Inorganic chemicals is the shortened form of inorganic chemical industry and is an important branch of the chemical industry with natural resources and industrial by-products as raw materials for the production of sulfuric acid, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, soda ash, caustic soda, synthetic ammonia, fertilizer and inorganic salts, etc. This includes sulfuric acid industry, soda industry, the chloro-alkali industry, synthetic ammonia industry, fertilizer industry and mineral industry. Its broad definition also includes the production of inorganic non-metallic materials and fine inorganic product such as ceramics and inorganic pigment. The main raw material of inorganic chemical products are mineral product including sulfur, sodium, phosphorus, potassium and calcium and coal, oil, gas, and air, water and so on. Inorganic chemicals can be traced back to the ancient process of ceramics, alchemy, brewing, dyeing at thousands of years ago. Although with small scale, backward technology and pure manual manipulation, but it is the prototype of inorganic chemicals. For thousands of years, due to the low productivity, it gets slow development. Until the 18th century, it had developed rapidly. In the middle of 18th century, Britain had first applied lead chamber method using saltpeter and sulfur as raw materials to produce sulfuric acid. In 1783, Lu Bulan (France) proposed the soda method using sodium chloride, sulfuric acid, coal as raw materials. In the latter half of the 18th century, the modern chemical industry taking inorganic chemical industry as the main content had began to emerge. In 1841, people began the production of phosphate fertilizer; In 1965 Belgian Solvay realized the industrialization of ammonia soda for production of soda; with the rise of preparing potassium industry in 1870; In 1890, people began to use electrolytic approach for making Cl2 and caustic soda; In 1913, people had achieved the catalytic synthesis
Barium Sulfate (BaSO4) Lewis Structure Explained: Step-by-Step Guide
Barium sulfate(BaSO4) is non-combustible and non-toxic. Emits toxic sulfur oxides when heated to decomposition.Reacts with reducing agents such as potassium, phosphorus or aluminum.
Jun 1,2026 Inorganic chemistryNH3: Lewis structure and polarity
Ammonia (NH3) plays a critical role in biochemistry. Here is its lewis structure and polarity.
Jun 1,2026 Inorganic chemistryLewis Structure and Structural Analysis of Tellurium Tetrachloride (TeCl4)
The Lewis structure of tellurium tetrachloride (TeCl4) exhibits bonding characteristics with accessible d orbitals.
May 29,2026 Inorganic chemistryWhat is the structure of carbonate?
This article shows the lewis dot structure of carbonate and three equivalent resonance structures.
May 29,2026 Inorganic chemistryHow to draw lewis dot structure for aluminum nitride?
Aluminum nitride (AIN) is an excellent candidate for use in electronic, light, and field- emission devices. Here is its lewis dot structure..
May 29,2026 Inorganic chemistryLewis structure of LiAlH4
Lithium Aluminum Hydride is a reductant commonly used in organic synthesis. Here is its lewis structure.
May 28,2026 Inorganic chemistryHow to draw Lewis Structure for P2?
Phosphorus dimer is a highly reactive diatomic molecule, here is the steps for drawing lewis structure of P2.
May 28,2026 Inorganic chemistryWater (H2O) Lewis Structure Explained Step-by-Step
Because of the two lone pairs, H2O will have a bent molecular geometry and it will be a polar molecule.
May 28,2026 Inorganic chemistryHow to draw the Lewis structure of ClO3-?
The Lewis structure of chlorine (ClO3-) consists of one chlorine atom (Cl), three oxygen atoms (O), and a negative charge (-1).
May 28,2026 Inorganic chemistryMagnesium hydroxide(Mg(OH)2) Lewis Structure Explained Step-by-Step
Magnesium hydroxide(Mg(OH)2) is used for relief of gastrointestinal symptoms of dyspepsia, heartburn, gastroesophageal reflux disease and constipation by acting as antacids and laxatives.
May 28,2026 Inorganic chemistry












