mercury(II) chloride
{{short description|Toxic mercury compound known as 'corrosive sublimate'}}
{{MCN|date=May 2025}}
{{chembox
| Verifiedfields = changed
| Watchedfields = changed
| verifiedrevid = 1099329214
| Name = Mercury(II) chloride
| ImageFile = Mercury(II)-chloride-xtal-1980-3D-balls.png
| ImageSize =
| ImageName = Ball-and-stick model of the crystal structure
| ImageFile1 = Mercury(II)-chloride-xtal-3D-SF.png
| ImageSize1 =
| ImageName1 = Space-filling model of the crystal structure
| ImageFile2 = Lühuagong(II).JPG
| IUPACName = Mercury(II) chloride
Mercury dichloride
| OtherNames = Mercury bichloride
Corrosive sublimate
Abavit
Mercuric chloride
Sulema (Russia)
TL-898
Agrosan
Hydrargyri dichloridum (homeopathy)
|Section1={{Chembox Identifiers
| CASNo = 7487-94-7
| CASNo_Ref = {{cascite|correct|CAS}}
| UNII_Ref = {{fdacite|correct|FDA}}
| UNII = 53GH7MZT1R
| EINECS = 231-299-8
| RTECS = OV9100000
| UNNumber = 1624
| PubChem = 24085
| ChemSpiderID_Ref = {{chemspidercite|correct|chemspider}}
| ChemSpiderID = 22517
| KEGG_Ref = {{keggcite|correct|kegg}}
| KEGG = C13377
| SMILES = Cl[Hg]Cl
| StdInChI_Ref = {{stdinchicite|changed|chemspider}}
| StdInChI = 1S/2ClH.Hg/h2*1H;/q;;+2/p-2
}}
|Section2={{Chembox Properties
| Formula = HgCl2
| MolarMass = 271.52 g/mol
| Appearance = colorless or white solid
| Odor = odorless
| Density = 5.43 g/cm3
| Solubility = 3.6 g/100 mL (0 °C)
7.4 g/100 mL (20 °C)
48 g/100 mL (100 °C)
| SolubleOther = 4 g/100 mL (ether)
soluble in alcohol, acetone, ethyl acetate
slightly soluble in benzene, CS2, pyridine
| MeltingPtC = 276
| BoilingPtC = 304
| pKa = 3.2 (0.2M solution)
| RefractIndex = 1.859
| MagSus = −82.0·10−6 cm3/mol
}}
|Section3={{Chembox Structure
| MolShape = linear
| Coordination = linear
| CrystalStruct = orthogonal
| Dipole = zero
}}
|Section5={{Chembox Thermochemistry
| DeltaHf = −230 kJ·mol−1{{cite book| author = Zumdahl, Steven S.|title =Chemical Principles 6th Ed.| publisher = Houghton Mifflin Company| year = 2009| isbn = 978-0-618-94690-7|page=A22}}
| DeltaGf = −178.7 kJ/mol
}}
|Section6={{Chembox Pharmacology
| ATCCode_prefix = D08
| ATCCode_suffix = AK03
}}
|Section7={{Chembox Hazards
| ExternalSDS = [http://www.inchem.org/documents/icsc/icsc/eics0979.htm ICSC 0979]
| MainHazards = Highly toxic, corrosive.
| GHSPictograms = {{GHS05}}{{GHS06}}{{GHS08}}{{GHS09}}
| GHSSignalWord = Danger
| HPhrases = {{H-phrases|300+310+330|301|314|341|361f|372|410}}
| PPhrases = {{P-phrases|201|202|260|264|270|273|280|281|301+310|301+330+331|303+361+353|304+340|305+351+338|308+313|310|314|321|330|363|391|405|501}}
| LD50 = 32 mg/kg (rats, orally)
| NFPA-H = 4
| NFPA-F = 0
| NFPA-R = 1
| NFPA-S =
| FlashPt = Non-flammable
}}
|Section8={{Chembox Related
| OtherAnions = Mercury(II) fluoride
Mercury(II) bromide
Mercury(II) iodide
| OtherCations = Zinc chloride
Cadmium chloride
Mercury(I) chloride
}}
}}
Mercury(II) chloride (mercury bichloride,{{citation needed|reason=BIchloride would be HgHCl2|date=July 2023}} mercury dichloride, mercuric chloride), historically also sulema or corrosive sublimate,{{cite EB1911 |wstitle=Corrosive Sublimate |volume=7 |page=197}} is the inorganic chemical compound of mercury and chlorine with the formula HgCl2, used as a laboratory reagent. It is a white crystalline solid and a molecular compound that is very toxic to humans. Once used as a first line treatment for syphilis, it has been replaced by the more effective and less toxic procaine penicillin since at least 1948.
