No, I think that the use of excess bisulfate (about 3x by weight that of the nitrate) prevents much of the caking problem. The unreacted bisulfate
(and its water of crystallization) just sits happily in the reaction flask.
I get very good yield of azeotropic acid. What little NO2 I get gets captured as well, this then is mixed with the distillation heads, and this dilute
acid is used for utility in the lab, until I make another acid batch, when it is carried forward.
I would imagine that if you desired fuming acid, you'd have to start with H2SO4.
You don't need peroxide at all. I simply use it to scrub my offgas, and make a bit more acid. Vent your offgas, if you like.
Typically, I use 130g or so of NaNO3, and 450g (i.e. 1 pound) of bisulfate. I usually get around 120g of acid, and it measures about 1.4 g/cc, which
is close enough to azeotropic. Plus a few mLs of distillation heads, which I save.
Quote: Originally posted by VeritasC&E | Quote: Originally posted by PirateDocBrown | I use NaNO3 and NaHSO4, both really cheap. KNO3 would be fine, also. I use an excess of the bisulfate, and get 80% + yields. Slow and low heat.
I do it notionally "dry", but in fact add whatever dilute HNO3 I have laying around, to bring up concentration. NO2 waste gas gets led though 28%
H2O2, to make more dilute acid as I go. |
That's a good yield!
How much do you think you would get without using any H2O2?
Do you have any feedback regarding the challenges related to caking mentionned by Woelen?
"The disadvantage of using NaHSO4.H2O is that more solid stuff remains behind, whuch can form a nasty hard cake in the flask and may require stronger
heating."
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[Edited on 8/16/22 by PirateDocBrown] |