Sciencemadness Discussion Board

40gal Muriatic acid advertised for "free"

RogueRose - 7-6-2016 at 07:49

Just curious if there is anything that could be done with 40 gals of free Muriatic acid. I know it can be used to make other acid often but is there anything that you can think of that you would do with a quantity such as this?

unionised - 7-6-2016 at 10:41

Sell it.

myristicinaldehyde - 7-6-2016 at 12:24

The acid I can get at the hardware store is shit. (Well, if it for free, perhaps you can send 1L samples :P)

I'd buy it

[Edited on 2016-6-7 by myristicinaldehyde]

RogueRose - 7-6-2016 at 12:36

Quote: Originally posted by myristicinaldehyde  
The acid I can get at the hardware store is shit. (Well, if it for free, perhaps you can send 1L samples :P)

I'd buy it

[Edited on 2016-6-7 by myristicinaldehyde]


Well this is "free" so I'm a little cautious and wondering if it is polluted.

unionised - 7-6-2016 at 13:00

At about 20% HCl by weight it distils nicely.

RogueRose - 7-6-2016 at 13:23

Here is what I am thinking: I'm curious if it is true 31.45% HCl or some lesser 12, 15 or 15% HCl. Please excuse this remedial question as I know the jist of some of this, but verifying it all before this dissappears (business giving it away) may be difficult.

So, can I purify it and concentrate it by bubbling in more Cl?

Next access to Ca(NO3)2, KNO3 and possibly NaNO3 (if the CalNit is converted to NaNO3) isn't much of a problem.

Once the HCl is purified and concentrated I can add a nitrate to get nitric acid

Chlorates may be possible if that would be good to make an acid. Perchlorates are a little more difficult to aquire.

H2SO4 would be my ideal acid next to Nitric or Perchloric so what about adding ammonium sulfate? in the end I shoul have ammonium chloride and H2SO4 in a dilute form, correct (if it is 32% HCl, then I would have about 32% H2SO4 and I would be happy with the ammonium chloride that is left behind.

I am looking for a good source of pure CaCl2 and I have a lot of CaCO3, so I should get CaCl2 + H2O + CO2, correct?

So my biggest question. Let's say I clean it with a SUPER fine filter like .05 micron (yeah I know I hear ya'all) would that help remove any yellow iron from it?

Metacelsus - 7-6-2016 at 14:38

Adding a nitrate salt to HCl gives you a complex mixture akin to aqua regia. You can't make pure nitric acid this way.

Likewise, how do you plan to separate the ammonium chloride from the HCl + ammonium sulfate?

Finally, the iron would be dissolved, and thus impossible to filter out. Distillation would work, however.

Dr.Bob - 7-6-2016 at 17:31

I used to get chemicals free all of the time from people who needed to get rid of them and did not want to pay someone to dispose of them as waste. I would buy it, but only if I could store and use that much safely or find others to share in it.

Richard3050 - 7-6-2016 at 18:48

Now all you need to find is a bunch of free zinc and you can revamp your supply of free zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Not sure why you need that but whatever works. I am also curious where you would plan to store 40 gallons of acid.

RogueRose - 7-6-2016 at 21:24

Quote: Originally posted by Richard3050  
Now all you need to find is a bunch of free zinc and you can revamp your supply of free zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Not sure why you need that but whatever works. I am also curious where you would plan to store 40 gallons of acid.


Same place I keep my 400 gallons of H2O2:P J/k!

RogueRose - 9-6-2016 at 06:33

That H2O2 was a joke, it is only H2O unfortunately, that extra 2 makes a little difference doesn't it.

I've seen some methods to get pure HCl (closed tupperware container w/ DH2O container inside). This will give 1/2 the concentration and I've heard the azeotrope is about 20%.

If distillation is used will it off-gas the Cl first allowing it to be bubbled into a solution of DH2O?

Also, if distillation is used and once liquid starts coming over I am guessing I am going to be getting the 20% azeotrope coming over (after the initial Cl gases have stopped being emmited). Will any contaminates come over with the gases like when essential oils or distilled spirits (liquor) brings over flavor?



Texium - 9-6-2016 at 08:24

Well, first of all, it's not "Cl" gas, it's HCl gas. Hydrochloric acid is HCl gas dissolved in water. There really shouldn't be any other volatile contaminants, so distilling it should leave you with quite pure azeotropic acid. The main contaminant that will likely be there is iron, and none of it will carry over.

Also, regarding making nitric acid or sulfuric acid using your hydrochloric acid, neither is feasible. As previously stated, mixing hydrochloric acid with nitric acid or a nitrate salt will produce aqua regia, and once you've made it there's no going back. Adding hydrochloric acid to a sulfate salt will appear to do absolutely nothing. This is because there is nothing driving the equilibrium to either side. As there's not really a way to remove ammonium chloride or sulfuric acid from the mixture without removing ammonium sulfate or hydrochloric acid as well, you won't be able to get anything out if it. The reverse reaction however is very doable, as HCl can be distilled from the mixture as the only volatile product, which will shift the equilibrium to be favoring HCl.

