Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Chloric acid

Chemical compound From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chloric acid
Remove ads

Chloric acid, HClO3, is an oxoacid of chlorine, and the formal precursor of chlorate salts. It is a strong acid (pKa ≈ −2.7) and an oxidizing agent.

Quick Facts Names, Identifiers ...
Remove ads

Properties

Chloric acid is thermodynamically unstable with respect to disproportionation.

Chloric acid is stable in cold aqueous solution up to a concentration of approximately 30%, and solution of up to 40% can be prepared by careful evaporation under reduced pressure. Above these concentrations, chloric acid solutions decompose to give a variety of products, for example:

8 HClO3 → 4 HClO4 + 2 H2O + 2 Cl2 + 3 O2
3 HClO3 → HClO4 + H2O + 2 ClO2
Remove ads

Hazards

Chloric acid is a powerful oxidizing agent. Most organics and flammables will deflagrate on contact.[citation needed]

Production

It may be produced from barium chlorate through its reaction with sulfuric acid, which results in a solution of chloric acid and insoluble barium sulfate precipitate:[2]

Ba(ClO3)2 + H2SO4 → 2 HClO3 + BaSO4

The chlorate must be dissolved in boiling water and the acid should be somewhat diluted in water and heated before mixing.

Another method which can be used to produce solutions up to 10% concentration is by the use of cation exchange resins and a soluble salt such as NaClO3, where the Na+ cation will exchange with H+.[2]

Another method is the heating of hypochlorous acid, producing chloric acid and hydrogen chloride:[citation needed]

3 HClO → HClO3 + 2 HCl

Any way it is produced, the acid may be concentrated up to 40% in a vacuum dessicator over H2SO4.[2]

See also

References

Additional Information

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads