Brightthermite
Hazard to Others
Posts: 133
Registered: 26-6-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
Ammonium Nitrate Purity?
I recently purchased 5 lbs of "DIY Cold Pack Refills" (clever branding ), the
intended purpose is definitely for exploding targets. Since you do not necessarily need very pure AN for this it makes me question its purity. I have
got poor yields doing various nitration but there were too many factors to peg down the AN as the problem. The cold pack AN is in prilled form, smooth
almost looks like a cream colored plastic. It does not resemble the AN fertilizer which is bright white and almost translucent.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to test its purity? I would like to avoid a re-crys and keep it in prilled form.
|
|
Belowzero
Hazard to Others
Posts: 173
Registered: 6-5-2020
Location: Member Is Offline
Member Is Offline
|
|
Perhaps crude; AN does not leave any residue when thermally destroyed.
If you have an accurate scale you can measure the weight after it is decomposed.
Otherwise a melting point determination can give you some idea.
[Edited on 7-7-2020 by Belowzero]
|
|
Mateo_swe
National Hazard
Posts: 541
Registered: 24-8-2019
Location: Within EU
Member Is Offline
|
|
Try melting point, AN should melt at 169.6 °C.
You could try measuring the volume and weight of a sample and compare with AN density 1.725 g/cm3 (20 °C).
Its a little tricky measuring the volume though.
|
|
monolithic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 436
Registered: 5-3-2018
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Did you order this on Amazon? I just did the same, hope the purity can be improved through recrystallization from methanol.
Somewhat on-topic, what happened to AN based fertilizers? All I see is urea and other non-AN blends. I understand it's restricted due to Oklahoma
City, plant explosion in Texas, etc., but it seems like manufacture of it has completely stopped.
|
|
MadHatter
International Hazard
Posts: 1339
Registered: 9-7-2004
Location: Maine
Member Is Offline
Mood: Enjoying retirement
|
|
Ammonium Nitrate Fertilizer
In terms of available nitrogen urea is
superior to ammonium nitrate. Urea
contains over 46% nitrogen versus
35% from ammonium nitrate. This
pyro supplier for example:
www.fireworkscookbook.com
carry the agricultural prills for $1
LB. Minimum 10 LB order. I've ordered
from them a couple of times. They're
very good as pyro suppliers.
From opening of NCIS New Orleans - It goes a BOOM ! BOOM ! BOOM ! MUHAHAHAHAHAHAHA !
|
|
Brightthermite
Hazard to Others
Posts: 133
Registered: 26-6-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by monolithic | Did you order this on Amazon? I just did the same, hope the purity can be improved through recrystallization from methanol.
Somewhat on-topic, what happened to AN based fertilizers? All I see is urea and other non-AN blends. I understand it's restricted due to Oklahoma
City, plant explosion in Texas, etc., but it seems like manufacture of it has completely stopped. |
Yes it was from amazon so Im sure we ordered from the same seller. I re-cyst with water, it was full of dust and dirt but it looks to be pretty pure.
Im not for sure what happened to the fertilizer, sometimes you can buy it at my local co-op. I live in a backwoodsy area though. Is it cheaper to
manufacture than Urea?
|
|
monolithic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 436
Registered: 5-3-2018
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
As a follow up, the AN was recrystallized from water. Basic procedure was to mix 5 pounds of AN with 2000 ml room temperature water and sit overnight.
None of the impurities settled to the bottom, unfortunately. Vacuum filtered the ~4000 ml solution on a fritted filter to yield a light yellow
solution, and then vacuum filtered this solution again on a fine filter paper. The solution was then boiled down and precipitate was collected.
https://i.imgur.com/bHYXjRw.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/5iyn1qq.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/1wgM8z2.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/IEl2nNR.jpg
It's a huge pain in the ass, took 2 or 3 days of boiling with 2000 ml beaker and a good lab hot plate. Some tips:
1. Don't use fritted glass for initial filtering, use coarse filter paper. The red stuff is slimy, poorly soluble in water, and plugs/stains frits. I
have no idea what it is. It's poorly soluble in hot water, acetone, hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, and isopropyl alcohol.