Synthesis
Mercuric chloride is obtained by the action of chlorine on mercury or on mercury(I) chloride. It can also be produced by the addition of hydrochloric acid to a hot, concentrated solution of mercury(I) compounds such as the nitrate:
:Hg2(NO3)2 + 4 HCl → 2 HgCl2 + 2 H2O + 2 NO2
Heating a mixture of solid mercury(II) sulfate and sodium chloride also affords volatile HgCl2, which can be separated by sublimation.
Properties
Mercuric chloride is not a salt composed of discrete ions, but it is made of linear triatomic molecules, hence its tendency to sublime. In the crystal, each mercury atom is bonded to two chloride ligands with Hg–Cl distance of 2.38 Å; six other chlorides are more distant at 3.38 Å.Wells, A.F. (1984) Structural Inorganic Chemistry, Oxford: Clarendon Press. {{ISBN|0-19-855370-6}}.
Its solubility in water increases from 6% at {{convert|20|C}} to 36% at {{convert|100|C}}.
Applications
The main application of mercuric chloride is as a catalyst for the conversion of acetylene to vinyl chloride, the precursor to polyvinyl chloride:
:C2H2 + HCl → CH2=CHCl
For this application, the mercuric chloride is supported on carbon in concentrations of about 5 weight percent. This technology has been eclipsed by the thermal cracking of 1,2-dichloroethane. Other significant applications of mercuric chloride include its use as a depolarizer in batteries and as a reagent in organic synthesis and analytical chemistry (see below).Matthias Simon, Peter Jönk, Gabriele Wühl-Couturier, Stefan Halbach "Mercury, Mercury Alloys, and Mercury Compounds" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 2006: Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. {{doi|10.1002/14356007.a16_269.pub2}}
It is being used in plant tissue culture for surface sterilisation of explants such as leaf or stem nodes.
=As a chemical reagent=
Mercuric chloride is occasionally used to form an amalgam with metals, such as aluminium.{{cite journal|doi=10.15227/orgsyn.092.0013|title=Synthesis of 4,4-Dimethoxybut-1-yne|journal=Organic Syntheses|volume=92|pages=13–25|year=2015|last1=Deng|first1=James|first2=Yu-Pu|last2=Wang|first3=Rick L.|last3=Danheiser|doi-access=free}} Upon treatment with an aqueous solution of mercuric chloride, aluminium strips quickly become covered by a thin layer of the amalgam. Normally, aluminium is protected by a thin layer of oxide, thus making it inert. Amalgamated aluminium exhibits a variety of reactions not observed for aluminium itself. For example, amalgamated aluminum reacts with water generating Al(OH)3 and hydrogen gas. Halocarbons react with amalgamated aluminium in the Barbier reaction. These alkylaluminium compounds are nucleophilic and can be used in a similar fashion to the Grignard reagent. Amalgamated aluminium is also used as a reducing agent in organic synthesis. Zinc is also commonly amalgamated using mercuric chloride.
Mercuric chloride is used to remove dithiane groups attached to a carbonyl in an umpolung reaction. This reaction exploits the high affinity of Hg2+ for anionic sulfur ligands.
