Disadvantages of Using Water as a Solvent
| # | Disadvantage | Explanation / Consequences |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Reacts with many reagents | Violently reacts with or destroys moisture-sensitive compounds (organolithium, Grignard reagents, LiAlH₄, acid chlorides, alkali metals, etc.) |
| 2 | High boiling point (100 °C) | Difficult and energy-intensive to remove by evaporation/distillation |
| 3 | High freezing point (0 °C) | Limits low-temperature reactions without additives |
| 4 | Poor solvent for non-polar compounds | Most organic compounds (hydrocarbons, oils, many drugs) are insoluble |
| 5 | Promotes hydrolysis | Esters, amides, lactones, nitriles, etc., can hydrolyze under acidic or basic conditions |
| 6 | Strong solvation & hydrogen bonding | Can deactivate catalysts and strongly solvate reactants |
| 7 | Difficult to dry completely | Forms azeotropes and trace water is hard to remove |
| 8 | Corrosion & electrolysis issues | Aqueous salt solutions conduct electricity and corrode equipment |
| 9 | High heat of vaporization | Very energy-intensive to evaporate on industrial scale |
| 10 | Risk of biological contamination | Supports microbial growth → problematic in pharma and long-term storage |
Summary: Although water is cheap, non-toxic, and environmentally friendly, it is often one of the worst solvents for organometallic chemistry, air-sensitive reactions, and most large-scale organic syntheses involving non-polar or water-sensitive substrates.
Related Topics
Advantages of Water as Solvent
Water vs Organic Solvents Comparison