boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 sorry one more thing how many times would i have to distill it to get pure or purish i mean no impurites at 70% concentrated
YT2095 Posted September 15, 2004 Posted September 15, 2004 twice should be perfectly fine, once without the H2SO4 and once with it. then it`s entirely down to you how much de-ionised water you add to get the correct percent conc you want but again, I can`t vouch for the impurities present in the product, and so you`ll have go with this educated guess
boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 i have to add the H2SO4 i thought i could just distill it with out H2SO4 because i thought it forms a azeotrope with water at 70% which is the conc i want and adding H2SO4 dehydrates it and is able to get the concentration around 98% and also if i order 2 bottles i reckon it will tell me the ingridents. it should do should'nt it if not how could i tell if it does have impurities
YT2095 Posted September 15, 2004 Posted September 15, 2004 one bottle should tell you the ingredients
boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 yes but i want about 1ltr of the nitric acid and considering about 62% of its water possibly something else it only leaves me with 380ml which is enough but not enough for different experiments. so should i add the sulphuric acid or would distilling it without the sulphuric acid give me my 70% conc acid
YT2095 Posted September 15, 2004 Posted September 15, 2004 if the bottle is 1 litre and it`s 38% nitric, how many bottles are needed to make 1 litre of 70% nitric? c`mon dude, use your head! you`ll be asking me to make it for you next!
boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 if the bottle is 1 litre and it`s 38% nitric' date=' how many bottles are needed to make 1 litre of 70% nitric? c`mon dude, use your head! you`ll be asking me to make it for you next! [/quote'] i dont want 1ltr exactly i should have said but i would rather have more then less. 2 bottles would be suffice all though at a £5 delivery charge i might just buy 5 bottles that way i wont have to keep paying £5 if i want some nitric acid i'll have enough to last me a long time
boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 you still havent answerd my question though you should become a politician do i have to add the sulphuric acid to get 70% conc i am pretty sure you dont but i just want to check
YT2095 Posted September 15, 2004 Posted September 15, 2004 i DID actualy answer that, but you went off on a tangent about impurities etc... I said: "twice should be perfectly fine, once without the H2SO4 and once with it. then it`s entirely down to you how much de-ionised water you add to get the correct percent conc you want but again, I can`t vouch for the impurities present in the product, and so you`ll have go with this educated guess " and so, if you do it that way you`ll not go wrong, and you`ll get a good clean product, BUT I don`t know what the impurities are, if they have a lower BP (also prior mentioned!) they may pass on also. I don`t know what else to tell you here, it`s all there for the reading!
boris_73 Posted September 15, 2004 Author Posted September 15, 2004 there are three more things how much sulphuric acid should i add to the nitric acid and where did you get your glass rods from and what temperature should i heat the homemade nitric acid using potassium nitrate and sulphuric acid these are the last thing's i am going to ask and thank you for helping me
budullewraagh Posted September 15, 2004 Posted September 15, 2004 i dont think the amount of sulfuric you add is really a problem; just make sure it is there. get glass rods from chem suppliers online. heat the nitrate/sulfuric mix to 150 or so and i think youre set
boris_73 Posted September 16, 2004 Author Posted September 16, 2004 budullewraagh when you are making nitric acid from potassium nitrate and sulphuric acid does'nt water mainly come out for the first 5 minutes or so then the nitric acid comes out. i suppose i could test it with a ph indicator strip
budullewraagh Posted September 16, 2004 Posted September 16, 2004 you'll want to be careful when working with that. nitric acid gas is bloody corrosive. if you wanted to be smart, you'd have a few drops of methyl orange in the glass tubes to test for pH
boris_73 Posted September 17, 2004 Author Posted September 17, 2004 where could i buy some methyl orange
YT2095 Posted September 17, 2004 Posted September 17, 2004 simple, goto Argos and buy their Chem set for kids, it contains all you`re likely to need of Meth Orange and 1 or 2 other goodies sounds lame at face value I know, but I`ve bought 1 or 2 in the past, exactly for that purpose, it was alot cheaper than Sci-Chem
boris_73 Posted September 17, 2004 Author Posted September 17, 2004 thank you very much i always wanted to know what were in those chemistry kits as well
boris_73 Posted September 17, 2004 Author Posted September 17, 2004 i have looked into the argos book and it appers they no longer sell those type of chemistry sets only worm farms fossils making strange plants and volcanoes etc.
boris_73 Posted September 17, 2004 Author Posted September 17, 2004 yt how do you test to see when your solution starts producing nitric acid not water
YT2095 Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 I always look for the orange/brown gas, and I start with conc acid anyway, so I don`t ever have to worry about water all that much
pulkit Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 If methyl orange is hard to get, you could always use a home-made indicator. Red-cabbage juice does the trick.
YT2095 Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 doesn`t red cabbage juice only indicate Alkali, like Beetroot or Turmeric does though? I only ask as red cabbage is often pickled in Vinigar (an acid) and there`s no color change
pulkit Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 I have not worked with it myself because red cabbage is frightfully expensive around here. But this resource would have me believe that it does indeed change colour at an apropriate pH to be useful as an indicator in the reaction in question.
YT2095 Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 aha, that explains it the color change is far more noticable with alkali than acids as I suspected, although there is a slight change for acids cheerz
Gilded Posted September 18, 2004 Posted September 18, 2004 Heh, the red cabbage juice is probably the most basic experiment with acids/pH. I remember doing it when I was 9 or something.
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