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Author: Subject: screw caps for storage bottles
Ubya
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[*] posted on 12-4-2018 at 15:30
screw caps for storage bottles


storage bottles are expensive, and even if i can find a supplier for a reasonable price, or the shipping cost nullify any gain or simply i would need to buy in bulk.
i don't need 100 bottles, i need random big and small bottles to store solvents. i thought of using plastic bottles but compatibility is an issue, glass bottles would be perfect for every kind of solvent.

so here is the thing, i collected a few glass bottles from various sources (fruit juice, cough syrup, random medicines, etc), i think they would be great for storing solvents, i just need new screw caps.
every glass bottle has this useless aluminium screw cap, that if you try to tight it too much it would simply bend and get loose.


so, how do i find better caps with compatible threads?

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RawWork
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[*] posted on 12-4-2018 at 15:44


Come on man, why glass? When I was amateur chemist few years back, i wanted to use glass too, because i thought it's chemically resistant. Until I found plastics are chemically resistant. All those chemicals like paint thinner, oils, shampoo, bleach, acids, alkalis come in plastic bottles. Just like for cola or any normal juices and products. Except for hydrogen peroxide and potassium permanganate. Actually even they have plastic cap. Even percarbonates (which are actually hydrogen peroxide + salt) come in plastic package. Polyethylene, polypropylene... They ARE chemically resistant in most cases. Search google for "polyethylene chemical resistance" to find out more. Even such solvents as acetone, paint thinner (mix of common organic solvents), MEK and oils come in plastics.

I also used glass bottles with plastic caps from plastic bottles. They fit perfectly.

[Edited on 12-4-2018 by RawWork]
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Ubya
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[*] posted on 12-4-2018 at 16:11



Quote:

Come on man, why glass?


i know that many solvents are sold in plastic bottles, i actually store many of them in those.
so why glass?
well as i said compatibility, many plastics are perfect to store a solvent, but could be melted like sugar by another solvent.
glass is an universal solution, i don't need to worry about checking if my bottle is going to melt if i use a different liquid inside.
then what if i want to recycle the bottle and put in it something different from a solvent, like HCl, H2SO4 or HNO3?

many things are stored in plastic conteiners, right now i'm storing all my chemicals in plastic... i wanted to upgrade my storage quality without spending 10 euros or more for a single small glass bottle





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[*] posted on 12-4-2018 at 16:33


Well, H2SO4 and HCl come in plastics too. Even glacial acetic acid. It's fun how explosives and most extreme chemicals can be easily transported in cars in normal milk or juice bottles or cardboard boxes. Police don't even think to open these. Even normal weapons if small enough and bullets can be hidden inside. Drugs and poisons too. Of course some soft material to reduce impact sound should be placed inside too, and must not be to heavy. They and their security :P

[Edited on 13-4-2018 by RawWork]
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Ubya
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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 02:24


ok, but for example i'm planning on distilling some DMC from an OTC source, so i need an appropriate container, plastics won't survive and the metal can it comes from it's not good for long term storage (rusting and leaking), so i need glass.
i will still use plastic containers, but sometimes i need glass and only glass.
the question still is the same





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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 05:23


I also prefer glass for general storage. Nearly everything can be stored in glass. Only exceptions are fluorides and dissolved strong alkalies. Everything else can be stored safely in glass. For the cap I prefer PTFE-lined screw caps.

One very nasty problem with plastic is that it is a little porous. Even sturdy HDPE bottles are not completely trouble-free. I have had conc. HCl (36%) in plastic. The plastic did not corrode or deteriorate, but I noticed that it always was a little wet and labels on it became crumbly and humid as well, especially in winter time. The same issue I had with HNO3. This is because the plastic is slightly porous and HCl very slowly goes through it. With glass you don't have this problem at all.
It also works the other way around. I once had a little plastic bottle, containing CrO3. it was perfectly and very tightly sealed. I forgot about this, and when I needed some CrO3 two years later, I found that it had changed into a dirty dark brown sticky mass, while I had put it in the bottle as very nice bright red dry flakes. The CrO3 absorbed water, making the air inside the bottle very dry and then humidity from the air goes in. This process goes on and on and in the course of a few years the chemical inside is totally spoiled. Every chemical which is very air sensitive (e.g. hygroscopic, very easily oxidized) cannot be stored in a plastic container for a long time.

