Daffodile
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Extremely beginnery question (sorry)
Hey guys I have to prepare some extremely pure Tripotassium Phosphate, without mono or di phosphate.
Can I just mix stoichiometric quantities of Phosphoric Acid and Potassium Hydroxide? My partner says I can't, so I'm coming to you guys to dispell
doubt. This sounds silly, but I have had problems before when mono di and tri phosphate were not differentiated.
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Hexavalent
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An old paper in "Industrial and Engineering Chemistry", (Vol. 23, No. 5, pp 470) describes the industrial preparation of trisodium phosphate. They use
sodium carbonate with phosphoric acid to afford the dibasic salt, then use sodium hydroxide to form the tribasic salt. This is said to be due to
economic reasons, and so I can't see why just using 3 equivalents (possibly a slight excess?) of KOH wouldn't also work. They perform the final
reaction in hot solution, hot filter, and then cool to allow the tribasic compound to crystallise out. They make no mention of the presence of the
monobasic or dibasic species in the product.
It's advised to crystallise in the presence of another salt to reduce caking. They mention that sodium fluoride, chloride and borate have been used.
Whether you feel this is necessary, and in fact possible, depends on what you need your product for (and why it needs to be so pure).
[Edited on 2-2-2017 by Hexavalent]
Attachment: Trisodium phosphate - its manufacture and use.pdf (755kB) This file has been downloaded 576 times
"Success is going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm." Winston Churchill
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nezza
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You can.
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
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