ercdndrs Posted August 4, 2011 Posted August 4, 2011 Hey all, So I am looking to make some hydrazine sulfate through the ketazine process. However, I don't have acess to the ideal ingredients so I am wondering if my subsitutions would work: 65%Calcium hypochlorite powder susbtituted for NaClO solution 10% concentrated ammonia acetone instead of 2-butanone I would carry out the reaction with excess ammonia and then distill off the dimethyl ketazine from the solution before reacting it with sulfuric acid to get hydrazine sulfate. Are there any problems with this? Thanks in advance!
hypervalent_iodine Posted August 5, 2011 Posted August 5, 2011 Would you perhaps be able to say what you want with hydrazine sulfate? The reaction you've listed is not a very nice reaction to do if you don't have experience or access to a fume hood.
ercdndrs Posted August 6, 2011 Author Posted August 6, 2011 I don't so much have any special use for the hydrazine sulfate; I just think the reaction would be interesting and good practise. In any case I could just sell the product on ebay or something. I do have acess to a large backyard, and yes I am aware of the toxic fumes. Obviously I wouldn't be trying this on a large scale, but something small just for curiosity's sake.
hypervalent_iodine Posted August 7, 2011 Posted August 7, 2011 Okay then, well then yes, it looks to me like it should be okay, but definitely practice safety. Most any aliphatic ketones should be fine with this reaction and the calcium hypochorite over the corresponding sodium salt will just mean that you produce CaCl2 instead of NaCl. The major difference will of course be in your stoicheometry.
ercdndrs Posted August 13, 2011 Author Posted August 13, 2011 Ok thank you! Have yet to conduct the experiment because I've decided against using acetone as the resulting ketazine is soluble in water and I don't want to bother with distillation of it. Will post my results as soon as I can get some MEK.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now