RogueRose - 9-6-2016 at 08:42

Quote: Originally posted by zts16  
Well, first of all, it's not "Cl" gas, it's HCl gas. Hydrochloric acid is HCl gas dissolved in water. There really shouldn't be any other volatile contaminants, so distilling it should leave you with quite pure azeotropic acid. The main contaminant that will likely be there is iron, and none of it will carry over.

Also, regarding making nitric acid or sulfuric acid using your hydrochloric acid, neither is feasible. As previously stated, mixing hydrochloric acid with nitric acid or a nitrate salt will produce aqua regia, and once you've made it there's no going back. Adding hydrochloric acid to a sulfate salt will appear to do absolutely nothing. This is because there is nothing driving the equilibrium to either side. As there's not really a way to remove ammonium chloride or sulfuric acid from the mixture without removing ammonium sulfate or hydrochloric acid as well, you won't be able to get anything out if it. The reverse reaction however is very doable, as HCl can be distilled from the mixture as the only volatile product, which will shift the equilibrium to be favoring HCl.


Thank you for the explinations. I read so many posts here over the months and get mixed up as to what is possible vs what people "say" is possible.

If the goal is to get pure HCl w/o any impurities (the standard yellow color or even a slight green tint - iron or possibly copper maybe??) I've read that putting a gallon of HCl in an open container/tub along with another container/tub with a gallon of DH2O will give pure HCl in the DH2O container - All must be in an air tight container.

What I'm wondering is if doing something like distilling or simple heating and piping vapors into a column of DH2O to bubble up through.

I see that BP increases as HCl content decreases.

What is the best and also easiest (2 options?) to get a high concentration (30%+) of pure HCl from the muriatic.

I have use for lower concentration HCl from say 5-12% and it doesn't need to be pure, so if the HCl could be evap'd and re-absorbed leaving the lower concentration as the last 5-12%, that would be the best alternative. Can this be done with a heat distill/evap setup with a bubbler into DH2O?

Deathunter88 - 10-6-2016 at 02:43

Assuming your muriatic acid is above 20% I think the following is best:
Dilute some of your acid to a concentration below 20%.
Distill the acid and keep the fraction boiling 107-110˚C (the 20% azeotrope)
Put your distilled acid in a graduated cylinder.
Put the raw >20% acid in a flask with a tube leading into the graduated cylinder with pure acid.
Heat the flask with raw acid until its boiling point reaches 108˚C.
Distill the resulting lower concentration raw acid and repeat the process.

RogueRose - 10-6-2016 at 04:50

Quote: Originally posted by Deathunter88  
Assuming your muriatic acid is above 20% I think the following is best:
Dilute some of your acid to a concentration below 20%.
Distill the acid and keep the fraction boiling 107-110˚C (the 20% azeotrope)
Put your distilled acid in a graduated cylinder.
Put the raw >20% acid in a flask with a tube leading into the graduated cylinder with pure acid.
Heat the flask with raw acid until its boiling point reaches 108˚C.
Distill the resulting lower concentration raw acid and repeat the process.


Thanks for the suggestions! That is kind of what I was thinking after reading many posts related to HCl.

I did come across one post that said that by adding CaCl2 (some said MgCl2 is even better) to HCl that this will release a lot of the HCl gas and can be taken down past the 20% azeotrope. I think this process is exothermic so an icebath is necessary.

I'm still trying to figure out how to deal with such-back and I see the funnel method is supposed to work pretty well.

RogueRose - 10-6-2016 at 05:36

Quote: Originally posted by Deathunter88  
Assuming your muriatic acid is above 20% I think the following is best:
Dilute some of your acid to a concentration below 20%.
Distill the acid and keep the fraction boiling 107-110˚C (the 20% azeotrope)
Put your distilled acid in a graduated cylinder.
Put the raw >20% acid in a flask with a tube leading into the graduated cylinder with pure acid. Heat the flask with raw acid until its boiling point reaches 108˚C.
Distill the resulting lower concentration raw acid and repeat the process.


When the tube is in the cylinder should it be submerged and have some kind of bubbler in it or what is the best way to do this?

Arg0nAddict - 10-6-2016 at 06:28

Quote:

I'm still trying to figure out how to deal with such-back and I see the funnel method is supposed to work pretty well.


Easy problem to solve, if its a sealed glass setup use a suckback stop, its like a one way valve.

If you don't want to buy anything you can use empty flask in the center. This is how I bubble a few gases anyway; H2S, chlorine and acetylene...

Don't just use a open tube because you will waste way more gas with such little surface area. You want tons of small bubbles going slowly. I have found that a fish tank bubble maker going into a graduated cylinder works best because the bubbles can rise and be exposed more.

A bit of warning I am all self taught, so im sorry if I am not using the right terminology here.

Pro Tip: Don't seal the last piece of glassware, I had a cyanide volcano happen on accident. Well I loosely set a stopper there so the glass would rub but it sealed itself.


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