Sciencemadness Discussion Board

My problem with pure fuming hno3

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 01:30

I got 2 liters of 95% nitric from one of my friends. To test it, I synthesized some petn, but after 4 tests, I failed each time for one reason, and that was a sudden rise in temperature. I cooled 50 cc of nitric acid to -18 and placed it in an ice water bath. Then I added the dried and ground pentaerythritol in a very small amount. But after adding 2-3 grams of pentaerythritol, the temperature of the acid rises and reaches from 2c to 15c in 2 to 3 minutes. During this time no pentaerythritol is added and the whole acid is mixed by a magnetic stirrer. My pentaerythritol is 99% pure and fresh, and nitric acid seems to have all the properties of 95% nitric acid (it burns latex gloves). What do you think is the problem? Why does the temperature rise without the addition of pentaerythritol while being mixed by a magnetic stirrer?
Have any idea?
Thank you

mackolol - 9-5-2020 at 02:03

When making energetic materials especially nitrations, always cool them during the reaction.
Even if you cooled your HNO3 to -42C (at which I doubt that the reaction would be significant), the temperature will eventually rise, because they are very exotermic. And the warmer the reaction is, the faster will it be and it will produce more heat.

You must cool it during the reaction for example in salted ice. And to be honest 2-3 grams pentaerythritol at once is quite much. If you don't cool it good enough and don't wait between portions you can cause an explosion, resulting most probably in serious injuries.

There is no problem with your HNO3, rather with how you perform this reaction

[Edited on 9-5-2020 by mackolol]

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 02:54

Yes, it is important to keep the temperature as low as possible. But maybe I'm wrong, I didn't say add 2 grams of pentaerythritol at a time, I added a maximum of 2_3 grams in a few steps in small sizes.
I have experienced a synthesis of petn by 95% nitric acid but this is the first time that despite all the conditions for cooling the acid mixture. The temperature rises uncontrollably.

Fulmen - 9-5-2020 at 04:51

It's a bit counter-intuitive, but cooling components too far below the desired reaction temperature can cause this. The low temperature slow down the reaction too much, so by the time it has risen enough for the reaction to take off you have already added far too much and the reaction goes runaway.
The proper method is to start closer to the desired rx-temperatue. This might even require pre-heating (told you it was counter-intuitive).

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 06:36

Quote: Originally posted by Fulmen  
It's a bit counter-intuitive, but cooling components too far below the desired reaction temperature can cause this. The low temperature slow down the reaction too much, so by the time it has risen enough for the reaction to take off you have already added far too much and the reaction goes runaway.
The proper method is to start closer to the desired rx-temperatue. This might even require pre-heating (told you it was counter-intuitive).


In your opinion. I have to start making petn at a temperature close to 0 to have more control over the temperature rise?

Fulmen - 9-5-2020 at 07:02

Correct. You could even start with room temperature acid and let it cool down in the cooling bath. This way you get a sense of how efficient your cooling really is.

Tsjerk - 9-5-2020 at 07:08

You haven't been too clear about whether you are actually cooling the reaction, externally, while adding the PE. My guess is you are not.

And my second guess is that your guess about what Fulmen is saying is correct. I also think this is one of your problems. You can't expect a reaction to stay below a certain temperature just by cooling the reactants while the reaction is exothermic.

Also have a look at the amount of energy it takes to get water from, example given, -18 to 0 degrees and the amount of energy it takes to get water from -9 (frozen, ice-bath) to +9.

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 07:47

Quote: Originally posted by Tsjerk  
You haven't been too clear about whether you are actually cooling the reaction, externally, while adding the PE. My guess is you are not.

And my second guess is that your guess about what Fulmen is saying is correct. I also think this is one of your problems. You can't expect a reaction to stay below a certain temperature just by cooling the reactants while the reaction is exothermic.

Also have a look at the amount of energy it takes to get water from, example given, -18 to 0 degrees and the amount of energy it takes to get water from -9 (frozen, ice-bath) to +9.


Your second guess is correct. I can't keep the acid temperature below the critical temperature.
After Fulmen said, I noticed that due to the low temperature at the beginning of the reaction a large proportion of pentaerythritol does not react. perhaps the reason for this lack of attention is that I mostly use the second method for synthesis(hno3 65%-h2so4 98%), and in the second method I start from a temperature below 0.

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 07:59

If the reaction is not caused by a failure to control the temperature, is it possible that the nitric acid is impure?
how to ensure its pure?

Tsjerk - 9-5-2020 at 08:48

For a start I would assume the nitric acid is pure (if colorless or only slightly yellow) and use proper cooling during the reaction.

Water and a lot of ice is standard in any nitration, using salt is optional.

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 09:13

Quote: Originally posted by Tsjerk  
For a start I would assume the nitric acid is pure (if colorless or only slightly yellow) and use proper cooling during the reaction.

Water and a lot of ice is standard in any nitration, using salt is optional.


This is my hno3

891C4E82-88C9-4938-8772-42765FC9EAC7.jpeg - 565kB

Tsjerk - 9-5-2020 at 09:31

Ah, yes, of course... It is 95%+.

