Hello, I am doing some work with gypsum on a surface and trying to understand the reaction more. I think this is how the reaction goes, but not sure and would appreciate any advice.
I think with the addition of water the gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate) becomes (calcium sulfate hemihydrate):
##CaSO_{4}\cdot 2H_{2}O \ + \ H_{2}O \ \rightarrow \ CaSO_{4}\cdot \frac{1}{2}H_{2}O ##
Then when it dries in air, or I put it in the oven, it loses it's moisture and becomes calcium sulphate. Is this correct?
Also, I am interested in the reaction of calcium sulphate with barium chloride solution. I have read that barium sulphate will precipitate out and then leave calcium chloride in solution. Would the solid on my surface then be barium sulphate?
Thanks for any help understanding the reactions more.