JerryK Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 This forum has been very helpful and intresting, thanks to all. I do have another question. I have been able to make potassium chlorate from bleach and potassium chloride, I was wondering what the procedure is to make Potassium Perchlorate? If possible what the proper weights for the chemicals and solutions are. Thanks Again!
Gilded Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 I'd imagine heating the chlorate a bit (not too much, or it will decompose in to potassium chloride) would make it perchlorate. About 200 C / 400 F, perhaps?
budullewraagh Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 woah woah. how do you oxidize hypochlorites to chlorates using chlorides?????
Gilded Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 "woah woah. how do you oxidize hypochlorites to chlorates using chlorides?????" What? I didn't say anything about USING chlorides. I just said it can decompose into NaCl if heated too much, which is unwanted. Edit: Or did you mean the bleach-NaCl -> NaClO3? I think I'm tired.
JerryK Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 Take one gallon of bleach, place it in the container, and begin heating it. While this solution heats, weigh out 63 grams of potassium chloride and add this to the bleach being heated. Constantly check the solution being heated with the hydrometer, and boil until you get a reading of 1.3. If using a battery hydrometer, boil until you read a FULL charge. Take the solution and allow it to cool in a refrigerator until it is between room temperature and 0 degrees Celcius. Filter out the crystals that have formed and save them. Boil this solution again and cool as before. Filter and save the crystals. Take the crystals that have been saved, and mix them with distilled water in the following proportions: 56 grams per 100 milliliters distilled water. Heat this solution until it boils and allow to cool. Filter the solution and save the crystals that form upon cooling. This process of purification is called "fractional crystalization". These crystals should be relatively pure potassium chlorate. Is this not correct??
RICHARDBATTY Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 What do you want potassium perchlorate for.
budullewraagh Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 Is this not correct?? sorry man but all you have is a mixture of sodium and calcium hypochlorite and potassium chloride.
budullewraagh Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 What do you want potassium perchlorate for. it's a good oxidizer
budullewraagh Posted November 25, 2004 Posted November 25, 2004 on second thought, there may be a double replacement reaction. unfortunately i have yet to find an activity series of monatomic AND polyatomic anions
JerryK Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 The crystals that come of this mixture look like diamonds. Here is what I did after the crystals were dried: 2 parts Potassium Chlorate (The dried crystals) 1 part Sulfur 1 part Al Just putting a spec of this stuff on a hard surface and hitting it lightly with a hammer made a BIG BLAST! (So what is this stuff if its not Potassium Chlorate?) What I was wondering if there is a way to make potassium perchlorate - to make a more stable flash powder.
YT2095 Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 Take one gallon of bleach' date=' place it in the container, and beginheating it. While this solution heats, weigh out 63 grams of potassium chloride and add this to the bleach being heated. Constantly check the solution being heated with the hydrometer, and boil until you get a reading of 1.3. If using a battery hydrometer, boil until you read a FULL charge. Take the solution and allow it to cool in a refrigerator until it is between room temperature and 0 degrees Celcius. Filter out the crystals that have formed and save them. Boil this solution again and cool as before. Filter and save the crystals. Take the crystals that have been saved, and mix them with distilled water in the following proportions: 56 grams per 100 milliliters distilled water. Heat this solution until it boils and allow to cool. Filter the solution and save the crystals that form upon cooling. This process of purification is called "fractional crystalization". These crystals should be relatively pure potassium chlorate. Is this not correct??[/quote'] it`s a long winded method, but it does work, I`ve done the same myself in the past, until I found an easier way
boris_73 Posted November 26, 2004 Author Posted November 26, 2004 The crystals that come of this mixture look like diamonds. Here is what I did after the crystals were dried:2 parts Potassium Chlorate (The dried crystals) 1 part Sulfur 1 part Al Just putting a spec of this stuff on a hard surface and hitting it lightly with a hammer made a BIG BLAST! (So what is this stuff if its not Potassium Chlorate?) What I was wondering if there is a way to make potassium perchlorate - to make a more stable flash powder. you should not add sulphur to any chlorates it makes the mixture unstable
Gilded Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 "it`s a long winded method, but it does work, I`ve done the same myself in the past, until I found an easier way :)" Perhaps you would like to share the easier method?
boris_73 Posted November 26, 2004 Author Posted November 26, 2004 there is an easier method buy it 500g for £7.00 Edit: £5.90 from http://www.labpakchemicals.co.uk
Gilded Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 "there is an easier method buy it 500g for £7.00" [nitpicking]OR you could buy 500g for £5.90 at Labpak Chemicals![/nitpicking] Anyway, making stuff is more fun than buying stuff. Unless it's the "make one mistake and die" type of making process.
boris_73 Posted November 26, 2004 Author Posted November 26, 2004 yes i do enjoy making my own chemicals but when the cost making it out weigh the costs buying it ill just buy it
YT2095 Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 make it 1`st regardless of the cost, just for the experience, after that whatever`s cheapest that`s how I like to do it.
boris_73 Posted November 26, 2004 Author Posted November 26, 2004 what is your easier method then YT because i would like to make some for the experience
YT2095 Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 there`s a multitude of ways (almost as many as there are compounds containing K and N and O). if I don`t buy the stuff as it is, try NaNO3 and KCL or potassium sulphate from the same gardening shop ya bought the sodium nitrate from the REAL hard way, is get a Huge bucket, put in old BBQ ashes and and even cig ash, add some pee pees and horse crap (manure), leave it outdoors over winter (I do). then dry the liquid in a shallow tray in the sunshine, collect the crystals. keep doing that till all the liquids used up (I make mine in a plastic barrel 4 foot high and 2 foot diameter) and you have a bag of crystals. it`s all just a case of purifying them after
boris_73 Posted November 26, 2004 Author Posted November 26, 2004 oh yes that has just reminded my dont buy potassium nitrate from http://www.gardenchemicals.co.uk i payed £9.50 for 500g plus postage so about £12 for 500g of potassium nitrate instead get it of http://www.labpakchemicals.co.uk for about £3 for 500g that way you can get 3 times as much you have to include postage thats why it's not four times as much, Anyway YT how well does the bleach method work IE how much crystals will you get and how easy is the NaNO3 and KCL method i am guessing you get a bit more then the amount of NaNO3 you use
YT2095 Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 Bleach!???? for KNO3? you`ve lost me there! for a start NEVER mix nitrates and chlorates!
Gilded Posted November 26, 2004 Posted November 26, 2004 That bleach thing was about KClO3, I think. Even though this seems to be the KNO3 thread. Weird.
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