Mercuric chloride may be used as a stabilising agent for chemicals and analytical samples. Care must be taken to ensure that detected mercuric chloride does not eclipse the signals of other components in the sample, such as is possible in gas chromatography.{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1021/es00031a004| title = Analytical interferences of mercuric chloride preservative in environmental water samples: Determination of organic compounds isolated by continuous liquid-liquid extraction or closed-loop stripping| journal = Environmental Science & Technology| volume = 26| issue = 7| pages = 1307| year = 1992| last1 = Foreman | first1 = W. T. | last2 = Zaugg | first2 = S. D. | last3 = Faires | first3 = L. M. | last4 = Werner | first4 = M. G. | last5 = Leiker | first5 = T. J. | last6 = Rogerson | first6 = P. F. | bibcode = 1992EnST...26.1307F}}
History
=Discovery of the mineral acids=
Around 900, the authors of the Arabic writings attributed to Jabir ibn Hayyan (Latin: Geber) and the Persian physician and alchemist Abu Bakr al-Razi (Latin: Rhazes) were experimenting with sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride), which when it was distilled together with vitriol (hydrated sulfates of various metals) produced hydrogen chloride.{{Cite book|last=Kraus|first=Paul|author-link=Paul Kraus (Arabist)|year=1942–1943|title=Jâbir ibn Hayyân: Contribution à l'histoire des idées scientifiques dans l'Islam. I. Le corpus des écrits jâbiriens. II. Jâbir et la science grecque|publisher=Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale|location=Cairo|oclc=468740510|isbn=9783487091150}} vol. II, pp. 41–42; {{cite book|last=Multhauf|first=Robert P.|author-link=Robert P. Multhauf|year=1966|title=The Origins of Chemistry|location=London|publisher=Oldbourne|oclc=977570829}} pp. 141-142. It is possible that in one of his experiments, al-Razi stumbled upon a primitive method to produce hydrochloric acid.{{cite journal |last1=Stapleton|first1=Henry E.|author1-link=Henry Ernest Stapleton|last2=Azo|first2=R.F.|last3=Hidayat Husain|first3=M.|year=1927|title=Chemistry in Iraq and Persia in the Tenth Century A.D.|journal=Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal|volume=VIII|issue=6|pages=317–418|oclc=706947607|url=http://www.southasiaarchive.com/Content/sarf.100203/231270}} p. 333. The relevant recipe reads as follows: "Take equal parts of sweet salt, Bitter salt, {{transliteration|ar|Ṭabarzad}} salt, {{transliteration|ar|Andarānī}} salt, Indian salt, salt of {{transliteration|ar|Al-Qilī}}, and salt of Urine. After adding an equal weight of good crystallised Sal-ammoniac, dissolve by moisture, and distil (the mixture). There will distil over a strong water, which will cleave stone ({{transliteration|ar|sakhr}}) instantly." (p. 333) For a glossary of the terms used in this recipe, see p. 322. German translation of the same passage in {{cite book|last1=Ruska|first1=Julius|author1-link=Julius Ruska|date=1937|title=Al-Rāzī's Buch Geheimnis der Geheimnisse. Mit Einleitung und Erläuterungen in deutscher Übersetzung|series=Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften und der Medizin|volume=VI|location=Berlin|publisher=Springer}} p. 182, §5. An English translation of Ruska 1937's translation can be found in {{cite book|last1=Taylor|first1=Gail Marlow|date=2015|title=The Alchemy of Al-Razi: A Translation of the "Book of Secrets"|publisher=CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform|isbn=9781507778791}} pp. 139–140. However, it appears that in most of these early experiments with chloride salts, the gaseous products were discarded, and hydrogen chloride may have been produced many times before it was discovered that it can be put to chemical use.{{harvnb|Multhauf|1966|loc=p. 142, note 79}}.