That will, most of the time, be yellow/orange. But again; did you cool the reaction while running it?

Fulmen - 9-5-2020 at 10:58

According to the first post he used an ice bath. That should be sufficient as long as one is patient and can tolerate temperatures up to say 3-5°C? Trying to maintain a reaction at the cooling bath temp is hard, heat transfer requires a temperature difference and glass is a poor conductor. So I would use a cooling medium at least 5° colder than the maximum allowable temp.

As for the acid, this synthesis is supposed to be sensitive to nitric oxides. I'm not sure what the problem is, but if it oxidizes the reagents or product it could increase the heat output significantly. This might explain the different results with the 95%, was that acid clear?

The standard fix for NOx is to add a little urea and pass dry air through the acid. But it might not be necessary with better temperature control.

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 12:10

Quote: Originally posted by Tsjerk  
Ah, yes, of course... It is 95%+.

That will, most of the time, be yellow/orange. But again; did you cool the reaction while running it?


Yes . Throughout the reaction, the acid container inside the bath was ice water

mackolol - 9-5-2020 at 12:20

As far as I remember there is no need to use RFNA in pentaerythritol nitration and you can do it using regular 65% HNO3/ 90%< H2SO4 mix. I did so when I performed this synthesis.
Especially if it is sensitive for Nitric Oxides. Do you have preparation of PETN that uses RFNA?
Good synthesis of energetic material that uses 95% HNO3 is synthesis of RDX.

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 12:33

Quote: Originally posted by Fulmen  
According to the first post he used an ice bath. That should be sufficient as long as one is patient and can tolerate temperatures up to say 3-5°C? Trying to maintain a reaction at the cooling bath temp is hard, heat transfer requires a temperature difference and glass is a poor conductor. So I would use a cooling medium at least 5° colder than the maximum allowable temp.

As for the acid, this synthesis is supposed to be sensitive to nitric oxides. I'm not sure what the problem is, but if it oxidizes the reagents or product it could increase the heat output significantly. This might explain the different results with the 95%, was that acid clear?

The standard fix for NOx is to add a little urea and pass dry air through the acid. But it might not be necessary with better temperature control.


maybe my words be funny
but
Is it possible for the reagent to be decomposed by acid?
That is, due to the presence of no2 gas, the pentaerythritol decomposes during acid entry?
This is the reason for my statement, When the temperature rose uncontrollably and I poured the acidic contents into the cold water There was no sign of a small amount of petn in the water.
Anyway, I added some pentaerythritol to the acid, so at least some of it shouldn't have turned into petn?

Petn1933 - 9-5-2020 at 12:45

Quote: Originally posted by mackolol  
As far as I remember there is no need to use RFNA in pentaerythritol nitration and you can do it using regular 65% HNO3/ 90%< H2SO4 mix. I did so when I performed this synthesis.
Especially if it is sensitive for Nitric Oxides. Do you have preparation of PETN that uses RFNA?
Good synthesis of energetic material that uses 95% HNO3 is synthesis of RDX.


Yes, you are absolutely right. But I want to fully understand the reason for this with your comments and those of other friends. Well, the way you mentioned is more economical

Microtek - 9-5-2020 at 13:45

I would say that there is way too much NOx dissolved in the acid. You get too much oxidation that way. You should purge the acid by blowing DRY air through it at ca. 50 C until it becomes almost colourless. You can also add urea (also at 50 C), but with the amount of NOx in your acid, the byproduct water will dilute it appreciably.

MineMan - 10-5-2020 at 02:53

How do you blow dry air through it without spraying acid everywhere?

mackolol - 10-5-2020 at 03:59

Quote: Originally posted by MineMan  
How do you blow dry air through it without spraying acid everywhere?


I have done it with aquarium bubbling pump, in erlenmeyer flask.
It was splashing, but the flask was few times bigger than volume of the acid so acid drops were kept inside the flask.

Petn1933 - 10-5-2020 at 05:25

Quote: Originally posted by Microtek  
I would say that there is way too much NOx dissolved in the acid. You get too much oxidation that way. You should purge the acid by blowing DRY air through it at ca. 50 C until it becomes almost colourless. You can also add urea (also at 50 C), but with the amount of NOx in your acid, the byproduct water will dilute it appreciably.


Should dry air be blown into acid? Or its optional
Because ican't make dry air now

Microtek - 10-5-2020 at 07:42

As I said, you can add urea instead of using dry air. The reaction is something like this:

4CO(NH2)2 + 6NO2 -> 4CO2 + 8H20 + 7N2

So, if you had 100 grams of nitric which contained 10% NO2, you would produce a little more than 5 grams of water, taking the concentration down to below 95%. I don't know how much NOx is in your nitric, but looking at the colour of the gas above the liquid, I would say close to saturated (I don't have exact numbers on what that is).

Dry air can be accomplished by using an aquarium air pump to pump air through a jam jar or tube with CaCl2, H2SO4 or other effective dessicant (I prefer CaCl2 scale - it is cheap and not as messy as sulfuric acid). Then lead the air through a bubbler, into the acid. I use a polypropylene single use pipette that I poke holes in with a needle, but numerous other methods could work as well.

