Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Iron Ethanedioate (oxalate) stains

Picric-A - 14-8-2009 at 12:47

Hi, after making some Iron ethanediote for pyrophoric iron i have got nast yellow stains everywhere, all over my sink, stirring rods, pestel and mortar and worse still my precious glassware and impossible to clean buchner funnel.
Now i tried using boiling NaOH to get rid of these but had no success... i have also used;
boiling sodium percarbonate
boiling dil. H2SO4
boiling H2O2
and boiling sodium carbonate
none of these worked...
Can somebody please tell me what will remove these?
thanks


Edit by chemoleo: title spelling. Further incidents of 'diotes' are to be seen as oxalates.

[Edited on 16-8-2009 by chemoleo]

not_important - 14-8-2009 at 13:57

citric acid (even lemon juice), oxalic acid, and various other reducing and complexing agents. Even SO2 in water works on mild stains, but thicker stains require additional SO2, both a reducing agent and an acid.

Almost everything you used was sure to precipitate iron and/or oxidise it to Fe(III). Hot alkaline material can make the stains more difficult to remove.



kclo4 - 14-8-2009 at 14:10

Iron out is a cleaner sold at walmart which contains sodium dithionite (sp?) and sodium bisufite. When it is added to water SO2 is formed to some degree.

Iron out, as the name might suggest, is probably used for removing rust stains :)


Rust stains on glass are easily the most difficult stain to remove. Also try swirling sand and water w/iron out in it. The sand really helps clean the glassware.

[Edited on 14-8-2009 by kclo4]

Lambda-Eyde - 14-8-2009 at 14:16

I'm guessing the stains are Fe2O3? Dilute phosphoric acid will remove it even at room temperature.

kclo4 - 14-8-2009 at 14:19

Is iron phosphate even solubile? I tried removing some rust stains from glass using a phosphoric acid I bought at the store as a rust remover but I did not have success. Did you do this first hand?

IIRC the phosphoric acid is used to prevent rust by forming a thicker insoluble layer of the phosphate.

Lambda-Eyde - 14-8-2009 at 14:24

I haven't tried it on glass before, but I have used phosphoric acid in a ceramic mortar and on an old rusty vice. Worked like a charm. I don't know if iron phosphate is soluble in water.

chemoleo - 14-8-2009 at 14:31

Please specify what "Ethanediote" exactly is, and edit if there's a spelling error!!!

Picric-A - 14-8-2009 at 14:33

sorry i forgot to mention i used SO2 (aq) with no success...
i dont have access to dithionite but i guess aqeous SO2 works the same...
Nope it isnt a Fe2O3 stain, its a ethanediote stain... hence its difficult to remove

Ozone - 14-8-2009 at 16:16

I'm pretty sure ethanediote = ethanedioate, a complex chelate of iron with (for example) 1-3 oxalate ligands
(if 3+, iron(III)-tris-(ethanedioate), if 2+, Iron (II)-oxalate).

See (3+):

http://www.chemthes.com/entity_datapage.php?id=3994


For the synthesis of pyrophoric iron (see attached) iron(II)-ethanedioate (FeC2O4) is the intermediate.

Cheers,

O3

[edit] try CLR cleaner (attached)?
[Edit] further clarification; ETHANDIOIC ACID = OXALIC ACID!
Attachment: 22-1 demo Spontaneous combustion of iron.pdf (29kB)
This file has been downloaded 686 times




Attachment: CLR_01.pdf (70kB)
This file has been downloaded 608 times





[Edited on 15-8-2009 by Ozone]

DJF90 - 14-8-2009 at 16:17

You still havent said what "ethanediote" is...

JohnWW - 14-8-2009 at 17:06

Try nitric acid, or failing that aqua regia.

kclo4 - 14-8-2009 at 17:23

ethanediote is oxalate isn't it?

Who uses ethandiote? Must be a cultural or regional thing I guess.

I figure iron ethandiote acts similiar to iron acetate, and eventually forms iron oxide when exposed to the air - at least some iron acetate I made by reacting Fe with vinegar after a while left some iron oxide.

Have you tried using a torch with a reducing flame on it (fuel rich) perhaps?
If you can heat it, you'd be able to at least change it to iron, and then iron oxide.

Edit: Why would nitric acid or aqua regia dissolve iron oxides? I didn't think they would.





[Edited on 15-8-2009 by kclo4]

DJF90 - 15-8-2009 at 11:39

There is no such thing as "ethanediote". What I think he means is "ethanedioAte", which is indeed oxalate. But who knows what he really means until he clarifies it himself! I would expect Iron oxalate to be quite soluble, especially as oxalic (aka ethanedioic) acid is used to remove rust and rust stains (IIRC).

kclo4 - 15-8-2009 at 16:53

Yeah, I think it is iron oxide that fell out of the solution. Probably ought to just add more oxalic acid and heat it up to a boil or something.