One of the first such uses of hydrogen chloride was in the synthesis of mercury(II) chloride (corrosive sublimate), whose production from the heating of mercury either with alum and ammonium chloride or with vitriol and sodium chloride was first described in the {{lang|la|De aluminibus et salibus}} ("On Alums and Salts").{{harvnb|Multhauf|1966|pp=160–163}}. On the {{lang|la|De aluminibus et salibus}}, see further {{cite journal|last1=Ferrario|first1=Gabriele|date=2004|title=Il Libro degli allumi e dei sali: status quaestionis e prospettive di studio|journal=Henoch|volume=26|issue=3|pages=275–296}}, {{cite book|last1=Ferrario|first1=Gabriele|date=2007|chapter=Origins and Transmission of the Liber de aluminibus et salibus|editor1-last=Principe|editor1-first=Lawrence|editor1-link=Lawrence M. Principe|title=Chymists and Chymistry: Studies in the History of Alchemy and Early Modern Chemistry|location=Sagamore Beach|publisher=Science History Publications|pages=137–148}} See also more briefly {{cite journal|last1=Ferrario|first1=Gabriele|date=2009|title=An Arabic Dictionary of Technical Alchemical Terms: MS Sprenger 1908 of the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin (fols. 3r–6r)|journal=Ambix|volume=56|issue=1|pages=36–48|doi=10.1179/174582309X405219|pmid=19831258 |s2cid=41045827 }} pp. 40–43, and the sources cited in {{harvnb|Ferrario|2009|loc=p. 38, note 5}}. See also {{cite journal|last1=Moureau|first1=Sébastien|date=2020|title=Min al-kīmiyāʾ ad alchimiam. The Transmission of Alchemy from the Arab-Muslim World to the Latin West in the Middle Ages|journal=Micrologus|volume=28|issue=|pages=87–141|hdl=2078.1/211340|url=http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/211340}} pp. 106–107. This eleventh- or twelfth-century Arabic alchemical text is anonymous in most manuscripts, though some manuscripts attribute it to Hermes Trismegistus, and a few falsely attribute it to Abu Bakr al-Razi.{{harvnb|Moureau|2020|pp=106–107}}. On the false attribution to al-Razi, see {{harvnb|Ferrario|2009|pp=42–43}} and the sources cited there. Moureau 2020, p. 117 stresses that the only Latin work which in the current state of research is known to be a translation of an authentic Arabic work by al-Razi is the {{lang|la|Liber secretorum Bubacaris}}, an interpolated paraphrase of al-Razi's {{transliteration|ar|Kitāb al-Asrār}}. It was translated into Hebrew and two times into Latin, with one Latin translation by {{nowrap|Gerard of Cremona (1144–1187)}}.{{harvnb|Moureau|2020|pp=106–107}}.
In the process described in the {{lang|la|De aluminibus et salibus}}, hydrochloric acid started to form, but it immediately reacted with the mercury to produce mercury(II) chloride. Thirteenth-century Latin alchemists, for whom the {{lang|la|De aluminibus et salibus}} was one of the main reference works, were fascinated by the chlorinating properties of mercury(II) chloride, and they eventually discovered that when the metals are eliminated from the process of heating vitriols, alums, and salts, strong mineral acids can directly be distilled.{{harvnb|Multhauf|1966|pp=162–163}}.
=Historical use in photography=
Mercury(II) chloride was used as a photographic intensifier to produce positive pictures in the collodion process of the 1800s. When applied to a negative, the mercury(II) chloride whitens and thickens the image, thereby increasing the opacity of the shadows and creating the illusion of a positive image.Towler, J. (1864). [http://albumen.conservation-us.org/library/monographs/sunbeam/chap18.html Stereographic negatives and landscape photography]. Chapter 28. In: [http://albumen.conservation-us.org/library/monographs/sunbeam/index.html The silver sunbeam: a practical and theoretical textbook of sun drawing and photographic printing. ] Retrieved on April 13, 2005.
