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Author: Subject: Citric acid "burnt" at 70ºC?
Daddy
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[*] posted on 8-2-2012 at 13:21
Citric acid "burnt" at 70ºC?


My kids and I have begun again to do some chemical experiments, after having put it on the shelf for some years. So I decided to visit again this forum with our latest accidental discovery.

We tried to extract citric acid from lemon juice - only at test tube scale to begin. First we filtered the juice, then we added lime, decanted and rinsed, then added 40% H2SO4 to the residue. Since we saw no visible sign of a reaction, we boiled it gently for ten minutes.
(First question here: is heating - or a stronger concentration of the acid - actually needed, or does this reaction occur spontaneously? I had expected to observe at least a color change in the calcium compound, since gypsum (CaSO4) is normally white; but it remained grey.)
Well, after that we added some more water, decanted and left the liquid on a dish in our solar evaporator - a simple glass-covered black plywood box with a black metal tray inside. After some hours it took the consistence of a thick, yellowish, half-crystallized syrup.

Then the unforeseen happened. I had to go for an errand and left the evaporator unattended. I delayed longer than I thought. When I came back after three hours, the substance on the dish was dry (although still somewhat sticky) - and it had turned dark brown, almost black! (Most of the dark color seems to be elemental carbon.) - One day later (having it taken out of the evaporator), liquid droplets had appeared on its surface (see photo).

citric.JPG - 11kB

Now, the temperature in the evaporator box is normally around 60 to 70ºC - far below the 175º at which citric acid is supposed to decompose. May some residual H2SO4 have caused this "burning" effect (similar to what it does to sugar)? Or is citric acid sensitive to strong sunlight?
If the first case applies, how can I know or make sure that the second reaction (H2SO4 with calcium citrate) goes to completion? - We had used some 20-25% excess of lime over the stoichiometric amount in respect to H2SO4 (and in respect to the expected amount of citric acid in the juice), so there should (theoretically) no H2SO4 be left.
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Ozone
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[*] posted on 8-2-2012 at 17:39


I looks like the sulfuric acid concentrated upon drying and dehydrated your sample (leaving mostly carbon). It's similar to mixing concentrated acid with sucrose. When liberating free acid, I like to use a volatile acid like HCl (we recover aconitic acid from cane molasses). You can also try the mixed Mg/Ca salt.

I had a student burn up aconitic acid exactly the same way.

Cheers,

O3

[Edited on 9-2-2012 by Ozone]




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aaparatuss
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[*] posted on 9-2-2012 at 17:25


what did you want the H2SO4 to accomplish...

try wiki, The juice as treated with lime (CaO) to precipitate calcium citrate, which was isolated and converted back to the acid.[5]


base is better here, i would think the solution to turn milky white which Calcium salts do, then filter... I combined both Calcium Hypochlorite and Oxalic acid for a serious wood bleaching effort, but produced a milky brew

dont get me wrong playing with acids is fun
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[*] posted on 11-2-2012 at 07:22


Yes, aaparatuss, that is exactly the purpose of the H2SO4 - converting calcium citrate back to citric acid (and CaSO4 as a precipitate).
A base is better here?? I don't think so: if you had Ca(OH)2 and citric acid, then they would again neutralize each other and form calcium citrate.

To Ozone: So I was correct in my suspicion that some leftover H2SO4 was the culprit... How would you isolate the citric acid with HCl? CaCl2 is water soluble, so I would have a mix of CaCl2 and citric acid in the solution, wouldn't I?

All the sources I found indicate that using H2SO4 is the standard process. But how can I make sure that this second reaction (H2SO4 and calcium citrate) goes to completion, so that no H2SO4 remains?
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[*] posted on 11-2-2012 at 08:48


... a second thought: Or do you mean adding some NaCl so that would form HCl together with the remaining H2SO4? Would that be a meaningful way to eliminate leftover H2SO4?
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[*] posted on 15-2-2012 at 15:20


Well, I finally found this reference in another thread here:

http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/citricacid.t...

This article mentions specifically the risk of carbonizing the extracted acid during the last step, so it seems that the problem of residual H2SO4 cannot be avoided and the crystallization must be done more carefully. Also it says that the H2SO4 must be much more diluted, and several other hints. I hope to have time some day to try it again, taking into account these points.
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