Quote: Originally posted by TheNerdyFarmer | Yesterday I decided to generate some ammonia gas for a separate project of mine. I had the whole gas generating setup built and so I mixed the
reactants and started gas generation. By the way I was making ammonia via ammonium halide salt + alkali metal hydroxide. Any way, the reaction started
and a lot of gas was coming off. There was also a good deal of moisture coming with it. Little did I notice that some (a great deal) of ammonia gas
was leaking from the tubing that I used to make the gas generating setup. Before I realized what was happening I lifted the sash of the fumehood up
and got a huge whiff of ammonia gas. I had forgotten to turn my fume hood on. I quickly turned it on and ran to the other side of the lab. I walked
over to the hood every few seconds and within 2 minutes there was no detection of ammonia gas.
This wasn't a super dangerous situation but it did give me somewhat of a scare considering that ammonia isnt the greatest stuff to inhale.
[Edited on 6-11-2017 by TheNerdyFarmer] |
I kind of like the smell of ammonia, because I've come to associate it with neutralization of HCl vapors. I did this one halogenation reaction a lot
that necessitated generating chlorine gas, and produced HCl gas. Both gases escaped from time to time, and opening my ammonia jug and squeezing it
repeatedly to get the vapors to diffuse would allow me to see where the bad vapors were coming from and stop them. It reacts with Cl2 and HCl in
midair to generate salts, which are visible like smoke.
This is clever. I have never thought of using ammonia to detect HCl. I will certainly try this in the future. Thanks for the tip!
Incidentally, if you want to generate anhydrous ammonia gas cheaply, the most effective way I know of is heating urea to about 200C. It's super easy
to control; you just turn the heat up or down. It leaves cyanuric acid residue, which you can use to make cyanates or any number of things. It's
hard to clean out of stuff, but will form isocyanuric gas at higher temperatures. |