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Author: Subject: Difference between nitrates and chlorates? and nitrates/chlorates with different cations?
bolbol
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 14:35
Difference between nitrates and chlorates? and nitrates/chlorates with different cations?


I know that when these chemicals are mixed with coal, sugar, or whatever that burns, they give the extra O2 for combustion and boost up everything but I want to know if theres any difference between them at all.

the chemicals I want to know about are:

NaNO3
KNO3
NaClO3
KClO3

I made some sodium nitrate the other day and when I mixed it with sugar, the burning was a bit less strong than the KNO3+sugar mixture that I had done before this.
But then again I tried doing it with red phosphorus. I made a line of red P and another line near it that had a small amount of NaNO3 and when I burned them the line containing the oxidizer burnt in less than half a second with a really bright flash while the red P line was still burning after the smoke of the first line was out.

I would be interested to try this same method with the other 3 chemicals that ive listed to do a comparison but just wondering if it would be a waste of time&money or I could actually get different results
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 16:46


Chlorates are more powerful oxidizers than nitrates, this is partly because chlorates can give up all three oxygen atoms, while nitrates cannot. Theoretically, the cation shouldn't make a difference, but the sodium salts are hygroscopic while the potassium salts are not, so traces of water in the oxidizer can cause a slower burn. A mixture with red P will most certainly burn faster than one with sugar.
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bolbol
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 19:53


I see, and in that case perchlorates are even stronger right?

So if there was no water involved KNO3, NaNO3, or even RbNO3 would work the exact same way if the quantity used was the same in case of moles of anion involved
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 23:30


Yes, I don't think it matters what you use as the cation.

Chlorates are actually more reactive than perchlorates because in a chlorate, the Chlorine has a pair of valence electrons left unpaired, whereas in a perchlorate the extra oxygen atom takes that spot.

From Wikipedia:
"The greater reactivity of chlorate is typical – perchlorates are kinetically poorer oxidants. Chlorate produces chloric acid, which is highly unstable and can lead to premature ignition of the composition. Correspondingly, perchloric acid is quite stable."




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bolbol
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 23:32


Oh... well I've read a lot about perchlorates being scary especially the heavy metal ones.. so I thought it was due to the oxidizing properties
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 23:41


If you ever get your hands on chlorates, DO NOT MIX CHLORATES WITH RED P. You will regret doing that. Such a mix almost certainly will set off while you are still fiddling with it.

Chlorates are much more reactive than either perchlorates or nitrates. I would say that in pyrotechnic mixtures reactivity of perchlorates is comparable to reactivity of nitrates. If you mix red P with perchlorate (e.g. KClO4) then the mix can be ignited easily and it burns with a nice flash and a WHOOMP sound.

Perchlorates are not scary at all, as long as they are ionic. Covalent perchlorates (e.g. anhydrous HClO4 or organic perchlorate esters) are extremely dangerous, but you'll never encounter them in an amateur/home setting.




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Volanschemia
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 23:44


Quote: Originally posted by bolbol  
Oh... well I've read a lot about perchlorates being scary especially the heavy metal ones.. so I thought it was due to the oxidizing properties


I've never heard of perchlorates being any more dangerous than their chlorate counterpart. Obviously something like Lead Perchlorate (if that even exists!) would be more dangerous than potassium perchlorate, but I've heard the opposite if you're talking about comparing chlorate and perchlorate with the same cation.




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bolbol
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[*] posted on 26-1-2015 at 23:49


Well that sounds scary but now that uve said it... its tempting lol

The mix of Red P and nitrate that i ignited I got no sound out of it just a quick flash like gunpowder burning and it was a bit less intense than magnesium burning.
I'll definitely have to try the red P + perchlorate mix though.

It was a long time ago on reddit that I was talking about the potential use of Silver perchlorate/copper perchlorate for electrolysis purifying of sterling silver when everyone said that it was an explosive hazard, now that I think of it tho reddit people have always been trollish and oversensitive
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[*] posted on 27-1-2015 at 04:03


Quote: Originally posted by bolbol  
I know that when these chemicals are mixed with coal, sugar, or whatever that burns, they give the extra O2 for combustion and boost up everything .....


If one where somehow able to safely combine the moist NaNO3 with "whatever that burns", which could include any compound that reacts explosively, or nearly so, with water forming a flammable gas (which IS highly dangerous and should never be actually performed), one would probably change their opinion on the normal drag that water presents. The mixture of the flammable vapors together with oxygen released from heating of the NaNO3 could detonate or be ignited providing an oxygen boost to a fuel air mixture. Unexpected is the extreme temperature, as I noted in another thread on N2O, that such mixtures can achieve.

Be careful on mixing chemicals.

[Edited on 27-1-2015 by AJKOER]
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