Water vapor effect on the physico-geometrical reaction pathway and kinetics of the multistep thermal dehydration of calcium chloride dihydrate†
Abstract
This study investigated how water vapor influences the reaction pathway and kinetics of the multistep thermal dehydration of inorganic hydrates, focusing on CaCl2·2H2O (CC-DH) transforming into its anhydride (CC-AH) via an intermediate of its monohydrate (CC-MH). In the presence of atmospheric water vapor, the thermal dehydration of CC-DH stoichiometrically proceeded through two distinct steps, resulting in the formation of CC-AH via CC-MH under isothermal conditions and linear nonisothermal conditions at a lower heating rate (β). Irrespective of atmospheric water vapor pressure (p(H2O)), these reaction steps were kinetically characterized by a physico-geometrical consecutive process involving the surface reaction and phase boundary-controlled reaction, which was accompanied by three-dimensional shrinkage of the reaction interface. In addition, a significant induction period was observed for the second reaction step, that is, the thermal dehydration of CC-MH intermediate to form CC-AH. With increasing p(H2O), a systematic increase in the apparent Arrhenius parameters was observed for the first reaction step, that is, the thermal dehydration of CC-DH to form CC-MH, whereas the second reaction step exhibited unsystematic variations of the Arrhenius parameters. At a larger β in the presence of atmospheric water vapor, the first and second reaction steps partially overlapped; moreover, an alternative reaction step of the thermal dehydration of CC-MH to form CaCl2·0.3H2O was observed between these reaction steps. The physico-geometrical phenomena influencing the reaction pathway and kinetics of the multistep thermal dehydration were elucidated by considering the effects of atmospheric and self-generated water vapor in a geometrically constrained reaction scheme.