ammonium nitrate Posted November 22, 2012 Posted November 22, 2012 i was attempting to collect some gas from the reaction of 3HCl+Al>AlCl3+3H ((is this right?) it has a noxious odor so i always wear a mask but hydrogen i odorless?) but the reaction bubbled enough to blow a chunk of Al into the rubber tubing which then melted in the heat, how can i avoid this? the hole in the tube was coincedentaly the right size that escaping gas put newtons 3rd law in place and acid got sprayed everywhere
CaptainPanic Posted November 22, 2012 Posted November 22, 2012 First of all, the gas you produce is probably a combination of H2 (hydrogen, odorless, although very explosive) and HCl (a very strong acid). The conversion to H2 is not complete. Secondly, you probably want to rebuild your setup, so that it gets inherently more safe. Limiting your HCl flow rate will also reduce the reaction speed. Finally, if your goal is to make hydrogen, there are safer ways to do that. Electrolysis of water is probably safer.
ammonium nitrate Posted November 22, 2012 Author Posted November 22, 2012 my end goal is the hydrogen mixture, i am trying to do a comparison in reactive properties in impure gas collected using this method and hydrogen collected using Mg+2HCl>MgCl2+2H (is that right)
weiming1998 Posted November 23, 2012 Posted November 23, 2012 i was attempting to collect some gas from the reaction of 3HCl+Al>AlCl3+3H ((is this right?) it has a noxious odor so i always wear a mask but hydrogen i odorless?) but the reaction bubbled enough to blow a chunk of Al into the rubber tubing which then melted in the heat, how can i avoid this? the hole in the tube was coincedentaly the right size that escaping gas put newtons 3rd law in place and acid got sprayed everywhere Electrolysis of water is far too slow, producing only a very small amount of H2 in a few hours. If you want to prevent your rubber tubing from melting, I think you should dilute the HCl a bit so that the reaction is less vigorous and doesn't heat up as much. Using large chunks of Al also helps, as opposed to foil. To get rid of any HCl that might have mixed together with the produced H2, bubble the gas through dilute baking soda solution, then collect it.
alpha2cen Posted November 24, 2012 Posted November 24, 2012 Heat input rate + Heat creation rate = Heat output rate +Heat accumulation rate Heat creation rate = reaction rate of the reaction Heat input rate =0 Reaction rate = Heat output rate + Heat accumulation rate For the reaction heat output rate by conduction is not high, heat accumulation rate in the reactor is increased. So increased reactor temperature induces the reactants or products rapid evaporation. Heat output is mainly established by reactants and products convection. Reducing the reaction rate or increasing conductive heat transfer, by using cooling system, is a key factor to establish the reaction safely. Reactant dilution is one of the methods to reduce the reaction rate.
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