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Author: Subject: Synthesis of Nickel Sulfate
Arthur Dent
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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 05:25
Synthesis of Nickel Sulfate


I have a question about the synthesis of Nickel Sulfate...

Recently I have prepared successfully a good quantity of Copper Sulfate using the good old technique of gently heating telephone wire in sulfuric acid, and adding dropwise a bit of H2O2...

So I figured that the chemistry of Nickel must be similar, so I prepared a beaker filled with pieces of nickel (pre-1980 canadian dimes) with H2SO4, heating it gently and adding small quantities of H2O2... but oddly, instead of getting a nice clear greenish solution, I get a very pale green, milky solution... it bubbles lightly, but it looks like a lot of suspended particles.

The chemistry indicates that one of the techniques to produce Nickel Sulfate is to treat nickel with H2SO4. My sulfuric acid is pretty clean and clear, and my nickel is 99.9% pure, so I am curious if I should leave this for a while and it will work or am I missing something?

Included is a pix of the copper sulfate I prepared last week. Nice crystals! :)

IMG_2335.jpg - 1.5MB




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fx-991ex
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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 06:29


The anhydrous form is yellow, different hydrate will be blue or green.
I just made some 2 days ago with H2SO4 and 20%H2O2, same thing happened. First was a white/yellow precipitate and it turned green after some time(probably because of the water from the H2O2). It was very slow, i added KNO3 to speed it up as am after the nickel nitrate(No nitric acid around, used everything i have and too lazy to make more).

I used pre 2000 canadian quarter, they should be 99.9% nickel.

Here is a quote from the nickel compound wiki:
There is also an anhydrous form, a dihydrate and a tetrahydrate, the last two crystallised from sulfuric acid. The hexahydrate has two forms, a blue tetragonal form, and a green monoclinic form, with a transition temperature around 53 °C.[19] The heptahydrate crystallises from water below 31.5 above this blue hexhydrate forms, and above 53.3 the green form.

[Edited on 11-6-2023 by fx-991ex]

[Edited on 11-6-2023 by fx-991ex]

[Edited on 11-6-2023 by fx-991ex]
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Arthur Dent
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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 06:53


Thank you FX!

Then i'll just let the mixture simmer slowly at ambient temperature over this week and hope I see a change in color. Using H2O2 as oxidizer usually speeds up the process but I guess Nickel is a bit more capricious. I'd love to be able to generate Nickel sulfate crystals as nice as the CuSO4 crystals i've made last week.

:D




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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 08:13


I used 2 quarter about 5 gram each with 5 ml H2SO4 and 10-15 drop of H2O2, after 2 or 3 days only 0.21grams was removed from the quarter(around 0.5G of NiSO4).
Will work if you need only a very small amount and have a lot of time.
Should probably use the electrolysis route. This is what i did last time i made nickel acetate for electro-plating.

[Edited on 11-6-2023 by fx-991ex]
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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 09:27


Once you have nickel suphate, you can also make double salts such as (NH4)2Ni(SO4)2*6H2O. Very pretty.



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Bedlasky
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[*] posted on 11-6-2023 at 15:00


What concentration of H2SO4 did you used?
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Arthur Dent
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[*] posted on 12-6-2023 at 16:59


"What concentration of H2SO4 did you used?"

Technical, around 96%, very clear.
After three days, no change, solution is cloudy light green, nickel pieces are dark gray, doesn't seem to be any activity, maybe the metal has been passivated. I'll try to simmer it at low heat tomorrow, and maybe add a bit of peroxide again.




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[*] posted on 13-6-2023 at 00:07


You can dissolve copper in ammonium persulfate water solution. Does persulfate work for nickel also?

[Edited on 13-6-2023 by teodor]
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[*] posted on 13-6-2023 at 20:11


Concentrated H2SO4 isn't very good in dissolving metals. Usually metals get passivated by conc. H2SO4. Try to dissolve nickel in dilute H2SO4, this reaction will be much faster.
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[*] posted on 15-6-2023 at 06:11


Concentrated H2SO4 reacts pretty fast with HOT nickel metal (200C + ), and this is easier to get heating nickel pieces in flame, but the problem of H2SO4 is that it is always being reduced by metals, so the reaction produces H2S.

