.
The liquid will have van der Waals dispersion forces and
dipole-dipole attractions.
There are no ions in disulphur dichloride and no mobile
electrons - so it never conducts electricity.
Disulphur dichloride reacts slowly with water to produce a
complex mixture of things including hydrochloric acid, sulphur, hydrogen
sulphide and various sulphur-containing acids and anions (negative ions).
There is no way that you can write a single equation for this - and one would
never be expected in an exam.
Where would you like to go now?
© Jim Clark 2005 (modified June 2013)
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