I have spoken occasionally with Indians (from India) and as a rule they addressed me as Sir, Dear Sir, with such formality that made me feel as an
aged wise man, rather than the obnoxious old fart that I am. It's cultural, respect for the elders etc.
Anyway. @Romix, correct me if I'm wrong. You mixed the ashes with water, filtered the suspension, then reacted the solids with vinegar. After that,
you added potassium hydroxide to increase the pH and precipitate whatever it was that could be precipitated. Finally, you used an alkaline carbonate,
sodium carbonate probably, and it was now that something more precipitated.
That's odd. It looks like calcium hydroxide but you say that there were always ounces (tens of grams) of it, no matter from what plant the ashes came.
It is neither aluminum hydroxide nor silica because they wouldn't precipitate with carbonate in alkaline solution; there is plenty silica in ashes and
only traces of aluminum. Magnesium hydroxide is practically insoluble. Barium hydroxide is quite soluble: about 86 g/L for the octahydrate; the
problem is that there wouldn't be that much barium in a plant.
Do you have some sodium sulfate? If so, you can repeat the process, this time adding sodium sulfate instead of potassium hydroxide, so you can see if
it really is calcium that is precipitating or something else. |