Hello fellow pyrotechnicans, i just wonder if anyone could help me with a guide how-to-make for example Strontium peroxde?
Cheers
Can anyone aid in the synthetis of Ba/Sr Peroxide?
Started by scientific.pyrotechnics, Jun 27 2009 04:27 PM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 27 June 2009 - 04:27 PM
#2
Posted 28 June 2009 - 05:57 AM
I'm afraid that burning Sr metal in an oxigen atmosfere is not quite the cheapest way to make it, but unfortunatelly it may be the only practical way.
#3
Posted 28 June 2009 - 12:59 PM
Also, if we talk about these burning methods, you can by theory Melt Strontium in a test tube and bubble the molten metal with pure oxygen gas.
Cheers
Cheers
#4
Posted 29 June 2009 - 05:02 AM
Here is the synthesis I have. Strontium can probably be substituted for the barium.
Barium Peroxide
Preparation: Prepare a solution of 47g of barium chloride dihydrate in 250ml water. To this solution add 250ml 30% H2O2. Add 200ml 24% aqueous ammonia solution with stirring. Let the mixture stand until no more precipitate forms. Decant the clear portion, and replace the liquid with fresh water. Repeat the decanting 2-3 times. Filter on a Buchner funnel and wash with water. Dry in a porcelain cup at 50-70°C, occasionally spreading the powder with a spatula. After the product turns into a crumbly mass, increase the temperature to 75-80°C. Store the completely dried product in a tightly sealed bottle. Yield: 55-60g of the octahydrate. The product can be further dried to the hemihydrate at 130°C. The completely anhydrous peroxide can be obtained above 200°C, but a partial loss of oxygen will occur.
Barium Peroxide
Preparation: Prepare a solution of 47g of barium chloride dihydrate in 250ml water. To this solution add 250ml 30% H2O2. Add 200ml 24% aqueous ammonia solution with stirring. Let the mixture stand until no more precipitate forms. Decant the clear portion, and replace the liquid with fresh water. Repeat the decanting 2-3 times. Filter on a Buchner funnel and wash with water. Dry in a porcelain cup at 50-70°C, occasionally spreading the powder with a spatula. After the product turns into a crumbly mass, increase the temperature to 75-80°C. Store the completely dried product in a tightly sealed bottle. Yield: 55-60g of the octahydrate. The product can be further dried to the hemihydrate at 130°C. The completely anhydrous peroxide can be obtained above 200°C, but a partial loss of oxygen will occur.
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