Edited by Bonny, 30 August 2007 - 05:54 PM.
Making Srno3 From Nh4no3?
#1
Posted 30 August 2007 - 05:36 PM
#2
Posted 30 August 2007 - 06:07 PM
#3
Posted 30 August 2007 - 06:18 PM
it can be done sure, but you will need heating for the reaction, that will breakdown the ammonium carbonate to CO2 and NH3.
How would I go about this though? Be nice if it was as easy as stirring dry ingredients together...then heating.I'm assuming water can't be used, as the NH4NO3 would react with the water right away. No idea how to start this one.
#4
Posted 30 August 2007 - 07:00 PM
it will Get Cold sure, as the ions separate it`s quite endothermic (hence cold packs) , but it doesn`t alter it chemically
then you add the SrCO3, when the liquid has warmed up a little (room temp is fine).
make sure the sr carb is in excess too, then you Must heat the liquid, that will break down the Ammonium carb into a gas.
make sure you still have unreacted Sr Carb in the pot though! you don`t want ANY unreacted AN in there.
when you cant smell any ammonia coming off you`re about good to go
you`ll need to add a some more water, and then Filter this soln, heat again to reduce the water a little and then just evap as normal until crystals form.
slow evap is Good too, you get bigger crystals and can see all the great shapes they make, Sr(NO3)2 is one of the neatest looking crystaline formS (yes plural) that I`v seen from such simple ingredients.
#5
Posted 30 August 2007 - 07:35 PM
why would it react?
it will Get Cold sure, as the ions separate it`s quite endothermic (hence cold packs) , but it doesn`t alter it chemically
then you add the SrCO3, when the liquid has warmed up a little (room temp is fine).
make sure the sr carb is in excess too, then you Must heat the liquid, that will break down the Ammonium carb into a gas.
make sure you still have unreacted Sr Carb in the pot though! you don`t want ANY unreacted AN in there.
when you cant smell any ammonia coming off you`re about good to go
you`ll need to add a some more water, and then Filter this soln, heat again to reduce the water a little and then just evap as normal until crystals form.
slow evap is Good too, you get bigger crystals and can see all the great shapes they make, Sr(NO3)2 is one of the neatest looking crystaline formS (yes plural) that I`v seen from such simple ingredients.
I guess I was thinking the cold was the AN reacting with the water... Hopefully try this one in the next week or so. Thanks
#6
Posted 07 September 2007 - 05:34 PM
2NH4NO3 + SrCO3 = Sr(NO3)2 + (NH4)2CO3 is this correct? Trying to calculate weight (ratios) of NH4NO3 and SrCO3 to use but need to know if reaction is right first.
Then when heat is applied:
(NH4)2CO3---> 2NH3 + CO2 +H2O ??? I was having a hard time trying to balance w/o the water...
Edited by Bonny, 07 September 2007 - 05:38 PM.
#7
Posted 08 September 2007 - 09:15 AM
for instance if you had strontium nitrate and added ammonium carbonate, you would get Ammonium nitrate and strontium carbonate Very easily, almost instantly at room temp, that is the direction the reaction Wants to go naturally.
you have to Force it backwards with a lot of heat, this will drive off the volatile Ammonia gas, and with That out of the equasion the reaction progresses in the direction you want it to quite nicely
it would have been Much easier using strontium Hydroxide or Oxide even.
#8
Posted 11 September 2007 - 07:14 PM
http://www.sciencema...;page=1#pid1002
It's surprisingly simple. I haven't tried it with strontium, but it does work with barium carbonate.
#9
Posted 12 September 2007 - 07:39 AM
#10
Posted 20 September 2007 - 05:04 PM
2NH4NO3 + SrCO3 ----> Sr(NO3)2
160g + 148g----> 211g + (NH4)2CO3...
The SrCO3 is from a ceramic shop, so not likely too pure... maybe I should increase by about 10 or 15% to ensure excess to complete the reaction.
#11
Posted 20 September 2007 - 05:22 PM
a Gallon of it for instance would need a day to boil (outdoors of course) and regular topping up with water.
it Is Doable, but it`s hard work!
so try a small amount 1`st, and keep the carbonate in excess, it`s the AN traces you don`t want!, the Carbonate is mostly insoluble anyway and so after filtering it`s negligible
#12
Posted 28 September 2007 - 02:36 PM
#13
Posted 28 September 2007 - 03:59 PM
#14
Posted 28 September 2007 - 04:00 PM
trying it with Barium would be a nightmare! it wouldn`t be worth even trying, Sr is pain in the ass, Ba is even worse!
OK thanks.I'll scratch that idea then... will need to get or learn how to make HNO3 to produce more barium nitrate.
#15
Posted 28 September 2007 - 05:43 PM
AKA HCl Hydrochloric acid.
convert the BaCO3 to BaCl2, then at least it`s Soluble, then you can use it to make Ba(NO3)2 and ammonium chloride.
that`s another way around it
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