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Author: Subject: How to keep elemental bromine?
Tacho
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 06:39
How to keep elemental bromine?


Bromine is dangerous and escapes from every container as a gas.

If I keep it mixed with some solvent, like DCM or GAA, will it behave better?

If it does, whats the logic behind it? Why would he "fume" less in a solvent? Some bond to the solvent?
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chemoleo
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 09:12


Isn't it kept under water, ordinarily? Just to avoid that particular problem?



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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 09:15
Never used bromine but


I think if you put a less dense liquid on top of it the weight would help compress the bromine and help keep it in liquid form. If it didn't work at least you would not get a pressure explosion.

Edit: Chemleo posted while I was typing. I was thinking water or possibly some light, non reactive oil as well.

[Edited on 8-4-2004 by Quantum]




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Tacho
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 09:44


Thanks.

Well, I have made some bromine oxidating aquous NaBr.

Even after some bromine has precipitated to a brown layer the solution still fumes a lot.

Freezing is not an option since I may find some oposition to keep a volatile poison where we store food. Even considering the antiseptic advantages.

If only it formed some bond to a solvent, like HCl to water.
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Nick F
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 10:11


I don't have any myself, but once used it at school. It was in a glass bottle with a screw-on plastic lid, probably made of teflon so that it wasn't corroded.
I guess a glass bottle with ground glass stopper would work too, with a little teflon grease on the stopper.




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chemoleo
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 11:40


Well, I wouldn't keep the bromine under some type of oil, it tends to react (isn't that a reaction activated by light) by forming bromo-alkanes etc.

Under water, bromine does of course react to a small extent, according to Br2+H2O--> HBr + HOBr (hypobromic acid). However, as soon as you have reached equilibrium, the Br2 should not react any further.
I'd stick to Nicks advice, use a glass-stoppered bottle, and keep in a dark place or use brown bottles instead.
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 14:04


I've tried a few ways to keep bromine, in an organic solvent (chloroform) in a glass bottle with a ground glass joint, it slowly reacted with it and evaporated away anyways. Under water in the same bottle and it evaporated away. And finally in a screw top bottle with no adulterants. The screw top bottle proved best, just don't heat it with the lid on and the pressure should not get too excessive.



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Geomancer
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 16:18


I have had problems with HDPE and iodine, the iodine just goes right through the stuff. What is your cap made of, and how much bromine comes through? Interesting that the ground glass didn't work.
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[*] posted on 8-4-2004 at 19:04


The bromine had, on several occasions, developed internal pressure sufficent to eject the glass stopper. My caps are screw top PTFE lined and very resistant to the halogen in question.



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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 00:59


I posses only very small quantities of bromine but those who store it in somewhat large quantities store it dissolve in some organic solvent such as CCl4 (1,1,1,1-tetrachloromethane) - which is highly toxic and quite volatile, but inert to bromine.



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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 02:27


I wuold suggest the storage in some kind of an ampoule (may be self-made out of a test-tube) You fill many of these with small amounts of Br2, close the opening with a burner and store them in the refrigerator. So you avoid the problem with the volatility. If you need some Br2 all you have to do is take the ampoule out of the refrigerator and put it in some kind of cold-bath to reduce the pressure in the ampoule (the ampoule must be really cold, to avoid the formation of large amounts of gaseous (=pressure!) Br2) and open it with a file or something else.
The vapour-pressure of Br2 at -25degC;-8degC is 10mmHg;40mmHg compared with water which has those pressures at 11,3degC; 34,1degC
to create good cold-mixtures you may use this recipes
30,2g CaCl2 + 100g ice -> temp.: -50degC
45g CaCl2*6H2O + 100g water -> temp.: -22degC
this should be cold enough for cooling the ampoules
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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 03:12


Using an ampule is a good idea, cooling will not be needed during storage, pressure will not be a problem. Just so long as the neck is thin enough to be flame sealed quickly.
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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 03:47


I have the same problem with diethylether. At first I only thought, that the bottle in which I bought it was leaky. However, meanwhile I tried out many different bottles (also with glass stoppers), nevertheless a sweetish smell of ether still escapes. At university there is a special stainless steel canister used for storage the ether, however in the cupboard in which it stands the smell is also very strong.



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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 06:13


Quote:
Originally posted by Esplosivo
CCl4 (1,1,1,1-tetrachloromethane)


I've seen a lot of unnecessarily precise nomenclature in my time, but this really takes the biscuit. :D

[Edited on 9-4-2004 by I am a fish]




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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 06:14


My bromine is stored in a special bottle, actually an ordinary bottle with a special stopper. The bromine is Merk made, so the stopper is fine. The stopper is made (I guess) from ebonite with an opercule of some kind of teflon, since is totally inert to the bromine. There is no presure developped aswell, when I open the bottle.

I know that bromine is very volatile (boils at 58 degrees C or something), but I don't think it creates a vapor presure as the ether. Ether does make pressure and is quite dangerous, as the bottle may be blasted if the temperature goes to high (over 35 °C)
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[*] posted on 9-4-2004 at 09:33


Thank you all,

I'll go for the ampoule idea. I think I know where to buy virgin ampoules. Sealing of small amounts with a flame should not pose a problem if they are cooled.
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[*] posted on 18-9-2004 at 17:16


I had a bottle in the back of my chemistry supply area, glass with a PTFE cap. When I touched it it left a red sticky film on me, the whole lid swelled off the top of the container and attacked everything around it. Crazy ol' bromine.



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[*] posted on 20-10-2004 at 00:33


You could use a layer of strong CaCl2 or NaCl solution on top, the salt is there to stop the bromine from dissolving (chlorine is much less soluble in strong NaCl solution than in water, it's even collected over it, could work for bromine also)



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