crystallizes with water of hydration, which interacts with the sulfate and with the centers. A
salt with associated water of crystallization is known as a
hydrate. The structure of hydrates can be quite elaborate, because of the existence of
hydrogen bonds that define polymeric structures. Historically, the structures of many hydrates were unknown, and the dot in the formula of a hydrate was employed to specify the composition without indicating how the water is bound. Per IUPAC's recommendations, the middle dot is not surrounded by spaces when indicating a chemical
adduct. Examples: • – copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate • – cobalt(II) chloride hexahydrate • – tin(II) (
or stannous) chloride dihydrate For many salts, the exact bonding of the water is unimportant because the water molecules are made
labile upon dissolution. For example, an aqueous solution prepared from and anhydrous behave identically. Therefore, knowledge of the degree of hydration is important only for determining the
equivalent weight: one mole of weighs more than one mole of . In some cases, the degree of hydration can be critical to the resulting chemical properties. For example, anhydrous is not soluble in water and is relatively useless in
organometallic chemistry whereas is versatile. Similarly, hydrated is a poor
Lewis acid and thus inactive as a catalyst for
Friedel-Crafts reactions. Samples of must therefore be protected from atmospheric moisture to preclude the formation of hydrates. . Crystals of hydrated copper(II) sulfate consist of centers linked to ions. Copper is surrounded by six oxygen atoms, provided by two different sulfate groups and four molecules of water. A fifth water resides elsewhere in the framework but does not bind directly to copper. The cobalt chloride mentioned above occurs as and . In tin chloride, each Sn(II) center is pyramidal (mean angle is 83°) being bound to two chloride ions and one water. The second water in the
formula unit is hydrogen-bonded to the chloride and to the coordinated water molecule. Water of crystallization is stabilized by electrostatic attractions, consequently hydrates are common for salts that contain +2 and +3 cations as well as −2 anions. In some cases, the majority of the weight of a compound arises from water.
Glauber's salt, , is a white crystalline solid with greater than 50% water by weight. Consider the case of
nickel(II) chloride hexahydrate. This species has the formula . Crystallographic analysis reveals that the solid consists of subunits that are
hydrogen bonded to each other as well as two additional molecules of . Thus one third of the water molecules in the crystal are not directly bonded to , and these might be termed "water of crystallization". ==Analysis==