Colors Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 How do you make ammonia from solid ammonium hydroxide?
jdurg Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 Solid ammonium hydroxide does not exist. Never has and never will.
akcapr Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 ammonium hydroxide is just ammonia gas in water- if try to dry it itll evaporate
akcapr Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 if you have ammonia you can get the gas just by heating it and passing the resultant gas(s) through strong H2SO4.... .. if im not mistaken.
budullewraagh Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 ammonium hydroxide doesnt exist. NH3(aq) does. use dehydrating agents
H2SO4 Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 i always thought ammonium hydroxide was a solid for some reason, but now that i think of it, ya, it would be disolved ammonia in water. for making ammonia, heat an ammonium salt with a weak alkali. I use ammonium chloride and calcium carbonate.
YT2095 Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 if you have ammonia you can get the gas just by heating it and passing the resultant gas(s) through strong H2SO4.... .. if im not mistaken. that`s a Great method for making Ammonium Sulphate (agricultural fertiliser) ))
akcapr Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 my idea was to just get rid of the water vapor in the gas
raivo Posted March 26, 2005 Posted March 26, 2005 if you have ammonia you can get the gas just by heating it and passing the resultant gas(s) through strong H2SO4.... .. if im not mistaken. It gives ammonium sulfate as YT said and process is very exothermic. Glassware that contains small amount of conc H2SO4 may break if it is exposed to ammonia gas. I once tested this with success.
YT2095 Posted March 27, 2005 Posted March 27, 2005 Silica Gell is an excellent dessicant and will not react with the ammonia, it`s also re-usable. polyacrylamide is very good too, and quite easily obtained, but you MUST allow plenty of room for expansion as it can hold up to 400x its own weight in water!
H2SO4 Posted March 27, 2005 Posted March 27, 2005 For drying ammonia gas, ive always seen calcium oxide being used.
Invader_Gir Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 I understand that solid ammonium hydroxide does not exist, but i was wondering. In school, we made NI3, after the iodine had soaked long enough we decanted the NH4OH into a beaker and set it aside. I had offered to clean it up, but the teacher said no. It was left in the fume hood for quite a while, enough for the water to evaporate. There were white crystals in there. So, what could that be?
jdurg Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 Potassium iodide. It is added to the ammonia/iodine mixture to allow the iodine to dissolve in water and form the I3(-1) ion MUCH more readily than without the potassium iodide.
Invader_Gir Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 Well...we didnt add that unless it was already in the bottle of NH4OH. BTW this wasnt on the lesson plan, we only did it because i was trying to do it at home. My teacher wanted my curiosity to be satified so we did it in class.
jdurg Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 Then I would without a doubt say that it was KI. Did your teacher do the preparation of all this? If so, it's possible that he/she has done this before so they have a premade solution of ammonia/KI. Otherwise, he/she put the KI into there without your class noticing.
Invader_Gir Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 Nope, I watched her the whole time. She got the NH4OH from a locked cupboard, the iodine from the shelf, the apparatuses (apparatusii?) needed, and put me to work. She couldnt remember how to make it, so I had to look it up. I think she said that the last time she made it was in college (52 years ago!). She called them 'Fly crackers'. I'll ask her what it was tommorow when I go to school. I was the only one that did it out of 12 people.
jdurg Posted March 28, 2005 Posted March 28, 2005 Well, there is a VERY remote possibility that it could be ammonium iodide (NH4I), but that stuff would behave pretty similarly to silver nitrate in that it darkens over time but is also VERY hygroscopic.
Invader_Gir Posted March 29, 2005 Posted March 29, 2005 Well...my teacher doesnt know what was in the bottom of the beaker. she is positive that it wasnt potassium iodide though. But if she had to guess...she would say impurities in the iodine.
palitha51 Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 How do you make ammonia from solid ammonium hydroxide? how to make 26% amonia water from solid amonia hydroxide palitha51
Gilded Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 how to make 26% amonia water from solid amonia hydroxidepalitha51 ...As mentioned many times earlier in this thread, solid ammonium hydroxide doesn't exist. NH3(aq), ammonia dissolved in water, is sometimes called ammonium hydroxide. If you want a 26% solution by mass, you can just dissolve ammonia into water until this is achieved (as ammonia is very soluble in water at room temperature), for example approximately 26g of NH3 in 74g of H2O.
YT2095 Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 you`l need to mix a Base such as NaOH and an ammonium salt such as Ammonium chloride or sulphate (don`t use the nitrate), and then heat this gently, this will give you ammonia gas which can then be dissolved in water. use an upside down funnel just below the water line to present this gas with, thereby eliminating suck-back. do it in a good fume hood also!
John Cuthber Posted July 20, 2008 Posted July 20, 2008 The by product of the reaction of ammonia and iodine is ammonium iodide. Very hygroscopic, but it might have been responsible for the crystals in very dry weather. Was the "iodine" in the bottle crystals or was it a solution? If it was a liquid then it was almost certainly in solution with KI which would explain the crystals.
kizm0 Posted November 12, 2008 Posted November 12, 2008 So if I want to make a 14% Ammonium Hydroxide Solution with Distilled H20 I would just have 86% distilled water and 14% Ammonia mixed together at room temp? I know ammonium hydroxide doesn't exist btw, but I'm using that term because my science experiment uses that term.
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