2. When boiling down don't reduce volume by any more than 25-33%. If you go past this a shit ton of ammonium nitrate will crash out and form a solid
block and trap the impurities. Water isn't an ideal solvent for this recrystallization but it does work. Toward the end I would boil down 25% at most
and then rely on freeze precipitation. The last crop of crystals (before I lost patience) held on to some of the yellow impurity so I recrystallized
again from fresh water.
3. Consider using a gas burner or a high power induction hot plate in a metal container. Bringing 2 liters of solution to boil takes forever, even
with aluminum foil.
I recovered about 4 pounds of the initial 5 pounds. The remaining 1 pound could probably be recovered but I don't have the patience. The product is a
bit wet so the plan is to dry in an oven at 80-90 C. AN does sublimate and eventually decompose as a white gas (nitrous oxide + water vapor.) This
should not be an issue at 80-90 C. In its molten state it is as sensitive to impact as TNT, so probably best to avoid that. See https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/655888.pdf page 7/48 of the PDF.
[Edited on 7-22-2020 by monolithic]
|
|
Brightthermite
Hazard to Others
Posts: 133
Registered: 26-6-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
2. When boiling down don't reduce volume by any more than 25-33%. If you go past this a shit ton of ammonium nitrate will crash out and form a solid
block and trap the impurities. Water isn't an ideal solvent for this recrystallization but it does work. Toward the end I would boil down 25% at most
and then rely on freeze precipitation. The last crop of crystals (before I
[Edited on 7-22-2020 by monolithic][/rquote]
Freeze precipitation it what I found to work best after a lot of struggling. I would boil the solution down to much and the second it came in to
contact with anything that was of a slightly cooler temp, the AN immediately caked on in a hot sludge.
Please keep me updated on the drying, I am having a very hard time oven drying and keep moister out if it in general (around 80% humidity constantly).
|
|
monolithic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 436
Registered: 5-3-2018
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Brightthermite |
Freeze precipitation it what I found to work best after a lot of struggling. I would boil the solution down to much and the second it came in to
contact with anything that was of a slightly cooler temp, the AN immediately caked on in a hot sludge.
Please keep me updated on the drying, I am having a very hard time oven drying and keep moister out if it in general (around 80% humidity constantly).
|
The AN was split into two batches and spread in a glass baking pan. The pan was heated to 70-90 C (kind of varied) in a conventional oven, the door
propped slightly open with a spoon to promote airflow. Every 30-60 minutes AN was stirred/scraped. Total drying time was about 10 hours, to constant
mass. All AN was passed through a kitchen sieve and the remaining pieces were ground with a mortar and pestle until they would pass through a sieve.
Total mass was about 3.5 pounds of free flowing, snow white AN which was stored in an ordinary ziploc. I guess the filtrate should have been boiled
down a bit more, oh well.
https://i.imgur.com/G8FMXrf.jpg
Mortar and pestle definitely sucks but I don't have the balls to use a coffee grinder or a food processor. Maybe with a 100 foot extension cord.
|
|
Brightthermite
Hazard to Others
Posts: 133
Registered: 26-6-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by monolithic | Quote: Originally posted by Brightthermite |
Freeze precipitation it what I found to work best after a lot of struggling. I would boil the solution down to much and the second it came in to
contact with anything that was of a slightly cooler temp, the AN immediately caked on in a hot sludge.
Please keep me updated on the drying, I am having a very hard time oven drying and keep moister out if it in general (around 80% humidity constantly).
|
The AN was split into two batches and spread in a glass baking pan. The pan was heated to 70-90 C (kind of varied) in a conventional oven, the door
propped slightly open with a spoon to promote airflow. Every 30-60 minutes AN was stirred/scraped. Total drying time was about 10 hours, to constant
mass. All AN was passed through a kitchen sieve and the remaining pieces were ground with a mortar and pestle until they would pass through a sieve.
Total mass was about 3.5 pounds of free flowing, snow white AN which was stored in an ordinary ziploc. I guess the filtrate should have been boiled
down a bit more, oh well.
https://i.imgur.com/G8FMXrf.jpg
Mortar and pestle definitely sucks but I don't have the balls to use a coffee grinder or a food processor. Maybe with a 100 foot extension cord. |
I believe you would be okay to use a machine to process the AN as long as it was clean. While drying in the oven did your AN redissolve into a sludge?
