bekithemba Posted February 13, 2007 Posted February 13, 2007 hi please give me the instructions for making calcium acetate using hydrated lime and acetic acid. how do i get it to crystallise?
bekithemba Posted February 18, 2007 Author Posted February 18, 2007 i have hydrated lime and vinegar which has 4% acetic acid. i need to know how to make calcium acetate which i ned to use in the gelling of ethanol for gel fuel/sterno
YT2095 Posted February 18, 2007 Posted February 18, 2007 you simply mix the 2 together until no more of the calcium dissolves, filter and then evaporate the excess liquid off.
Primarygun Posted February 18, 2007 Posted February 18, 2007 hydrated lime is hydrated calcium hydroxide. adding excess acetic acid to dissolve the lime by neutralization. Then, I think next you can filter the solution to have a beaker of calcium acetate solution. I lack practical experience so I don't know whether the next step (( evaporating the solution) is correct. The size of the crystals is up to you, if you wnat to have large crystals, you should boil off only a small proportion of water, and set the beaker aside to let it cool itself.
joeflsts Posted February 18, 2007 Posted February 18, 2007 i have hydrated lime and vinegar which has 4% acetic acid. i need to know how to make calcium acetate which i ned to use in the gelling of ethanol for gel fuel/sterno The goal is to super-saturate the solution then allow it to crystalize. This can be accomplished by slightly boiling it down and then evap until you obtain crystals. It won't happen at the speed of light. Joe
bekithemba Posted February 19, 2007 Author Posted February 19, 2007 i have been trying to make calcium acetate using egg shells and vinegar. when i first put the egg shells into the vinegar there is a fizz that shows that a lot carbon dioxide is being produced, after some time the more i put egg shells into the solution the less the fizz. now there is virtually no real fizz. no bubbles rising. is that the point of saturation?
YT2095 Posted February 19, 2007 Posted February 19, 2007 no, probably an insoluble layer formed. get yourself some sea shells, and then smash them up, but into a tin can and roast them on a fire, then grind to a fine powder. add this to your vinigar, then when the fizzing stops, filter and evaporate, you will have calcium acetate
John Cuthber Posted February 21, 2007 Posted February 21, 2007 I'm puzzled, why don't you think the reaction has gone to completion? Since adding more eggshells doesn't produce more CO2 I think the acid has been used up. Btw, please give me the names of insoluble acetates that could plausible be present.
YT2095 Posted July 9, 2007 Posted July 9, 2007 egg shells also contain insoluble proteins. I never said the layer was an acetate
OLUMS12 Posted November 18, 2007 Posted November 18, 2007 Then what is the qucikest way to get vinegar if all aforementioend can produce calcium acetate
John Cuthber Posted November 18, 2007 Posted November 18, 2007 Buy it. Though, since vuinegar is about 95% water, it's not very ecconomical
Melvin Posted November 19, 2007 Posted November 19, 2007 Take one mole of Ca(OH)2, mix it into water and add one mole of Na2CO3, you will get NaOH and CaCO3. The CaCO3 will sink to the bottom while the NaOH remains in solution. Mix the CaCO3 with vinegar to get calcium acetate. (I like this method because it gives me NaOH as well.)
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