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Author: Subject: Safe disposal of old potassium
Bedlasky
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[*] posted on 9-8-2022 at 07:04
Safe disposal of old potassium


Hi.

My friend have a can with very potassium, probably without petroleum (according to the sound of can when he took it in his hands). What is the safest way of disposal of this large amount of potassium? Throwing it in to the nearby small pond or stream sounds quite dangerous, because of explosion and lots of KOH in water which can harm animals. Would be burning it in a pile of wood safer? Or did you have any better idea?
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Loptr
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[*] posted on 9-8-2022 at 10:24


How much potassium are we talking about? 100 grams? 1 kg?

Also, where are you located? There might be some people interested in possibly buying it.




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[*] posted on 9-8-2022 at 10:52


Even without petroleum most of the potassium should still be good, since it forms an oxide skin that protects it from further reaction. I agree that selling it is the best way, and failing that throwing it into a pond would be the second choice. Natural water sources are surprisingly well buffered such that even a few kg of KOH should not harm anything. Burning is a bad idea because it will be hard to ensure all of it is reacted and next time it rains there could be a fire.
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[*] posted on 9-8-2022 at 11:00


An interesting potential problem with a fire is the possible presence of potassium superoxide/ peroxide.
That, soaked with the remains of the oil, or mixed with potassium metal ... might not be what you expected.

Selling it is good (using it for something would be even better- if you had a use for it).
Throwing it into a deep pond is probably the best option.

The official answer is to destroy it by covering it with kerosene and slowly adding a solution of alcohol in kerosene.
You then have to slowly add water to destroy the potassium alkoxides.
And then you have to get rid of lots of dirty kerosene.

A word of caution; I heard of someone disposing of waste sodium in this way (they lived on Jersey and threw it in the sea).

They were prosecuted for "dynamiting fish".





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Bedlasky
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[*] posted on 11-8-2022 at 09:27


Thanks for answers.

Do you think that 40-50 years old potassium would be still good? It was probably under petroleum most of the time, but who knows how long it is without protection. Year? Decade?

Selling it to someone might be a good idea, but I think that sending it by post would be dangerous. Best would be personal handover, which make sense just for someone near Czech/German/Polish borders.
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[*] posted on 11-8-2022 at 19:49


If it was mine, I'd first see if there is any usable potassium inside the crud.
If yes then recover it,
the crud will be a mixture of potassium metal, oxides, hydroxide and carbonate ;
so it should be an excellent dessicant,
Or, just leaving the crud exposed to the atmosphere (but no liquid water obviously) will eventually yield potassium carbonate solution - I think.




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[*] posted on 11-8-2022 at 20:16


I would NOT endorse Sulaiman’s advice. Potassium in air, unlike sodium, forms primarily peroxide and superoxide rather than oxide, which leads to old samples potentially being shock sensitive, especially if fresh metallic potassium comes in contact with the superoxide. I would hesitate to touch it with a 10 ft pole, personally…



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Sulaiman
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[*] posted on 11-8-2022 at 20:21


Oh! that sounds bad... My bad!
Thank you for the warning/correction.




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[*] posted on 12-8-2022 at 02:34


Back at a time when you could even by white phosphorous at the local chemical company. I had a ten+ year old bottle of sodium (a bit less than 500g in a hydrocarbon. The sodium was heavily encrusted with a white partially translucent substance. I had read that there had been explosions when old encrusted sodium was cut. So I decided to dispose of it. I drained the hydrocarbon and through it into a lake in a clay pit. No explosion but a lots of bubbles reached the surface.



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[*] posted on 12-8-2022 at 04:30


To form sodium peroxides or super oxides you really have to mistreat the metal, but potassium not so much. Especially when stored under a flammable solvent you don't want those oxides to decompose upon contact with the metal it is encrusting.
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Bedlasky
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[*] posted on 17-8-2022 at 13:30


Thanks for advice, potassium was safely destroyed in old petroleum barrel filled with water.
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