=Historical use in preservation=
For the preservation of anthropological and biological specimens during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, objects were dipped in or were painted with a "mercuric solution". This was done to prevent the specimens' destruction by moths, mites and mold. Objects in drawers were protected by scattering crystalline mercuric chloride over them.{{Cite journal |last=Goldberg |first=Lisa |year=1996 |title=A History of Pest Control Measures in the Anthropology Collections, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution |url=http://cool.conservation-us.org/jaic/articles/jaic35-01-003.html |journal=JAIC |volume=35 |issue=1 |pages=23–43 |access-date=April 17, 2005}} It finds minor use in tanning, and wood was preserved by kyanizing (soaking in mercuric chloride).Freeman, M.H. Shupe, T.F. Vlosky, R.P. Barnes, H.M. (2003). [http://www.cfr.msstate.edu/forestp/preservation.pdf#search='wood%20preservative%20mercuric%20chloride' Past, present and future of the wood preservation industry] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050503113212/http://www.cfr.msstate.edu/forestp/preservation.pdf |date=2005-05-03 }}. Forest Products Journal. 53(10) 8–15. Retrieved on April 17, 2005. Mercuric chloride was one of the three chemicals used for railroad tie wood treatment between 1830 and 1856 in Europe and the United States. Limited railroad ties were treated in the United States until there were concerns over lumber shortages in the 1890s.Pg. 19-75 "Date Nails and Railroad Tie Preservation" (3 vol.; 560 p.), published in 1999 by the Archeology and Forensics Laboratory, University of Indianapolis; Jeffrey A. Oaks The process was generally abandoned because mercuric chloride was water-soluble and not effective for the long term, as well as being highly poisonous. Furthermore, alternative treatment processes, such as copper sulfate, zinc chloride, and ultimately creosote; were found to be less toxic. Limited kyanizing was used for some railroad ties in the 1890s and early 1900s.{{Cite web |url=http://facstaff.uindy.edu/~%20oaks/Articles/History.pdf |title=History of Railroad Tie Preservation |last=Oaks |first=Jeffrey A. |at=p. 20-30; p. 64, Table I |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718095129/http://facstaff.uindy.edu/~%20oaks/Articles/History.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-18 |url-status=dead |access-date=2009-01-14}}
=Historic use in medicine=
Mercuric chloride was a common over-the-counter disinfectant in the early twentieth century, recommended for everything from fighting measles germs{{cite news |author= |date=1908-01-29 |title=Measles Kills Many Children |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2241&dat=19080129&id=dZAlAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BPMFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6284,2248186 |work=The Star and Sentinel |location=Gettysburg, PA |access-date=2021-09-25}} to protecting fur coats{{cite news |author= |date=1914-05-05 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045487/1914-05-05/ed-1/seq-31/#date1=1777&index=1&rows=20&words=bichloride+mercury&searchType=basic&sequence=0&state=&date2=1963&proxtext=bichloride+of+mercury&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1 |work=The Day Book |location=Chicago, IL |access-date=2021-09-25|page=31|title=Adventures of Mr. Mouse}} and exterminating red ants.{{cite book|title=The American Frugal Housewife|last=Child|first=Lydia Maria|year=832|edition=12th|url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13493/13493-h/13493-h.htm#page21|page=21}}
A New York physician, Carlin Philips, wrote in 1913 that "it is one of our most popular and effective household antiseptics", but so corrosive and poisonous that it should only be available by prescription.{{cite news |last=Philips, M.D. |first=Carlin |date=1913-06-15 |title=To Keep Deadly Bichloride of Mercury from Family Medicine Shelves |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038615/1913-06-15/ed-1/seq-15/ |work=The Times Dispatch |location=Richmond, VA |access-date=2021-09-25}} A group of physicians in Chicago made the same demand later the same month. The product frequently caused accidental poisonings and was used as a suicide method.{{cite news |author= |date=1913-06-23 |title=Want Sale of Bichloride of Mercury Restricted |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045487/1913-06-23/ed-1/seq-8/ |work=The Day Book |location=Chicago, IL |access-date=2021-09-25}}
It was used to disinfect wounds by Arab physicians in the Middle Ages.{{cite book|last=Maillard|first=Adam P. Fraise, Peter A. Lambert, Jean-Yves|title=Principles and Practice of Disinfection, Preservation and Sterilization|year=2007|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=Oxford|isbn=978-0470755068|page=4}} It continued to be used by Arab physicians into the twentieth century, until modern medicine deemed it unsafe for use.
Syphilis was frequently treated with mercuric chloride before the advent of antibiotics. It was inhaled, ingested, injected, and applied topically. Both mercuric-chloride treatment for syphilis and poisoning during the course of treatment were so common that the latter's symptoms were often confused with those of syphilis. This use of "salts of white mercury" is referred to in the English-language folk song "The Unfortunate Rake".Pimple, K.D.; Pedroni, J.A.; Berdon, V. (2002, July 09). [http://wisdomtools.com/poynter/syphilis.html Syphilis in history] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080430223201/http://wisdomtools.com/poynter/syphilis.html |date=2008-04-30 }}. Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions at Indiana University-Bloomington. Retrieved on April 20, 2008.
