Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Collection of colored gases/vapors

woelen - 16-10-2016 at 11:31

Just for the fun of it, I made a nice small collection of colored gases and put them in ampoules so that they can be displayed at any time.

Currently I have 7 gases/vapor in ampoules. All of these ampoules were made with air, saturated with vapor, at 15 C. This allows displaying of the gas/vapor at room temperature without the risk of formation of condensed liquid at the inside of the ampoule. Of course, the really gaseous things are made just out of 100% gas. All gases are dried meticulously with P4O10 before ampouling.

I made the following:
- Cl2: from TCCA + HCl
- ONCl: Dripping concentrated solution of NaNO2 in conc. HCl at low temperature
- ONBr: Adding solid NaNO2 to 48% HBr
- Br2: Dripping a small amount of Br2 in a vessel and allowing all of it to evaporate in the loosely closed vessel. This takes a long time.
- IBr: Adding a small amount of IBr to a vessel and allowing it to evaporate. It was heated with the hand, otherwise it took ages. After formation of the vapor a 50% air/50% vapor mix was ampouled to be sure that no solid material collects at the glass wall.
- NO2: from solid NaNO2 added to dilute H2SO4. This gives a mix of NO and NO2. For this reason, I ampouled a mix of this gas and oxygen.
- BrCl: Made by adding Br2 to an excess amount of Cl2. The Br2 reacts with Cl2 forming gaseous BrCl (it evaporates very quickly due to this) and drives away part of the Cl2. My ampoule almost certainly is not pure BrCl, but also contains some excess Cl2, whose color is completely masked though.

Here follow some pictures of these gases (click the pictures for hires images):



seven_ampoules_upright1.jpg - 855kB


seven_ampoules_upright2.jpg - 885kB


seven_ampoules_upright3.jpg - 828kB


brown_gases.jpg - 976kB


Any ideas for other colored gases/vapors? The gases must be stable on storage. I myself consider vapor of CrO2Cl2. I tried dilute ClO2, but that does not keep well. Its color fades quickly.

BromicAcid - 16-10-2016 at 11:45

Pretty, thanks for sharing. Of course diazomethane and dichloroacetylene are off the table.

DraconicAcid - 16-10-2016 at 11:55

Isn't ozone blue, or is that only at high pressures? Iodine vapour, of course, is nice.

arkoma - 16-10-2016 at 17:04

Quote: Originally posted by DraconicAcid  
Iodine vapour, of course, is nice.


Yes it is ^^ As are the gasses you ampouled too. I'm so screwed up from the bike crash who knows how long it will be before I'm active so its nice to be in the lab vicariously.

JustMe - 16-10-2016 at 18:37

Manganese Heptoxide? / Permanganic Acid

DraconicAcid - 16-10-2016 at 19:12

Quote: Originally posted by JustMe  
Manganese Heptoxide? / Permanganic Acid

Those aren't gases, and aren't stable.

j_sum1 - 16-10-2016 at 19:42

What a cool project -- and challenging too.

It seems to me that there is a chunk of the spectrum missing. We have the yellows to browns. We have a hint of purple. But we don't really have a vivid red, a definitive green and nothing from the blue zone. Which gets me wondering...


Is a blue gas actually possible at ambient conditions? Is there a technical reason why we are mostly limited to the orange-brown colorations? (Kind of like why there are no green stars." Just wondering.

I was going to propose iodine vapours also but I think any successful attempt probably has to have some residual solid clinging to the glass and most likely be without air included.

Metacelsus - 16-10-2016 at 19:49

I was also wondering about the possibility of a blue colored gas. Dinitrogen trioxide is blue, but at temperatures where it's a gas, the equilibrium favors nitrogen monoxide and nitrogen dioxide. Google searches for "blue colored gas" all return results for dyed gasoline, so I haven't had luck there.

zwt - 16-10-2016 at 20:14

A blue gas?
A quick search turned up trifluoronitrosomethane.
Not the easiest synthesis, also, it might attack a glass ampule.

phlogiston - 17-10-2016 at 01:24

ozone is supposed to be pale blue.

ave369 - 17-10-2016 at 06:49

Ozone is not stable. In gaseous form, it decays into oxygen. In liquid form, it's a hair-trigger explosive.

woelen - 17-10-2016 at 09:37

I actually tried iodine vapor, but the color of the vapor at room temperature is so weak that it is not interesting anymore. If a little too concentrated iodine vapor is used, then the glass quickly becomes covered with brown stain, giving tha ampoule an ugly appearance.

