Yesterday, in my college gen chem, we completed a lab in which we synthesized trans-[Co(en)2Cl2]Cl.
We used these chemicals:
CoCl2 . 6H2O(s)
3 M ethylenediamine (en)
10% H2O2
12 M HCl
95% Ethanol
So we took 2.4 grams of CoCl2 . 6H2O(s), dissolved with 8mL water, added 8mL 3M ethylenediamine, added 8mL 10% H2O2, added 12 mL 12M HCl, heated it with a hot water bath for 50 minutes, then placed it in an ice bath and added 4mL 95% Ethanol.
So at this point, 1/4 of the solution was remaining in the casserole, and we used a vaccuum with a filter to separate the aqueous solution from the newly formed [Co(en)2Cl2]Cl(s) crystals.
So I believe this is the chemical reaction at this point?: [Co(en)2Cl2]+(aq) + OH-(aq) + HCl(aq) -> [Co(en)2Cl2]+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + H2O(l)
This aqueous solution we filtered out was spilled onto my laboratory notebook. I cleaned it up with paper towels, I disposed of the rest of the aqueous solution that didn't spill in the metal cation waste container. I then disposed of my nitrile gloves, after having them being slightly wet from the aqueous solution, and lastly I cut out the entire portion of my lab notebook that the aqueous solution spilled on.
I would like to know how harmful this aqueous solution is given the concentrations and amounts of the components, and if/what I should be worried about. I read the sidebar about spill questions, but the TA didn't have any answers, and since I needed to type out a wall of text to explain it, I felt this would be the best route.
Thanks so much.