[Edited on 15-6-2023 by teodor]
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[*] posted on 15-6-2023 at 09:26


I don’t know if this will work or not but what about oxidation of nickel metal via electrolysis serving as the anode. You could use battery electrolyte sulfuric acid, a lead cathode and nickel as the anode. Just go until it starts to plate onto the cathode. Then boil the resulting solution to concentrate it. The strong sulfuric acid should force the nickel sulfate to crystallize. Especially in an ice bath.



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[*] posted on 23-6-2023 at 02:09


I would try to make smaller pieces from the coins (if possible).
I used nickel powder + sulfuric acid in the past, and it reacts quite fast and vigorously.
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[*] posted on 23-6-2023 at 06:23


I produced some nickel sulfate this week, although my procedure might not be ideal..

I placed a a 60g chunk of Aliexpress purity nickel in a beaker, I then added 100ml of 80% H2SO4 and then 100ml of 12% hydrogen peroxide solution.

The reaction was really very slow but over a period of 3 days I eventually got a very dark blue/green solution which started to precipitate out crystals.

I removed the nickel chunk which is not much smaller than when I started and boiled the solution down about half way.

I then let the crystals gradually come out of solution as it cooled.

I noted it was still strongly acidic so I poured this off into another beaker and washed my crystals with 95% ethanol to remove as much acid as possible.

I have now put the nickel back in the other beaker and will add more hydrogen peroxide.
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[*] posted on 2-9-2023 at 11:03
Synthesis of Nickel Sulfate


Hello home chemists & co !

Here's a little synthesis of NiSO4 that I recently made. I needed some Nickel Sulfate for future efforts in Nickel electroplating. :D

Started out with about 20 vintage canadian nickel coins (1950-1980) that are 99% nickel and put them at the bottom of a 500 ml beaker. Added about 150 ml concentrated sulfuric acid, put on the hotplate in a sand bath for a couple of minutes, and then added very carefully small amounts of hydrogen peroxide 3% sol. At that point the hot solution started bubbling slightly and turned light mint green.

throughout the hours, i added more H2O2 until the solution was a deep bluish green. After this, I poured the solution in another beaker through a coffee filter. The solution was still quite acidic with remaining H2SO4 but I thought it would be concentrated enough to form crystals. So i put the beaker with some plastic wrap on top in my fridge for a few days.

Nothing. No crystals formed. Either because my solution was too acidic and/or not concentrated enough.

So I decided to evaporate the solution a bit further. Put it back on the hotplate and let it simmer for several hours until the solution appeared like a rolling and shimmering cloudy green solution. I let it settle for a few hours and the result was a light green solution with a thick, bright yellow deposit at the bottom of the beaker.

That deposit was of course anhydrous NiSO4 since most if not all of the water had evaporated and I was left with a small amount of sulfuric acid on top of the yellow NiSO4 deposit.

So I added 500 ml of distilled water to dissolve the deposit, and success! The solution turned a very deep dark green and I put it back in the fridge for a few days. The concentration was enough to produce some very very nice crystals.

Initial yield is about 53 g and I still have a beaker-full of solution, about 450 ml that's just below saturation, so another couple of hours on the hotplate and I should be able to get more crystals from that concentrated solution.

Since this was crystallized in the fridge at 4° C, the resulting crystals are the heptahydrate if i'm not mistaken. Should I warm them up a bit above 30° C to get the hexahydrate or should I store the crystals as they are?

Here is an image of the resulting crystals.



Rob

IMG_2599.jpg - 487kB




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Arthur Dent
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[*] posted on 2-9-2023 at 11:13


Using pH paper and applying on the surface of the crystals, i've noticed that the crystals, although they are quite dried out, are still acidic. Should I redissolve the NiSO4 crystals in distilled water and re-evaporate the solution?





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[*] posted on 2-9-2023 at 11:29


Yes, it would be best to recrystallize, and yes, it would be better to store as the hexahydrate. Generally it’s not such a great idea to use concentrated sulfuric acid to dissolve metals. It’s slower than dilute acid, and as you observed, leads to a lot of excess acid and doesn’t give as good crystals of a consistent hydration state when evaporated. I would recommend re-dissolving in dilute hydrogen peroxide and adding more nickel metal to consume any remaining acid. The solution should still be acidic (~4.5) since nickel sulfate is an acidic salt, but shouldn’t be lower than that. Once it’s at that point, you can remove the nickel and let the solution evaporate.



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[*] posted on 2-9-2023 at 13:06


Hey Arthur Dent.
Nice to see you back after a long time.
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