I knew of CF3NO. This sounds very interesting, but making this gas is not something, easily done by a home chemist. The required chemicals are very hard to obtain and quite hazardous.

It indeed is striking that colored gases all are in the yellow/orange/red range of the spectrum. Chlorine is somewhat borderline with a clearly green hue. ClO2 also is very bright yellow with a greenish hue, but keeping that gas around in an ampoule is not possible. The color fades over one day (I tried it with 30% ClO2 / 70% air).

At higher temperature, there are more possible colors: deep purple iodine, bright yellow NbCl5 and green VOCl3.

exp002.jpg - 34kB

This requires tempratures of 300 C or so. So, unfortunately, I cannot ampoule some of this green gas.

MeshPL - 17-10-2016 at 11:59

Chromyl chloride is quite volataile, but has rather reddish colour so that doesn't add anything new.

unionised - 17-10-2016 at 12:12

The subject of blue gases has been discussed before
http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=30354

diddi - 17-10-2016 at 13:44

huge vote of encouragement to you woelen. I am very keen to see some more colours!

clearly_not_atara - 17-10-2016 at 15:14

Quote:
[quote=woelen] Making [nitrosotrifluoromethane] most likely is beyond the reach of nearly all amateurs.


The German Wikipedia page suggests that the reaction between NOCl and silver trifluoroacetate may generate this compound by a sort of nitroso-Hunsdiecker reaction. Silver trifluoroacetate may itself be prepared from trichloroacetic acid and silver fluoride, which is a very accessible reaction ("otc") but very dangerous.

However, the other famous nitroso compound, 2-nitroso-2-methylpropane aka t-butylnitrosyl, tends to dimerize. In fact, t-butylnitrosyl is a "volatile blue liquid", which is about as good a candidate blue gas as any, but it dimerizes to a colorless solid. I suspect other blue compounds based on the nitroso group will have the same limitation. In fact, perfluorothioacetone also has the unfortunate tendency to dimerize! So it might as well be pointed out that nitrosobenzene:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrosobenzene
http://orgsyn.org/demo.aspx?prep=cv3p0668

boils at just 59 C under 18 mmHg, and could probably be brought down to 20C at 3-4 mmHg. Unlike all those other compounds, nitrosobenzene is quite easy to synthesize. It could possibly be ampouled with argon and cracked in sunlight?


j_sum1 - 17-10-2016 at 15:19

I believe that sodium gas is blue and potassium gas is green. But these gases at room temperature are not attainable.

clearly_not_atara - 17-10-2016 at 21:44

Oh -- you might be able to make trifluoronitromethane by the reactiin of chloropicrin with silver fluoride. Reduction gives a blue gas.

NO2 ampoule

Noucky - 11-4-2018 at 00:52

Hello!
What kind of ampoules did you by to do this!?
Thanks for your response.

woelen - 11-4-2018 at 02:21

I purchased these ampoules at this eBay seller. Most convenient are the 10 ml ampoules.

https://www.ebay.nl/usr/sir_doll?_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l275...

Morgan - 11-4-2018 at 13:02

On the subject of iodine vapor, I thought it might be interesting to try to heat it in a somewhat sealed quartz tube with a piston so that you could watch the intensity of the color vary as a thermoacoustic piston rises and falls, compressing and relaxing the vapor pressure - something akin to the "Thermoacoustic Quartz Piston" posted on YouTube.

Doped-Al2O3-fusion - 11-4-2018 at 23:52

This is awesome! I have only one sealed ampule of gas and it's hydrogen I generated through electrolysis. It looks like nothing, but I still think it's pretty cool.

j_sum1 - 12-4-2018 at 00:16

Sealing H2 must have been fun! Not the easiest to begin with.