Yaws was treated with mercuric chloride (labeled as Corrosive Sublimate) before the advent of antibiotics. It was applied topically to alleviate ulcerative symptoms. Evidence of this is found in Jack London's book The Cruise of the Snark in the chapter entitled "The Amateur M.D."
Between 1901 and 1904 the US Marine Hospital Service quarantined and engaged in an extensive disinfection program of San Francisco's Chinatown in response to an epidemic of bubonic plague. This program forced the closure of over 14,000 rooms and the eviction of thousands of Chinese residents whose dwellings were rendered toxic and uninhabitable from the disinfection program. Long-term mercury pollution is still a concern for construction workers in Chinatown to this day.{{cite book |last1=Craddock |first1=Susan |title=City of Plagues |date=2000 |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |page=138}}
=Historic use in crime and accidental poisonings=
- In 1613, whilst imprisoned in the Tower of London, Thomas Overbury was poisoned with an enema of mercury sublimate.{{Cite book |last=Somerset |first=Anne |title=Unnatural Murder: Poison at the Court of James I |publisher=Orion Publishing Group |year=1997 |isbn=978-0753801987}} The following trial saw the downfall of the murderers, Robert Carr and his wife, Frances.
- In Volume V of Alexandre Dumas' Celebrated Crimes, he recounts the history of Antoine François Desrues, who killed noblewoman Madame de Lamotte with "corrosive sublimate."{{cite book |last1=Dumas |first1=Alexandre |author-link1=Alexandre Dumas |date=1895 |title=Celebrated Crimes Volume V: The Cenci. Murat. Derues |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0vU_AAAAYAAJ&pg=250 |publisher=G. Barrie & sons |page=250 |access-date=30 June 2015 |via=Google Books}}
- In 1906 in New York, Richard Tilghman died after mistaking bichloride of mercury tablets for lithium citrate.{{Cite web|url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063756/1906-06-28/ed-1/seq-1/|title = The times and democrat. [volume] (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, June 28, 1906, Image 1|date = 28 June 1906}}
- Actor Lon Chaney's estranged wife Cleva attempted suicide by swallowing mercuric chloride in 1913. Although the attempt failed, the toxic effects ruined her singing career.{{cite AV media | title=Mysteries and Scandals – Lon Chaney (Season 3, Episode 34) | publisher=E! | date=2000}}
- In a highly publicized case in 1920, mercury bichloride was reported to have caused the death of 25-year-old American silent film star Olive Thomas. While vacationing in France, she accidentally (or perhaps intentionally) ingested the compound, which had been prescribed to her husband Jack Pickford in liquid topical form to treat his syphilis. Thomas died five days later.{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=L0pLAAAAIBAJ&pg=3680,4398473&dq=olive+thomas+mercury&hl=en|title=Bichloride of Mercury Killed Olive Thomas|date=September 15, 1920|work=The Toronto World|page=6|access-date=August 27, 2018}}Foster, Charles (2000). Stardust and Shadows: Canadians in Early Hollywood, page 257. Toronto, Canada: Dundurn Press, 2000. {{ISBN|978-1550023480}}.