If so was your final dry product one chunk or a crumbly mass?
|
|
monolithic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 436
Registered: 5-3-2018
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Brightthermite | I believe you would be okay to use a machine to process the AN as long as it was clean. While drying in the oven did your AN redissolve into a sludge?
If so was your final dry product one chunk or a crumbly mass? |
The first batch was pretty dry to begin with and so the oven drying went smoothly. The second batch was damper and I was concerned about a sludge
forming or it solidifying into a large slab. It was stirred/agitated every 30-60 minutes with a chemistry microspatula -- scrape the side and bottom
of the baking pan until you feel smooth glass, stir around the crystal mass, and break up the larger damp aggregates that might form by pressing on
them with the spatula. Overall it wasn't very difficult, just time consuming. If it's really damp, like sopping wet, I would recommend additional
vacuum filtration before putting it in the oven. Combining both batches, I would say about 1/2 of the volume of product passed through the sieve in
the first try, 1/4 was worked over with a mortar and pestle without too much difficulty before passing through the sieve, and 1/4 was repeatedly
smashed and ground in the mortar and pestle with some difficulty before it would pass through the sieve.
For what it's worth, I just checked the ziploc bag and the AN is still dry and free flowing after about 24 hours. Again this is just oven drying to
constant mass and storing in an ordinary ziploc bag with the excess air squeezed out. AN is hygroscopic but it's not like working with pyridine HCl or
anything.
[Edited on 7-24-2020 by monolithic]
|
|
Fyndium
International Hazard
Posts: 1192
Registered: 12-7-2020
Location: Not in USA
Member Is Offline
|
|
Has anyone got sol curve of AN in methanol or ethanol?
|
|
B(a)P
International Hazard
Posts: 1139
Registered: 29-9-2019
Member Is Offline
Mood: Festive
|
|
Not sure how reliable this is, but they are both here
https://en.crystalls.info/Solubility_curve
|
|
Fyndium
International Hazard
Posts: 1192
Registered: 12-7-2020
Location: Not in USA
Member Is Offline
|
|
It appears to contain no other data than 17.1g, without temp info. I suppose the sol does not change that much upon heating?
How practical is it to recrystallize AN from water? It has somewhat extreme solubility, and being as much hygroscopic the point when AN dissolves in
water or water dissolves in AN becomes quite unclear.
|
|
Belowzero
Hazard to Others
Posts: 173
Registered: 6-5-2020
Location: Member Is Offline
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Fyndium | It appears to contain no other data than 17.1g, without temp info. I suppose the sol does not change that much upon heating?
How practical is it to recrystallize AN from water? It has somewhat extreme solubility, and being as much hygroscopic the point when AN dissolves in
water or water dissolves in AN becomes quite unclear. |
Agreed a 1:1 solubility is called contamination
I've been doing this a lot and AN does crystalize from saturated solutions, it does however form quite large (and beautiful) needles which also trap
impurities.
This can still be an improvement.
I've also experimented with water/ethanol mixtures which makes crystalization more rapid and in theory can leave more unwanted product in solution.
As with any crystalization the more fractions you do the worse it gets when it comes to purity.
The remainder can be crashed out of solution quite easily as demonstrated here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xEMbNfofko
I would suggest purifying a fraction and use the rest as bulk for making HNO3 for example.
And of course if you have a lot of cheap sulfuric acid you can make very pure AN by distilling it in ammonia.
|
|
unionised
International Hazard
Posts: 5126
Registered: 1-11-2003
Location: UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Titration.
|
|
Fyndium
International Hazard
Posts: 1192
Registered: 12-7-2020
Location: Not in USA
Member Is Offline
|
|
Funny how the most eager tubers always have the crappiest equipment.
And every. single. time. people use too small vessels.
It might be impossible to state what is mixed in a fertilizer, or is it water soluble or non-water soluble. Filtering will get rid of those, but the
remaining liquor might still be far from pure. Although, depending on the use, it might be very well doable.
Funny how one product contains many % of potassium chloride in it, just like it was placed there to ruin sulfuric acid extraction. On the other hand,
it should be possible to extract the nitrate by mixing in large amount of potassium chloride and crystallizing KNO3 out, if just a mere nitrate is
needed.
|
|