Picric-A - 16-8-2009 at 09:03

yes i did mean ethanedioAte... just a spelling error, easy to make and yet you people make such a big thing of it even thought you blatently know what i mean... :mad:

kclo4 - 16-8-2009 at 11:49

Yeah it is a simple mistake to make, but so is sulfate vs sulfite or nitrate, nitrite, etc. Considering most of us have not really heard of ethanedioate, we were just making sure. So get all angry about it, because its not like you had the opportunity to clear up the confusion earlier by answering chemoleo's question, which seems to have been ignored.

Either way, did you ever get rid of your iron oxide stains? :P

chemoleo - 16-8-2009 at 15:38

Picric-A, the fact that so many people questioned you on what irondiote means, indicates you should have taken the opportunity to correct your error right away (hangon, errors, as you made that accidental error more than once, even after my request to edit the error earlier), and do so in the title as well. And since you haven't done it, in fact showed entirely inappropriate 'angry' signs, indicates you aren't exactly serious about this thread, so I'll move it back to beginnings. I'll edit the title as well.

Picric-A - 17-8-2009 at 09:04

I couldnt correct it straight away as i broke my laptop so it took 2 days to get fixed however i admit this should of been the standard action. It is not however like nitrite nitrate becuase there is no so thing as ethanedioite... but i get the picture :cool:
As for whether any of it worked, nope none have... i am pretty much out of ideas... maybe yellow stained glassware it is... :(

P.S. i would be very surpirsed if people havnt heard of Ethanedioates as they are common chemicals.... especially the free acid.

[Edited on 17-8-2009 by Picric-A]

DJF90 - 18-8-2009 at 08:40

Oxalate is much more frequent in literature. Ethanedioate is IUPAC nomenclature I believe, and as such is a bit OTT when oxalate suffices just as well. Just like propan-2-one and acetone, or 2-methylpropan-2-ol and t-butanol. A good chemist will recognise both, but the older nomenclature generally comes out on top. Wouldnt hurt to try aqueous acetone with salt added as an abrasive, and swirling the flask. Failing that I'm sure a wash with dil. HF would do it, or a soak in a base bath.

zed - 15-9-2009 at 22:22

Many Salts of Oxalic Acid are insoluble, insoluble, insoluble. Looks like you have one, and unfortunately it is colored.

You could try soaking in a Glycolic Acid(a cousin of Oxalic Acid) solution, also known as CLR. It does remove rust stains. And, it might slowly leach the Iron out of your Iron Oxalate.

Likewise, you could attempt to displace the Iron, with a more reactive metal.
Like Aluminum.

Another option, is to destroy the pesky oxalic acid skeleton, with an oxidizing flame.
Left behind will be Iron Oxide, still a possible problem, but a less esoteric problem.

With a little luck, you will be able to wipe most of it off.




Picric-A - 15-9-2009 at 23:13

When i used the filter flask to generate chlorine that removed the stain after about 2 hours contact with the mix. The chlorine generation mix was TCCA + HCl. What could of removed the stain here?
The problem is the stain is on the inside of the flask so an oxidising flame would not work.

zed - 16-9-2009 at 02:14

Well, it appears elemental Chlorine is able to tear Iron from the viselike grip of Oxalic Acid, at least momentarily. If the Oxalic Acid survives, I would suspect that it might rebind that Iron fairly quickly. It appears that, mercifully, such reconstituted Iron Oxalate , if it is present, is no longer welded to the surface of your glassware.

Perhaps Oxone plus NaCl/NaBr might achieve the same effect.

http://greencontroll.hu/EN_termekek_7.html

The metal extraction material at the bottom of this article may be relevant.

[Edited on 16-9-2009 by zed]

Picric-A - 16-9-2009 at 09:07

Yes i hope so, it did take a while though (2 hours) for the stain to be fully removed though and how can one remove the stain from my buchner funnel?

entropy51 - 16-9-2009 at 09:52

If Cl2 removed it from your flask, you might want to soak the funnel in a solution of sodium hypochlorite or a slurry of calcium hypochlorite, perhaps acidified slightly with say vinegar.

On the other hand, it could have been the HCl in the Cl2 generator, in which case a soak in HCl might do it.

Sincerely,
Retarded

[Edited on 16-9-2009 by entropy51]

chloric1 - 16-9-2009 at 13:01

I dunno I have to check my literature but isn't ferric oxalate ,along with other metal oxalate complexes, soluble in excess alkali oxalate? Potassium oxalate is easy to produce and MUCH more soluble in water than the sodium salt. Or for that matter, stong oxalic acid solution above 60 C should work. I used the free acid to remove rust stains from mortar and pestile. Putting it in the sun helps too.