In many cases, the presence of water can prevent a reaction from happening, or cause undesirable products to form. To prevent this, anhydrous solvents must be used when performing certain reactions. Examples of reactions requiring the use of anhydrous solvents are the
Grignard reaction and the
Wurtz reaction. Solvents have typically been dried using distillation or by reaction with reactive metals or
metal hydrides. These methods can be dangerous and are a common cause of lab fires. More modern techniques include the use of
molecular sieves or a column purification system. Molecular sieves are far more effective than most common methods for drying solvents and are safer and require no special equipment for handling. Column solvent purification devices (generally referred to as Grubb's columns) recently became available, reducing the hazards (water reactive substances, heat) from the classical dehydrating methods. Anhydrous solvents are commercially available from chemical suppliers, and are packaged in sealed containers to maintain dryness. Typically anhydrous solvents will contain approximately 10 ppm of water and will increase in wetness if they are not properly stored. Organic solutions can be dried using a range of
drying agents. Typically following a workup the organic extract is dried using
magnesium sulfate or a similar drying agent to remove most remaining water. Anhydrous acetic acid is known as
glacial acetic acid. ==Gases==