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Author: Subject: Chemical Storage Containers
lacrima97
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[*] posted on 18-12-2005 at 09:33
Chemical Storage Containers


What do you guys store your chemicals in? I have stored the more unreactive powders and such in simple ziplock bags, but I really don't like doing that...It seems a bit to "un-professional".

Erlenmeyer flasks seem like they would be best for liquid storage, but then the rubber stopper problem comes up. If your chemical reacts with the stopper, you end up having pieces of rubber in your liquid.

I am seriously getting tired of storing things in ziplock bags, and I have advanced to the point where I can't even use them anymore for a lot of things.

What do you guys use to store your chemicals in?
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Darkblade48
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[*] posted on 18-12-2005 at 11:16


Most dry chemicals can be stored in HDPE jars of some sorts. Even the more reactive dry chemicals (i.e. potassium permanganate) can be safely stored in HDPE jars as long as they are kept away from their incompatibles.

As for liquids such as acids and bases, again, HDPE bottles are usually good for most acids. If you have nitric acid, or concentrated sulfuric, you may want to buy a glass bottle with a teflon coated plastic cap, and that should be enough.
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lacrima97
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[*] posted on 18-12-2005 at 13:45


Ah, I appreciate the help. I found some very nice HDPE bottles on ebay. Cheap too.

Thanks.

EDIT: Fuck Ebay.

http://www.specialtybottle.com/

[Edited on 12/18/2005 by lacrima97]
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Lotek_
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[*] posted on 20-12-2005 at 07:59


^hey lacrim!

i found the following jars off ebay. i use them for solid storage(and if i absolutly need to, liquid reaction containers). http://www.rctparadox.net/gallery/albums/userpics/10001/CNXT...

they have a teflon seal inside the lid.


good link.
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Lotek_
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[*] posted on 28-12-2005 at 22:41


yea. im the lab ive got h2o2, NaOH, and acetone in 3% h2o2 bottles. the real reason i use them is because of their nice size but they do provie light shielding.

they make for very nice fridge bottles. i keep a bottle of most of my reagents in the fridge aswell as one on the bench because for many synths its really nice to start out with cooled reagents.
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chemoleo
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[*] posted on 28-12-2005 at 22:50


Cyroxos, your post screwed up html formatting of this thread. Why? Because you attempted to put a picture into the signature. Please DO NOT use pictures in signature.

This was the last message by Cyroxus.
Quote:
^ Yea, those are quite nice. Also, Lotek had a good idea of recycling used H2O2 bottles and such. I belive those are HDPE as well.




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Chris The Great
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[*] posted on 28-12-2005 at 23:04


I use empty H2O2 bottles as well. I transferred some of my 35% H2O2 to a really dark one because I find its hard to pour it out of the 4L jug, and I store it in the back of my chems to protect it from light to it is hard to get at.

They work great for storing liquids.

Now, I just need to get containers for solids, all mine are stored in ziplock bags and it really bigs me.
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Lotek_
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[*] posted on 28-12-2005 at 23:11


Quote:
Originally posted by Chris The Great
I use empty H2O2 bottles as well. I transferred some of my 35% H2O2 to a really dark one because I find its hard to pour it out of the 4L jug, and I store it in the back of my chems to protect it from light to it is hard to get at.

They work great for storing liquids.

Now, I just need to get containers for solids, all mine are stored in ziplock bags and it really bigs me.


:\ yea that thought was getting to me when i was settign my lab up. luckily i found an auction for these cool little jars. have a teflon lid seal. they are great for solids.

look on ebay. i got 12 of em for like 10 bux.
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Nick F
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 04:34


The only good bottles I've found for nitric are glass with ground glass stoppers. The container I bought it in (black HDPE) started to kinda leak (minute holes developed, and the acid very slowly oozed out and formed drops on the outside of the bottle), and even glass bottles with screw-on HDPE caps seem to leak a bit of vapour. If they stay unattended for any length of time, a slight condensation of acid builds up around the neck, near the cap.
Similarly with iodine, ground glass seems to be the only thing that it won't diffuse through!
But for most things, HDPE is cool.
One important rule (which unfortunately I am not adhering to at the moment :( ) is never store mercury in glass or other fragile containers. Mercury is so dense that even a small drop will cause the container to break, and it'll spill everywhere, which is very very bad. I have some fairly thick-walled polypropylene bottles which I think I will put it into, it shouldn't diffuse out too quickly. Then preferably put the container with the mercury in it inside a larger container with powdered sulphur at the bottom, to help mop up any vapour which does escape. I learnt that here :D.
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 10:12