- Mercuric chloride was used by Madge Oberholtzer to commit suicide after she was kidnapped, raped and tortured by Ku Klux Klan leader D.C. Stephenson. She died from a combination of mercury poisoning and the staph infection that she suffered when Stephenson bit her during the assault.[http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/stephenson/atatevstprosecution.html Daniel O. Linder, "D.C. Stephenson"], Testimony, Famous Trials, hosted at University of Missouri Law School, Kansas City
- Ana María Cires, a young wife of Uruguayan writer Horacio Quiroga, committed suicide by poison. After a violent fight with Quiroga, she ingested a fatal dose of "sublimado", or mercury chloride. She endured great agony for eight days before dying on December 14, 1915.{{cite book|last=Brignol|first=José|title=Vida y Obra de Horacio Quiroga|year=1939|publisher=La Bolsa de los Libros|location=Montevido|pages=211–213}}
- Ruth L. Truffant's death was called a suicide after she died from bichloride of mercury poisoning on 26 April 1914.{{cite news |title=Actress Dies of Poisoning When Heart Balm is Denied |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/104488448/ruth-trufant/ |access-date=27 June 2022 |publisher=The Indianapolis Star |date=27 April 1914}}{{cite book |title=The American Library Annual: Including Index to Dates of 1914-1915 |date=1915 |publisher=R.R. Bowker Company |location=New York |page=155 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OYkfAQAAIAAJ&dq=Ruth+L.+Truffant+actress&pg=PA155 |access-date=27 June 2022}}
Toxicity
{{main|Mercury poisoning}}
Mercury dichloride is a highly toxic compound,Mercury (II) chloride, toxicity both acutely and as a cumulative poison. Its toxicity is due not just to its mercury content but also to its corrosive properties, which can cause serious internal damage, including ulcers to the stomach, mouth, and throat, and corrosive damage to the intestines. Mercuric chloride also tends to accumulate in the kidneys, causing severe corrosive damage which can lead to acute kidney failure. However, mercuric chloride, like all inorganic mercury salts, does not cross the blood–brain barrier as readily as organic mercury, although it is known to be a cumulative poison.
Common side effects of acute mercuric chloride poisoning include burning sensations in the mouth and throat, stomach pain, abdominal discomfort, lethargy, vomiting of blood, corrosive bronchitis, severe irritation to the gastrointestinal tract, and kidney failure. Chronic exposure can lead to symptoms more common with mercury poisoning, such as insomnia, delayed reflexes, excessive salivation, bleeding gums, fatigue, tremors, and dental problems.
Acute exposure to large amounts of mercuric chloride can cause death in as little as 24 hours, usually due to acute kidney failure or damage to the gastrointestinal tract. In other cases, victims of acute exposure have taken up to two weeks to die.[http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/search/r?dbs+hsdb:@term+@rn+@rel+7487-94-7 "Mercuric chloride"]{{dead link|date=July 2022}} in ToxNet: Hazardous Substances data bank. National Institutes of Health (2002, October 31). Retrieved on April 17, 2005. See also the corresponding entry in ToxNet
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Mercury(II) chloride}}
- Agency for toxic substances and disease registry. (2001, May 25). [https://web.archive.org/web/20010718214647/http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp46.html Toxicological profile for Mercury]. Retrieved on April 17, 2005.
- {{vanchor|PubChem|text=[https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/24085 "Mercuric Chloride {{pipe}} HgCl2"] in PubChem database.}} US National Institutes of Health. Retrieved 19 July 2022. [https://archive.today/20220720043040/https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/24085 Archived] 20 July 2022.
- Young, R.(2004, October 6). [https://web.archive.org/web/20060930091459/http://risk.lsd.ornl.gov/tox/profiles/mercury_f_V1.shtml Toxicity summary for mercury]. The risk assessment information system. Retrieved on April 17, 2005.
- [https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxfaqs/tfacts46.pdf ATSDR - ToxFAQs: Mercury]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20020802220747/http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/phs46.html ATSDR - Public Health Statement: Mercury]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20030802024248/http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/MHMI/mmg46.html ATSDR - Medical Management Guidelines (MMGs) for Mercury (Hg)]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20010718214647/http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp46.html ATSDR - Toxicological Profile: Mercury]
- {{ICSC|0979|09}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060425193836/http://www.npi.gov.au/database/substance-info/profiles/53.html National Pollutant Inventory - Mercury and compounds Fact Sheet]
- [https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/npg/npgd0383.html NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards]
- {{vanchor|ToxSum|text=[http://www.altcorp.com/DentalInformation/mercuric.htm Mercury chloride toxicity]}} - includes excerpts from research reports.
{{Chemical agents}}
{{Antiseptics and disinfectants}}
{{Mercury compounds}}
{{Chlorides}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mercury(Ii) Chloride}}
Category:Mercury(II) compounds
Category:Alchemical substances