One of prior comments on SM (see http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=23 ):
Quote: Originally posted by AJKOER | OK, I an across a preparation path using available, mostly households, starting materials. To quote from Atomistry.com on HCN (link: http://carbon.atomistry.com/hydrocyanic_acid.html ):
"Bergmann has shown that when ammonia is passed over carbon heated to about 1300° C., 90 per cent, of it is converted into HCN. The reaction is
endothermic, its heat being -39,500 calories. A modification of this reaction is that of Roeder and Grunwald, who pass a mixture of ammonia, and
nitrous oxide over heated carbon, the reaction being:
2NH3 + N2O + 4C = 4HCN + H2O - 58,000 calories.
Owing to the heat of decomposition of nitrous oxide, which is endothermic, and the heat of formation of steam, it is not necessary to heat the carbon
to so high a temperature as in the former case; indeed the yield of hydrogen cyanide is nearly quantitative when the temperature of the carbon is but
450° C. "
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[Edited on 4-10-2014 by AJKOER] |
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A bit harder, try this path (see https://chemiday.com/en/reaction/3-1-0-261):
CO + NH3 --500 C, Al2O3--> HCN + H2O
"Carbon monoxide react with ammonia to produce hydrogen cyanide and water. The technical method production hydrogen cyanide. This reaction takes place
at a temperature of 500-800°C, an overpressure. In this reaction, the catalyst is can be V2O5, CeO2 Al2O3, ThO2."
Text sounds like a translation.
At such high temperatures, I would expect:
NH3 + Heat ---> .H + .NH2
based on the action of hv on ammonia (see R1 at https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/1520-0469%28197... )
Then, subsequent reactions with CO forming HCN and H2O.
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The above speculated radical mechanism is interesting, if correct, as the hydrogen atom radical can be formed at RT by the action of NaOH (or HCl) on
Aluminum metal where some .H radical could be imbued on the surface of the Aluminum. My prior related comment:
Quote: Originally posted by AJKOER |
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Next, imbue the surface of Mg or Al with the hydrogen atom radical (from the traditional nascent hydrogen generation methods based on say Al/NaOH).
One may assume that the •H radical functional behaves (per its seemingly reversible formation reaction: e- + H+ = •H ) as apparently a (e-,H+)
pair acting on ions. For an example from 'Hydrometallurgy 2008: Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium', p. 818, a commercial reductive
leaching equation, to quote:
" PbS + 2 •H = Pb + H2S (5) " (see https://books.google.com/books?id=1etfSdk55SYC&pg=PA818&... )
which I view functionally as follows:
Pb(+2)S(2-) + 2 (e-, H+) = Pb + H2S (g)
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[Edited on 4-10-2018 by AJKOER] |
So the surface .H could be further enlisted in other (unspecified) reactions with CO per above via the radical reaction:
.H + NH3 = H2 + .NH2
which are the same radicals (.H, .NH2) postulated above to be formed at high temperatures that eventually result in a HCN product.
[Edited on 9-11-2018 by AJKOER] |