Zuqrami
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Sodium azide from Sodium nitrate/nitrite
Could sodium azide be produced from the reaction of urea and sodium nitrate or nitrite
CH4N2O + NaNO3 = NaN3 + 2 H2O + CO2
or
CH4N2O + NaNO2 = NaN3 + 2 H2O + CO
Or is this reaction just impossible?
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Corrosive Joeseph
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You might like this..............
"Sodium nitrate/urea complex" - http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=7553
/CJ
Being well adjusted to a sick society is no measure of one's mental health
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PHILOU Zrealone
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Quote: Originally posted by Zuqrami | Could sodium azide be produced from the reaction of urea and sodium nitrate or nitrite
CH4N2O + NaNO3 = NaN3 + 2 H2O + CO2
or
CH4N2O + NaNO2 = NaN3 + 2 H2O + CO
Or is this reaction just impossible?
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Yes if you add some hydrazine salt like NH2-NH3HSO4 or NH2-NH3Cl and that you neutralize afterwards...but then urea is useless.
Alternatively if you have a positive chlorine reactant you could make N,N'-dichloro-urea and allow this to react with excess NH3...then with NaNO2 to
yield some NaN3.
All those processes passes via hydrazine intermediaries...
PH Z (PHILOU Zrealone)
"Physic is all what never works; Chemistry is all what stinks and explodes!"-"Life that deadly disease, sexually transmitted."(W.Allen)
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