observer1 Posted February 23, 2023 Posted February 23, 2023 (edited) So I basically wanted to make calcium acetate. So I took some vinegar and egg shells, mixed them and kept them in a container fr about about 3 weeks. I kept an excess of eggs and it finally stopped reacting. After that, I transferred the water and calcium acetate without the shells or the egg layer using a filter. I later left the cup to evaporate fr about 2 weeks and a mostly transparent, yellowish layer started forming on top. Is is calcium acetate? Edited February 23, 2023 by observer1
StringJunky Posted February 23, 2023 Posted February 23, 2023 Chalk and vinegar would give you a cleaner product. The yellow component is someting else.
observer1 Posted February 23, 2023 Author Posted February 23, 2023 when i filtered it, i say no insoluble particles
observer1 Posted February 23, 2023 Author Posted February 23, 2023 yes, so is this yellow because of me using eggs or is something ELSE happening?
exchemist Posted February 23, 2023 Posted February 23, 2023 17 minutes ago, observer1 said: yes, so is this yellow because of me using eggs or is something ELSE happening? Hard to say but eggs most likely. There is some protein in eggshells. Also if the shells are brown, there is a protoporphyrin pigment present, which may perhaps generate a yellow colour.
observer1 Posted February 23, 2023 Author Posted February 23, 2023 It was white eggs I basically was following this video, except i did not heat it to evaporate, I lift it to evaporate Link :-https://youtu.be/32vCLXTjnyQ
exchemist Posted February 23, 2023 Posted February 23, 2023 2 hours ago, observer1 said: It was white eggs I basically was following this video, except i did not heat it to evaporate, I lift it to evaporate Link :-https://youtu.be/32vCLXTjnyQ Maybe protein then. Especially if it is a skin on top. I would expect CaOAc crystals to settle out at the bottom, I think. But you must expect to have impurities if you use a a source of minerals from the environment around you. Almost nothing is pure.
observer1 Posted February 23, 2023 Author Posted February 23, 2023 so like if the layer is not calcium acetate, I will remove it. I am doing this just to confirm because I can't find anything about this in google
observer1 Posted February 27, 2023 Author Posted February 27, 2023 On 2/23/2023 at 7:08 PM, exchemist said: Maybe protein then. Especially if it is a skin on top. I would expect CaOAc crystals to settle out at the bottom, I think. But you must expect to have impurities if you use a a source of minerals from the environment around you. Almost nothing is pure. btw I forgot to mention that it only appears yellow when concentrated. When kept in a lot of water, the water appears transparent. Also, will I be able to break the proteins if I heat them, making it somewhat whiter?
exchemist Posted February 28, 2023 Posted February 28, 2023 (edited) 38 minutes ago, observer1 said: @exchemist? To my mind this is all getting too speculative to be useful. I can only make a few suggestions as to why it is yellow. Could be protein. Could be a bit of one of the coloured porphyrin type compounds I mentioned. Could be a trace of iron, e.g.: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron(III)_acetate . Or something else entirely. Eggshells, like just about anything biological, are not a pure chemical substance. But by all means try heating it to see what happens to the colour, or recrystallising to see if it comes out whiter. Edited February 28, 2023 by exchemist
observer1 Posted February 28, 2023 Author Posted February 28, 2023 2 hours ago, exchemist said: But by all means try heating it to see what happens to the colour, or recrystallising to see if it comes out whiter. Answer shall come in 2 weeks
observer1 Posted April 16, 2023 Author Posted April 16, 2023 so basically, it might be the organic stuff reacting with air while in water and turning yellow to get around it, I started evaporating in a larger plate, so more surface area and faster evaporation, so not it is becoming nice long white crystals. if i heat it it basically turns black
exchemist Posted April 16, 2023 Posted April 16, 2023 3 hours ago, observer1 said: so basically, it might be the organic stuff reacting with air while in water and turning yellow to get around it, I started evaporating in a larger plate, so more surface area and faster evaporation, so not it is becoming nice long white crystals. if i heat it it basically turns black If it goes black when heated, you have some organic material present.
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