The de-NOx-ing should be carried out at 50 C whether you choose the urea method (otherwise the reaction will be too slow) or the dry air method (otherwise the solubility of NOx in the acid will be too high).



DennyDevHE77 - 10-1-2024 at 03:14

Quote: Originally posted by Microtek  
The de-NOx-ing should be carried out at 50 C whether you choose the urea method


Microtek, I have many times purified the distilled acid from nitrogen oxides with urea. But always cooled down to 10-15C. I used regular urea from the fertilizer store, in 2-3mm granules. But the one time I tried to do it at room temperature, the nitric acid heated up quickly and the nitrogen oxides only got bigger. As I guessed, the urea probably turned into urea nitrate. However, following your words, this could not be the case. Maybe I confused urea with something else....

By the way, what do you think about removing nitrogen oxides with aminosulfamic acid (descaler), some people wrote that it is more effective than urea.

Etanol - 10-1-2024 at 08:27

Use dry urea nitrate, not urea.
However, in my experience, neither urea nor nitrate ammonium nor hydrogen peroxide operates in acid more than 90%. They work only in the average concentration HNO3.

DennyDevHE77 - 10-1-2024 at 23:21

Well, that's how I clean 95% nitric acid. With urea. The nitric acid went from yellowish red to greenish. But it didn't turn clear as a teardrop. Still, it was enough to comfortably make PETN. So it is probably necessary to always specify what is meant by cleaning.

Microtek - 11-1-2024 at 01:34

If you add the urea in small portions and wait until the exotherm has subsided before adding more, runaway should not be possible. The advantage of heating to 50C is that the reaction is much faster, so you do not have to wait so long between additions and you do not as easily add too much, which would lead to loss of nitric and could also lead to an uncomfortably high temperature rise.

DennyDevHE77 - 12-2-2024 at 02:39

What are some legal uses for concentrated nitric acid (not involving energy-rich compounds)? An opportunity has arisen to buy a few dozen liters of 97-98% nitric acid, factory, white, in Teflon canisters. But I can't think of any reason why it would be needed by, say, a small home handyman. All that comes to mind, refining, jewelry, all of that is solvable and 70% nitric acid. And the big question is, how long would you get to store that kind of acid? I mean, it's decomposing. I wouldn't be surprised if it's red in a year.

Nemo_Tenetur - 12-2-2024 at 07:03

Quote: Originally posted by DennyDevHE77  
to buy a few dozen liters of 97-98% nitric acid, factory, white, in Teflon canisters


What´s the expected price? Sigma-Aldrich/Merck sell it in Germany for 557 Euro per liter:

fuming.jpg - 189kB

I don´t know in which country you live and about the legal regulations, but to resell it to earn money sounds reasonable.

DennyDevHE77 - 12-2-2024 at 07:58

Well, I'm from Russia (no politics, please, I'm against the war, putin and his oligarchy).

The question is caused by the fact that our turnover of reagents is very bureaucratic, in simple words, what is not prohibited is allowed.

We have so-called precursor tables, there are only three of them. From I with the strictest restrictions, to III with the exception of some control measures.

For example, acetic anhydride is located in table I, and it is almost impossible to buy it. And sulfuric acid is in Table III, and it is sold upon presentation of a passport (that you are an adult). The restrictions are mainly aimed at combating the manufacture of drugs, and the sphere of energy-saturated compounds is almost not affected. Nitric acid is not on these lists.

Therefore, nitric acid of any concentration is sold as NaOH, simply as a caustic substance. And purely legally, it is completely legal.

Another thing is that the sales firms may already have questions. Why do you need it? Is it for yourself? If you show yourself incorrectly, you can say goodbye to the likely purchase. For example, I was once refused the sale of sulfuric acid. Just because, when asked to whom you are buying, I accidentally said "to a friend in the garage." That's why I need a reason that could justify buying almost anhydrous nitric acid. So for example, now when I buy sulfuric acid, I immediately mention that I need it for etching glass together with ammonium fluoride.

And at the expense of the price, if you take a large container (20l = 30 kg), the cost will be 34.650 ₽ ($ 380.45). This is very expensive (for many, a monthly salary), while 70% acid will cost $ 60 and 65% will cost only $ 40 (because in Russia 70% nitric acid is produced only as "especially pure for analysis", and 65% may be technical, hence the difference)

price.png - 55kB price65.png - 85kB

[Edited on 12-2-2024 by DennyDevHE77]

Nemo_Tenetur - 12-2-2024 at 08:48

In Europe, we also have schedules for drug precursors since many years and since several years also schedules for explosive precursors. Nitric acid is since a few years heavy regulated, concentrations of three percent and more is prohibited for the general public. Apart from this, I´m pretty sure that the so-called three letter agencies watch carefully the trade with explosive and drug precursors even if it is not regulated or prohibited.

So I think the acquisition of such a huge amount fuming nitric acid could draw attention.

If you keep the container cool (if possible, below room temperature) the fuming acid should remain usable for most purposes for a long time. If it discolors and the concentration decreases, you can distill it under reduced pressure with a dehydrating agent to push the concentration up.