The Difference Between Distilled and Deionized Water

These two forms of purified water are similar but not interchangeable

Distilled Deionized Water Laboratory Analysis

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While you can drink tap water, it's not suitable for most laboratory tests, preparing solutions, calibrating equipment, or cleaning glassware. For the lab, you want purified water. Common purification methods include reverse osmosis (RO), distillation, and deionization.

Distillation and deionization are similar in that both processes remove ionic impurities, however, distilled water and deionized water (DI) are not the same nor are they interchangeable for many lab purposes. Let's take a look at how distillation and deionization work, the difference between them, when you should use each type of water, and when it's okay to substitute one for the other.

How Distilled Water Works

Scientist adding distilled water to a sample container in the laboratory

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Distilled water is a type of demineralized water that is purified using the process of distillation to remove salts and particulates. Usually, the source water is boiled and the steam is collected and condensed to yield distilled water.

The source water for distillation can be tap water, but spring water is most commonly used. Most minerals and certain other impurities are left behind when water is distilled, but the purity of the source water is important because some impurities (e.g., volatile organics, mercury) vaporize along with the water.

How Deionized Water Works

A scientist fills a volumetric flask with deionized water from a wall-mounted deionization unit.

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Deionized water is made by running tap water, spring water, or distilled water through an electrically charged resin. Usually, a mixed ion exchange bed with both positive and negative charged resins is used. Cations and anions in the water exchange with H+ and OH- in the resins, producing H2O (water).

Because deionized water is reactive, its properties start to change as soon as it's exposed to air. Deionized water has a pH of 7 when it is delivered, but as soon as it comes into contact with carbon dioxide from the air, the dissolved CO2 reacts to produce H+ and HCO3-, driving the pH closer to 5.6.

Deionization does not remove molecular species (e.g., sugar) or uncharged organic particles (most bacteria, viruses).

Distilled vs. Deionized Water in the Lab

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Assuming the source water was tap or spring water, distilled water is pure enough for nearly all lab applications. It is used for:

  • a solvent to prepare a solution
  • analytical blank
  • calibration standard
  • cleaning glassware
  • equipment sterilization
  • making high purity water

The purity of deionized water depends on the source water. Deionized water is used when a soft solvent is needed. It is used for:

  • cooling applications where it's important to avoid depositing minerals
  • microbiology autoclaves
  • many chemistry experiments involving ionic compounds
  • washing glassware, especially the final rinse
  • solvent preparation
  • analytical blanks
  • calibration standards
  • in batteries

As you can see, in some situations either distilled or deionized water is fine to use. Because it is corrosive, deionized water is not used in situations involving long-term contact with metals.

Substituting Distilled and Deionized Water

You don't generally want to substitute one type of water for the other, but if you have deionized water made from distilled water that has been sitting out exposed to air, it becomes ordinary distilled water. It's fine to use this type of leftover deionized water in place of distilled water. Unless you're certain it won't affect the outcome, do not substitute one type of water for another for any application that specifies which type to use.

Drinking Distilled and Deionized Water

Drinking water

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Although some people like to drink distilled water, it's really not the best choice for potable water because it lacks minerals found in spring and tap water that improve the flavor of water and confer health benefits.​

While it's okay to drink distilled water, you should not drink deionized water. In addition to not supplying minerals, deionized water is corrosive and can cause damage to tooth enamel and soft tissues. Also, deionization does not remove pathogens, so DI water may not protect against infectious diseases. However, you can drink distilled, deionized water after the water has been exposed to air for a while.

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Helmenstine, Anne Marie, Ph.D. "The Difference Between Distilled and Deionized Water." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/distilled-versus-deionized-water-609435. Helmenstine, Anne Marie, Ph.D. (2023, April 5). The Difference Between Distilled and Deionized Water. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/distilled-versus-deionized-water-609435 Helmenstine, Anne Marie, Ph.D. "The Difference Between Distilled and Deionized Water." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/distilled-versus-deionized-water-609435 (accessed March 19, 2024).