a great deal of this thread should be deleted outright. Now I'm not against banter about random things, but we have a place for that and I see a
bunch of posts by these members there any way.. so maybe don't off this thread straight out the gate with that.
so far the chem answers were weak and this is buggin me because I really like sulfamic acid. I think it is neat, cheap, available, useful and
under-appreciated. it is great for a bunch of things. the smoke screen bit was a nice off topic bit, thanks BobD1001. but the question asked wasn't
directly about sulfamic acid, more of a what to do with the ammonium bisulfate produced mistakenly.
I haven't had a whole lot of time to look into the bisulfate my self. but info seems about as spread out as most I found on sulfamic acid was.
http://books.google.com/books?id=ltNLAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA577&a...
interesting:
p 577. " if common salt is added to fused ammonium hydrogen sulfate, hydrogen chloride is evolved and ammonium sodium sulfate is formed. the
reaction is, however, incomplete and a small quantity of sulfite is formed. on further heating, ammonia is evolved and sodium hydrogen sulfate
produced."
p 577. " when ammonium chloride and ammonium hydrogen sulfate are heated with an excess of manganese dioxide, nearly 15% of the chlorine is evolved.
sodium chloride, under similar conditions, yields about 20% chlorine, whilst a mixture of ammonium chloride( 1 equiv), sodium hydrogen sulfate( 4
equivs), manganese dioxide( 4 equivs) and a little water, as much as 83% of the combined chlorine was obtained. ammonium sodium sulfate being formed
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/old/4279.pdf
solar energy storage: ammonium bisulfate cycle. kinda interesting they propose a method of using solar flux to separate the components of decomp
and is some plans, used additional metal sulfates to grab SO3 produced as pyrosulfates.
thats all I could find tonight, been a LONG day. Sulfamic acid it self is great for electrochem, and is one of the more soluble of the lead salts.
good for nickel and copper as well. I found some times you had to use amidosulfonic acid to find older papers on sulfamic acid. I will be reading up
on this more and will link anything interesting that comes up. all the papers I requested and or tracked down for sulfamic acid are on another
computer so I cant pop 'em up here now. sorry |