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Molecular oxygen from Chlorine reduction


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Remember' date=' when salt dissolves in water it forms Sodium and Chloride ions:

 

[ce']NaCl_{(s)} <=> Na^{+}_{(aq)} + Cl^{-}_{(aq)}[/ce]

 

Cheers,

 

Ryan Jones

Bluenoise has a very good point here. I think it is VERY unlikely that initially there was elemental chlorine. Elemental chlorine is way too reactive to survive in nature for more than a few hours. So, even in very early times, I only can imagine the presence of chloride, not of chlorine. So, the answer to the OP is 'no'.

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Bluenoise has a very good point here. I think it is VERY unlikely that initially there was elemental chlorine. Elemental chlorine is way too reactive to survive in nature for more than a few hours. So, even in very early times, I only can imagine the presence of chloride, not of chlorin[/b']e. So, the answer to the OP is 'no'.

 

Thats good point, I never thought of that.

 

Elemental chlorine does not form in nature does it anyway?

So, there were chloride ions but no elmental chlorine?

 

Cheers,

 

Ryan Jones

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Elemental chlorine does not form in nature does it anyway?

No, at least not in appreciable amounts. I oce read something about volcanos, which could give off trace amounts of elemental chlorine (which is converted to chloride quickly anyway), but from a practical point of view, I would so 'no'.

 

So, there were chloride ions but no elmental chlorine?

Correct.

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