Quote: Originally posted by barley81 | I left a bottle of formalin in my lab during winter. It polymerized. The white residue on the sides of the bottle was very hard. I'm not sure if
there's any formaldehyde left in solution. |
I also have a very old bottle of formalin which has been stored incorectly, in an unheated space during all seasons. There's a large amount of white
solid at the bottom, but most of the formaldehyde is still in solution.
For most uses, you can simply shake up the precipitate and use the suspension as if it were 37% formalin. The paraformaldehyde reacts in the same way
as the aqueous solution.
A simple method to determine formalin strength is to add an excess of aqueous ammonia to a weighed sample. Leave the solution to evaporate and weigh
the residue of hexamine, and from this calculate how much formaldehyde was in the weighed sample.
Paraformaldehyde also quantitatively reacts with ammonia. |