Water of hydration is water that is stoichiometrically bound into a crystal. While the water is found within a crystal, it is not directly bonded to a metal cation. Crystal salts containing water of hydration are called hydrates.
Also Known As: water of crystallization, crystallization water
How Water of Hydration Forms
Many crystals form from particles dissolved in water or aqueous solutions. It's common for some of that water to be incorporated into the framework of a crystal. Usually, heating a crystal drives off water of hydration, but the structure of the crystal is lost.
Water of Hydration Example
Commercial root killers often contain copper sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO4·5H2O) cyrstals. The five water molecules are called water of hydration.
Proteins typically contain around 50 percent water within their crystal lattice.
Nomenclature
Water of hydration may be indicated a few different ways:
(1) For a compound consisting of a hydrate with coordinated water, the formula is written:
hydrated compound(H2O)n
Example: ZnCl2(H2O)4
(2) When a compound contains lattice water, but its stoichiometric ratio changes or is unknown, the formula may be written simply: hydrated compound·nH2O
Example: CaCl2·2H2O
(3) The notations may be combined:
Example: [Cu(H2O)4)SO4·H2O