I store my more corrosive chemicals (Br<sub>2</sub>, I<sub>2</sub>, conc. HNO<sub>3</sub>, etc.) in large vials or dark glass bottles whose caps have Teflon disc inserts. I have posted on making these a number of times, just look around.

These stoppers are completely leak-proof if made correctly. Nothing can diffuse through Teflon and almost nothing will react with it (except strong reducing agents and styrene monomer). I have stored a small sample (~.5mL) of a liquid with a vapor pressure of 2.5 atm at room temperature in a small vial with one of my Teflon-lined stoppers for several months now and all the liquid is still there, absolutely no leakage. :D
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Lotek_
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 10:30


OT: whats the deposit that forms on out outside of leaky NaOH bottles? its white and kinda hard on the outside btu still wet inside.
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 11:02


Sodium carbonate from the NaOH reacting with the air.

I use glass vials for storage of anything I prepare as I do not usually work on a scale which requires much larger. I also have some of those antique reagent bottles with the pennyhead ground glass stoppers for storage of concentrated or dilute acids.
I am going to be needing some HDPE bottles though, becuase I got some chems in bags from the pottery store recently.




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woelen
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 13:35


Most of my solid chems I store in HDPE bottles. Liquids I store in special lab bottles (a friend of mine works in a lab and he frequently brings empty bottles). These bottles have acid and chlorine resistant caps. Very nice.

For some chemicals I take special measures. Some chemicals are extremely hygroscopic or air sensitive (oxidation). These, I store in a HDPE bottle, which I in turn wrap in a closed small plastic bag, which in turn is put in a larger HDPE bottle. The plastic bag helps a lot against thermal cycling. When it gets colder, then the air shrinks and the bag also shrinks, when it gets warmer, the volume of the air in the bag increases and the bag expands. This helps a lot against cycling fresh air all over again into the bottle when temperature fluctuates. In this way I have kept my Na2S, Mg(ClO4)2, and a few other very sensitive chemicals very good for a long time. I have separate small bottles for my working amounts, the bottles with bags and so on contain larger stock amounts.

Iodine and p-benzoquinone I store in triple bottles. They make everything brown in the neightbourhood. I tried glass bottles, plastic bottles. It is horrible. With the triple bottles Only the first and second bottle become brown, the third outer one still is OK.




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lacrima97
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[*] posted on 29-12-2005 at 14:42


I got some #5 polypropylene containers today for storing the more unreactive/stable chemicals in. I also got some paper sticky labels that I am going to print info about the chem on, and stick those labels to the container.

For the liquids that don't eat at rubber, I am collecting 8oz dr.pepper bottles. They accept a #2 stopper perfectly, and I will store most liquids in there. A few will be wrapped in something to keep out light if the material is light sensative.

The last thing I will get will probably be a few HDPE jars for the more troublesome chems, and a few reagent bottles for the rubber eating acids.
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lacrima97
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[*] posted on 3-1-2006 at 16:52


Perfect bottles

Guys, I have a problem.

I get these 240ml Dr.Pepper drinks all of the time, and they come in a very nice glass bottle, which I have found out takes a #2 stopper perfectly.

The problem is, I don't like the fact that these bottles have dr.p and nutrition facts and all that shit on it.

It is some type of paint on the bottle. I have tried scratching it off with a knife, dissolving it in acetone, and this paint will not come off.

Does anyone know what im talking about, and/or have any ideas on how to get this damn paint off? This would be the perfect solution to storing liquids, becuase I just don't have the money to be buying expensive bottles.

