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Hemihydrate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In chemistry, a hemihydrate (or semihydrate) is a hydrate whose solid contains one molecule of water of crystallization per two other molecules, or per two unit cells. This is sometimes characterized as a solid that has one "half molecule" of water per unit cell.[1] An example of this is calcium sulfate hemihydrate (CaSO4·0.5H2O or 2CaSO4·H2O), which is the hemihydrate of calcium sulfate (CaSO4).

References

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  1. ^ Kent, James A. (2007-10-08). Kent and Riegel's Handbook of Industrial Chemistry and Biotechnology. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 1096. ISBN 978-0-387-27842-1.