So, a large group of my chemicals I store in glass bottles, with thick foam-liners and caps for tight nearly non-porous storage, and with PTFE-liners if the chemical itself is very corrosive. Only chemicals, which are neither easily spoiled by air, nor are corrosive themselves I store in plastic bottles (e.g. sulphur powder, CuSO4.5H2O, NaBr, NaCl, K2SO4, KClO3). Moderately hygroscopic chemicals also can be stored quite well in plastic containers (e.g. red P, cobaltous nitrate, nickel nitrate, copper nitrate, ammonium chloride, ammonium perchlorate, sodium nitrite, zinc chloride anhydrous). Really hygroscopic stuff must be stored in glass for long term storage (e.g. FeCl3 anhydrous, AlCl3 anhydrous, Na2O2) and easily oxidized stuff also must be stored in glass (e.g. NaBH4, LiAlH4, CaC2, NaH, LiH, P4O10). Fuming acids also must be stored in glass (HCl, HBr, HNO3) and very corrosive acids and other compounds must be stored in glass (H2SO4, HClO4, SO2(OH)Cl, I2, CH3COCl). The really corrosive stuff I store in glass ampoules (Br2, SO2Cl2, SOCl2, PCl3, POCl3, PCl5).





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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 07:12


It's scary to know that plastics allow something to pass through. So they are composed of air in between? Not only plastics, but maybe glass and metals are dangerous and something can pass through them. Best example how can Ga pass through Al. I am seriously worried :o
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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 07:34


yup, that was why i'd like glass, for example my HCl HDPE bottle is always moist on the outside, and everything made of metal near this bottle is rusting.
glass is not porous so gases or liquids shouldn't permeate through.





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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 09:01


Qorpak makes excellent bottles, and you can buy them quite cheaply by the case of 12 if you order from basically anyone but them. I use their amber bottles with the PTFE caps for most storage needs.
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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 10:59


Quote: Originally posted by weilawei  
Qorpak makes excellent bottles, and you can buy them quite cheaply by the case of 12 if you order from basically anyone but them. I use their amber bottles with the PTFE caps for most storage needs.


i looked at Qorpak bottles for a long time, i think they are really good storage conteiners, but i never found any for a decent prize (plus shipping to italy).
Qorpak bottles would be the best i know, but right now i'm a bit short on money, i can find many general glass bottles for free, i just need to replace the screw caps and they would be ok for most chemicals





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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 23:51


Until you find a better solution you can use any cork or rubber or plastic stopper,
cover the bottom and side with kitchen cling film folded two or three times to give four or eight layers.
Not pretty, but it works.




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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 23:56


I just buy Boston round bottles at the health food store and put Qorpak caps on them. It is cheaper than shipping the bottles from Qorpak.



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[*] posted on 16-4-2018 at 15:33


Ummm. A trip to the University in quest of empty reagent bottles might be productive.

Walk right up to the Chemistry Dept. storeroom, and ask for empty bottles. "Got any?"

Failing that, in my neighborhood, in Portland OR., on many nights of the week, recycling is practiced. Folks put out boxes full of presorted glass and plastic bottles, for trash pick-up.

Lots of folks, make the rounds, looking for deposit bottles and cans.

Utilizing a flashlight, you might be able to fulfill your fancy bottle needs, for the foreseeable future, via an hour or so, of scrounging.

Really good, chemically resistant caps? Well, you might just have to buy those.

At the University, bottles come outfitted with the good caps, elsewhere.... not so much.

My local Whole Foods, sells respectable Brown Glass, jars and bottles. The caps however, are ordinary.

[Edited on 16-4-2018 by zed]
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[*] posted on 16-4-2018 at 15:50


I just found an online shop that sells all kinds of rubber and silicone stoppers/bungs/plugs. I have some glass media bottles that take a GL45 cap and these seem to be really expensive by themselves but I found that these stoppers work well with them. IDK if something like this might help you with the different sizes that you have and they are priced pretty well too!

http://www.widgetco.com/rubber-stoppers
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