daniel limbert Posted June 30, 2008 Share Posted June 30, 2008 Can you dissolve it & analyse thr purity of red phosphorous? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YT2095 Posted June 30, 2008 Share Posted June 30, 2008 the Red allotrope of Phosphorus has no known solvents that I`m aware of. what sort of impurities are you looking for? there may be Other ways to establish what they are without the need for a solvent. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Cuthber Posted June 30, 2008 Share Posted June 30, 2008 I have been asked to measure the purity of red P before. I weighed it, then washed it with a variety of solvents (knowning that none of them would dissolve the P) then reweighed it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YT2095 Posted June 30, 2008 Share Posted June 30, 2008 I have been asked to measure the purity of red P before. I weighed it, then washed it with a variety of solvents (knowning that none of them would dissolve the P) then reweighed it. that`s ok, but what if the impurity is Glass powder, like he extracted it from the side of match boxes? and I`m kinda half thinking this may be the case here Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Cuthber Posted July 1, 2008 Share Posted July 1, 2008 "ok, but what if the impurity is Glass powder" Then you wash it with HF. Logically though, I admit there's still a problem. If I used HF (I didn't) I'd have needed to use something a like polypropylene or PTFE filter. If I did that, how would I know there wasn't PP or PTFE in the red P. I knew what I was looking for in the the red P from another part of the incident investigation. You could burn the stuff in a stream of air and titrate the phosphoric acid. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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