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Coolants & brines

Magnesium chloride · MgCl2

Magnesium chloride (MgCl2) is a brine salt; this page gives computed density and specific heat capacity for aqueous solutions from 5–20 wt% and -25–40 °C.

Values are computed from CoolProp's incompressible aqueous-mixture correlation (Melinder, 2010) and tabulated over 520 wt% and -2540 °C.

Also known as
Magnesium dichloride, Magnesium chloride brine
CAS number
7786-30-3
Tabulated range
520 wt% · -2540 °C
Properties
Density · Specific heat capacity · Specific gravity
At 20 wt% · 20 °C
reference snapshot
Density
1174.9kg/m³
Density
1.1749g/cm³
Specific gravity
1.177
Specific heat
3110J/kg·K
Explore

Read a value at any point

Move the sliders to interpolate between the tabulated grid points. The readout and chart never go outside the validated 520 wt% and -2540 °C range, and every number is interpolated from the committed table below — nothing is computed from a chemistry model in your browser.

Interactive explorer

Values are interpolated between the tabulated grid points below — sliders stay within the validated 520 wt% and -2540 °C range.

13 wt%
20 °C
Density
1110.3 kg/m³
Density
1.1103 g/cm³
Specific gravity
1.112
Specific heat
3451 J/kg·K
Density (kg/m³) vs wt% MgCl2 at 20 °C — Magnesium chloride.
Why it matters

What the numbers tell you

At 20 wt% and 20 °C, aqueous magnesium chloride has a density of about 1175 kg/m³ (1.175 g/cm³) — roughly 1.18× the density of water. It also has a specific heat of about 3.11 kJ/kg·K, about 74% of water’s 4.18 kJ/kg·K. Those differences carry straight into volume-to-mass conversions, pump and pipe sizing, and the heat needed to change its temperature.

Common grades

A few working strengths

Properties at 20 °C for a handful of concentrations in everyday use, read from the committed grid (interpolated between tabulated points where a grade falls between them). The full table follows below.

wt% MgCl2°CDensity kg/m³SGSp. heat J/kg·K
5201040.01.0423894
10201083.51.0853609
15201128.21.1303345
20201174.91.1773110
Freezing point

How low it protects

Freezing point of the aqueous solution against strength, computed from the same correlation and checked against an independently cited value. A 20 wt% magnesium chloride solution freezes at about −28.7 °C.

wt% MgCl2Freezing point °C
5−3.0
10−8.3
15−16.8
20−28.7

Freeze check: 5 wt% computed −3.0 °C against a cited −3.0 °C (tolerance ±1.5 °C). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics - Concentrative Properties of Aqueous Solutions. CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Concentrative Properties of Aqueous Solutions, Magnesium chloride (MgCl2) table: 5.0 mass % at 20 degC, freezing point depression = 3.01 degC (freezing point about -3.0 degC); the CRC depression column for MgCl2 is tabulated to 5 mass %. The Melinder freeze curve underlying CoolProp's INCOMP::MMG matches it to within 0.1 degC here.

Sources

Where the numbers come from

Every value on this page is computed by a deterministic model — none is entered by hand. The generating method and the references it is checked against:

  • Melinder, A. (2010). Properties of Secondary Working Fluids for Indirect Systems, 2nd ed. International Institute of Refrigeration - the basis of CoolProp's incompressible aqueous magnesium chloride (INCOMP::MMG) correlation.
  • CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics - Concentrative Properties of Aqueous Solutions (density, freezing-point depression and viscosity at 20 degC)

Model: CoolProp==6.6.0 - incompressible aqueous MMG correlation (Melinder 2010) · Generated 2026-06-07

The committed data file for this page is published as JSON on GitHub under CC BY 4.0.

Validation

Checked against a cited value

The model is cross-checked at one independently cited reference point. The page is published only because this check passes.

Property / pointDensity · 20 wt% · 20 °C
Cited reference value1174.2 kg/m3
Model computed1174.9 kg/m3
Error vs reference0.06% (tolerance 1%)

CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics - Concentrative Properties of Aqueous Solutions. CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Concentrative Properties of Aqueous Solutions (all data at 20 degC), Magnesium chloride (MgCl2) table: 20.0 mass % at 20 degC = 1.1742 g/cm3. This measured handbook data is independent of the Melinder correlation underlying CoolProp's INCOMP::MMG.

Full tables

Every tabulated point

Rows are temperature (°C); columns are concentration (wt% MgCl2). Read the cell at the intersection. Specific gravity is density divided by the model water reference of 998.2 kg/m³ at 20 °C.

Cells left blank (—) sit below the solution's freezing point at that strength, where it is no longer liquid; those points are not tabulated and the explorer will not interpolate across them.

Density kg/m³
°C \ wt%5101520
-251187.5
-201187.1
-151137.41186.3
-101136.61185.3
-51089.91135.71184.0
01043.81089.01134.51182.5
51043.21087.91133.21180.8
101042.31086.61131.71178.9
151041.31085.11130.01177.0
201040.01083.51128.21174.9
251038.61081.71126.21172.8
301037.01079.71124.11170.6
351035.21077.61121.91168.5
401033.51075.41119.61166.4
Specific heat capacity J/kg·K
°C \ wt%5101520
-252986
-203000
-1532603013
-1032733027
-5356332863041
03874357332983055
53879358333103068
103883359233223082
153888360033333096
203894360933453110
253899361733563124
303905362533683138
353910363233793151
403914364033913165
Typical values

Magnesium chloride solution properties at 25 °C

At 25 °C, 5 wt% magnesium chloride has a density of about 1038.6 kg/m³ and a specific heat capacity of about 3899 J/kg·K. At 25 °C, 15 wt% magnesium chloride has a density of about 1126.2 kg/m³ and a specific heat capacity of about 3356 J/kg·K. At 25 °C, 20 wt% magnesium chloride has a density of about 1172.8 kg/m³ and a specific heat capacity of about 3124 J/kg·K.

Limitations

Before you use these numbers

  • CoolProp's incompressible aqueous magnesium chloride correlation (INCOMP::MMG), built on Melinder (2010). Tabulated for 5-20 wt% MgCl2 over -25 to 40 degC. Magnesium chloride brine is used for deicing, dust suppression and secondary cooling; the Melinder incompressible path is used (over the Laliberte electrolyte correlation) because it carries the freezing line. Each cell sits above the solution's freezing line; cells below it are left blank and the explorer will not interpolate across them. The 20 wt% ceiling stays near the eutectic (about 21 wt%) and below saturation. Density and freezing points are tabulated; viscosity is not, because the correlation's viscosity term for MgCl2 deviates about 10% from independent CRC measured data, and an unreliable property is omitted rather than published with a caveat. Concentrations are anhydrous MgCl2; the commercial hexahydrate (MgCl2.6H2O) is 47% MgCl2 by mass. Values are for preliminary design; verify against vendor data for critical service.
  • Values are tabulated only inside the 520 wt% and -2540 °C ranges shown; the correlation is not extrapolated beyond them here.
  • Figures are for a pure magnesium chloride–water system. Commercial grades contain impurities (for example chloride in some caustic grades) that shift density and viscosity; check the supplier's data sheet for a specific product.
  • Use for preliminary design; verify for critical service.
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