Difference between revisions of "Adduct"

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(Adducts)
 
(Adducts First Draft)
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An adduct is a chemical compound of different entities, usually molecules, which aggregate without any chemical bonds being broken.  The classic example is sodium percarbonate (aka Oxi-Clean), which is an adduct of hydrogen peroxide and sodium carbonate.  It is markedly more soluble than sodium carbonate. It is also way less caustic than hydrogen peroxide of equivalent molarity.
 
An adduct is a chemical compound of different entities, usually molecules, which aggregate without any chemical bonds being broken.  The classic example is sodium percarbonate (aka Oxi-Clean), which is an adduct of hydrogen peroxide and sodium carbonate.  It is markedly more soluble than sodium carbonate. It is also way less caustic than hydrogen peroxide of equivalent molarity.
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Salts frequently form adducts with water, such as copper sulfate, which keeps a posse of 5 waters in crystalline form.
  
 
Adducts have an important role in organic chemistry.  Many weak lewis acids and lewis bases can form adducts.  It may well be easier to separate the adducts of two similar compounds than to separate the compound itself.  If one of the two or more bases will not form an adduct with an acid that the other will, you have a way to isolate it.
 
Adducts have an important role in organic chemistry.  Many weak lewis acids and lewis bases can form adducts.  It may well be easier to separate the adducts of two similar compounds than to separate the compound itself.  If one of the two or more bases will not form an adduct with an acid that the other will, you have a way to isolate it.
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Adducts are also useful in making organic compounds more soluble in water, thus making them easier to ingest.
 
Adducts are also useful in making organic compounds more soluble in water, thus making them easier to ingest.
  
An adduct is not a salt.  Where a salt would only have ions in its lattice, the adduct can molecules of acids and bases as well as ions.
 
  
Famous Adducts:
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{|  class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" width="100%" border="0"
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!Famous adducts:|| component|| component|| formula|| notes
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|- style="border=1 cellpadding=2"
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| [[sodium percarbonate]]|| hydrogen peroxide || sodium carbonate|| 2Na2CO3 · 3H2O2. || oxi clean
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|-
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| [[acetone sodium bisulfite]] || acetone || sodium bisulfite || NaHSO3 . (CH3)2CO || insoluble in water!
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|}

Revision as of 01:51, 29 March 2016

An adduct is a chemical compound of different entities, usually molecules, which aggregate without any chemical bonds being broken. The classic example is sodium percarbonate (aka Oxi-Clean), which is an adduct of hydrogen peroxide and sodium carbonate. It is markedly more soluble than sodium carbonate. It is also way less caustic than hydrogen peroxide of equivalent molarity.

Salts frequently form adducts with water, such as copper sulfate, which keeps a posse of 5 waters in crystalline form.

Adducts have an important role in organic chemistry. Many weak lewis acids and lewis bases can form adducts. It may well be easier to separate the adducts of two similar compounds than to separate the compound itself. If one of the two or more bases will not form an adduct with an acid that the other will, you have a way to isolate it.

Adducts are also useful in making organic compounds more soluble in water, thus making them easier to ingest.