If you were to neutralise the excess hydroxide with anything it should be HCl, then you're not introducing any further anions to confuse matters. HCl also has the advantage of being fully volatile, so a small excess is not problematic.
Thus: dissolve crude CaCl2 in dilute HCl, check pH (should be </= 7), then add your magnesium sulfate solution. Don't add solid MgSO4 as the crystals will become coated in CaSO4. To increase precipitation
warm the solution - calcium sulfate has a retrograde solubility curve.
All that said, the aldol condensation thing is a bit overstated (even if I've raised it as a potential issue in the past
) If you only dry as much acetone as you'll be needing just using MgSO4 shouldn't present any problems. Warming acetone with MgSO4 for long periods would be the thing to avoid.
But CaSO4 will be a more effective drying agent so do as you please.
Quote:Anhydrous magnesium sulfate is an inefficient drying agent and calcium chloride forms an additional compound. Drierite [CaSO4] offers the minimum acid and base catalysis of aldol formation and is the recommended drying agent for this solvent [acetone] [Coetzee and Siao Inorg Chem 14V 2 1987; Riddick and Bunger Organic Solvents Wiley-Interscience, N.Y., 3rd edn, 1970].
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