Thanks a lot. ;)
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[*] posted on 3-1-2006 at 18:05


I use "stock container" 90% of the time Ie if it came in a glass bottle it stays in a glass bottle.
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neutrino
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[*] posted on 3-1-2006 at 18:55


It doesn't come off with a knife? That is no ordinary paint!

My advice would mainly be scraping, preferably with steel wool. Burning it off would require an annealing oven (soda-lime glass is notoriously prone to thermal stress and must be annealed unless heated very evenly and slowly, which would be difficult at these temperatures). Chemical means would mainly involve dissolving it, after all they had to put it on there somehow... Try some more solvents, if you have any.
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lacrima97
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[*] posted on 3-1-2006 at 20:15


Alright, I'll give several solvents a try. Steel wool doesn't work either. Thanks neutrino.
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Rabidwolf
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[*] posted on 4-1-2006 at 04:32


ammo boxes make very secure places to store any chem.
and all the boxes i've seen have a rubber seal around the lid that makes it pretty much air/water-tight
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Lotek_
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[*] posted on 4-1-2006 at 08:09


i wouldnt wanna put any chem in a metal box...

the idea is to go for beign as inert are you can(exept mabye making a teflon cube)
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Rabidwolf
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[*] posted on 4-1-2006 at 20:29


lol,
after i posted i saw the potential it had to being interperted as you did.
:P

i ment the ammo box used as a water/air tight container for storage of smaller vessels filled with misc. chemicals.
considering an ammunition box is spacifically designed to be a box that can safely store and protect a sizeable ammount of explosive meterial, i'd highly recommend a few to safely store various energetic materials, and componets related thereto.
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[*] posted on 5-1-2006 at 13:47


a lot of containers might be acceptable for long term storage but I have always been concerned about the possible leakeage via the gasket material.

therefore cutting a approipriate shaped gasket from something like thin Teflon
would give a much added life to the vessel.

just an idea
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[*] posted on 5-1-2006 at 16:53


My habit is to leave the chemical in the container in which I receive it. If it is a plastic bag I usually overpack this in a recycled food jar. I agree that the gasket material may not be appropriate. Jimwig's idea of making own Teflon gaskets is a good one where this extra effort and expense is warranted.

I like the Quorpak bottles. They can be bought with either polyethylene or Teflon gaskets in various sizes. It seems like there are always a lot of good buys on bottles on eBay. But check the freight before buying.

If the material is particularly hard to contain I use ground glass stoppered bottles.

[Edited on 6-1-2006 by Magpie]




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[*] posted on 6-1-2006 at 06:35


Within a few weeks I hope to receive 2 ampoules, each having 250 ml of bromine (pro analysi)in them. These are all-glass ampoules from an old GDR lab, which, once broken, cannot be sealed anymore. The ampoules are intended for use in a lab, where the contents is used at once in a synthesis reaction. Of course, I will use the bromine in much smaller parts, in a lot of nifty experiments :D.

So, I need a bottle of 250 ml, in which I can store the bromine, once the original container is broken. I already had some bromine before, which I had isolated myself, but I never stored it for more than a few days, because it leaks away from its container and it eats the cap. I would be really pleased if one of you can give me a location of a supplier, who can sell bromine-resistant bottles and who ships these bottles internationally. These bottles also should be such that the bromine does not slowly leak/diffuse out of the bottle over the course of months or years.

A question, a little bit off-topic: I had to pay EUR 30,- (appr. $35) per ampoule of bromine (appr. 250 ml -- 800 gram). This is not particularly cheap, but do you think I have been ripped off or is this a fair price? I myself have the impression that this is a fair price, although I have not a real good idea about the price of bromine. I purchased NaBr from the same seller for appr. $15 for one kilo, which is a good price to my opinion. I decided to buy the ampoules anyway, it is a one-time offer and it is a very interesting chem to have.


[Edited on 6-1-06 by woelen]




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chromium
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[*] posted on 6-1-2006 at 06:55


I suppose that best container you can have is bottle or flask with ground glass stopper but i do not know what grease to use if content is bromine.

Another way is to repack this bromine into your own ampoules. Its not as hard as it may seem. You can use long test tubes or small flasks or just suitable glass tubes as material for ampoules.


[Edited on 6-1-2006 by chromium]
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