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Author: Subject: freebasing hydroxylamine
vertexrocketry
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[*] posted on 16-2-2025 at 15:11
freebasing hydroxylamine


i have some hydroxylamine sulfate and i need to freebase it to make pure hydroxylamine

sciencemaddness wiki says that you can make hydroxylamine from the sulfate by adding liquid ammonia



do you think i could just freebase it with hydroxide like in nilered's video
or even better a double displacement with calcium nitrate
Ca(NO3​)2​+(NH3​OH)2​SO4​→CaSO4​↓+2NH3​OHNO3​

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaTGCMixxKU&t=210s

or is liquid ammonia or butoxide(wikipedia) the only way?????


[Edited on 17-2-2025 by vertexrocketry]






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[*] posted on 16-2-2025 at 21:35


Hydroxylamine’s conjugate acid pKa is only ~6 so hydroxide should be more than sufficient if you are trying to make an aqueous solution. Even carbonate should work fine. The liquid ammonia procedure is for isolating pure hydroxylamine rather than an aqueous solution.

Read up on pKa. It'll save you a lot of questions and frustration in the future.




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vertexrocketry
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[*] posted on 16-2-2025 at 21:54


ok thanks





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[*] posted on 1-3-2025 at 17:27


Pure hydroxylamine is not stable, as I recollect. In 30 years of chemistry I have never isolated it, and been told not to. For almost every reaction, I have used a salt and then added it to a reaction (such as an organic acid to make an amide), then added the reagent (amide coupling reagent) and then carefully added a base to free the amine slowly. Typically triethylamine, Hunig's base, pyridine, or similar are all fine. In some the hydroxlamine salt was added to Aqueous base (NnaOH works fine), and then extracted with organic solvent, DCM is ideal, and then further reacted, but I have never isolated the free hydroxylamine.

If you have a specific goal, we can maybe provide more ideas, but I would not try to isolate the amine.
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[*] posted on 6-3-2025 at 01:01


i am converting hydroxylamine sulfate to hydroxylammonium nitrate to make hipep microthrusters





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[*] posted on 6-3-2025 at 12:36


The free base NH2OH only is stable at low concentration in aqueous solution.

If you want hydroxylammonium nitrate, you do not need to first create free hydroxylamine.

You could dissolve your hydroxylammonium sulfate in water and add a solution of barium nitrate to it. Barium nitrate is easy to obtain.
Barium sulfate precipitates and a solution of hydroxylammonium nitrate remains behind.

Barium nitrate is not that well soluble in water, but the sulfate is extremely insoluble in water. So, even from the fairly dilute solutions you have to work with, you can precipitate all barium and can get a dilute solution of hydroxyl ammonium nitrate. You should boil this down to make it more concentrated.

Getting the dry salt from this is another challenge. I expect hydroxyl ammonium nitrate to be very very hygroscopic. The wiki page on this tells that the pure salt is somewhat unstable. Commercially it is handled as a solution. In the past it is used for experiments with rocket fuel. Apparently these were not really succesful, otherwise we would have heard more of it.




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6-3-2025 at 16:10
vertexrocketry
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[*] posted on 6-3-2025 at 21:36


i have a vacuum desiccator to dry it
i will use the barium nitrate method :)






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[*] posted on 27-3-2025 at 08:44


As was already mentioned hydroxylamine is not stable, it can even lead to explosions. There were reported accidents. Trying to isolate it is never really necessary though and its salts are safe to handle.

[Edited on 27-3-2025 by Osmiridium]
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[*] posted on 27-3-2025 at 18:34


Quote: Originally posted by vertexrocketry  
i am converting hydroxylamine sulfate to hydroxylammonium nitrate to make hipep microthrusters


I had been thinking of making hydroxylamine nitrate by reacting nitric acid with nitromethane, for hipep. Its still on my to do list.
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