Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Experimental: Alternative to Al/Hg - the Al/Ga

TheCopperMan - 29-6-2014 at 12:51

References
There has been plenty of talks about using gallium to activate Al, both on this forum and elsewhere. Search Google for "Al/Hg gallium sciencemadness" and you will find many posts referencing the use of gallium. However, it seems there has been no complete writeups of this method.

So, after some experimentation, a general method has been found that produces a reaction VERY similar to an Al/Hg and in the same yields too. And unlike an Al/Hg it can be scaled massively, because the amalgam itself is added gradually.

So far it has been tried on a propene which is notoriously hard to reduce, and gave the same yields as Al/Hg.

Experimental
Amalgam preparation
Many methods have been tried to prepare the amalgam. It has been tried making gallium salts, but they show very little reactivity or willingness to attack the Al. It has been tried using plain Ga, and dissolving Al powder, foil, etc. into the plain Ga, and generally all methods took very much time, required heating and other nonsense.

The easiest method found was this (takes 10 min tops):
Measure up 15g molten Ga in some disposable container. Now take a large sheet of Al-foil, keep it as straight as possible, and fold it like you were folding a piece of paper very precisely, making sure it's completely flat before you do the next fold. Unlike paper, it can be folded more than 7 times (or was it 9, don't remember) ;). You will be left with a thick 'brick' of Al. Make a total of 12g worth of such bricks. Takes maybe 3 minutes. Now, put them into the container containing the Ga. Take a teaspoon (or etc) and exert strong downward force on the bricks in the Ga container, whilst scraping them back and forth into the Ga. This way, the Al dissolves AMAZINGLY quick. It takes maybe 5 minute tops until you have a uniform, silvery mass of amalgam. That's it, your amalgam is done.

Sidenote: It is strongly recommended to add maybe 5% tin (based on weight Ga) into the amalgam, to lower the MP of the amalgam. This makes it react much better and more completely (instead of reacting just a bit then getting covered with sludge that prevents further access to the amalgam). It also makes it a bit softer and easier to handle.

Reaction
Here, you can use the regular Al/Hg solvent ratios, unlike with the Al/Cu. Add all the ingredients together. Recommended to use 10g Al per 10g substrate at least. No need to apply heat. Now, start adding the amalgam bit by bit, into the reaction flask. Use gloves, break off pieces of amalgam with your hands, roll them into long sausages or whatever shape maximizes the surface area, then add it through an open joint (close joint after each addition). Add it however fast or slow you want, depending on if you want a volcano type reaction or just a nice, slow reflux.

After finished adding, reflux reaction for a bit, whatever you want, then work up as usual.



Some notes
Because this reaction can be easily controlled by the addition rate of the amalgam, it has been thought that this reaction can easily be scaled up VERY large, AND solvent volumes can probably be reduced, allowing to use much less size glassware for much larger batches of substrate.

Crypto - 29-6-2014 at 14:17

10g of aluminum per 10g of substrate, but how much amalgam? Let's say someone wants to run the reaction with 100 or even 200 grams of aluminum. A gram of HgCl2 would be enough. How much Al/Ga? All the aluminum is suppose to be mixed with gallium?

[Edited on 29-6-2014 by Crypto]

Burner - 29-6-2014 at 14:41

Just for the record, I have used about 1/10 the mass of gallium as TheCopperMan has described and while I did not end up with liquid amalgam but rather an aluminum sample that looked like it was suffering from "tin disease" ;) it worked well. Similar to the results that TheCopperMan described, my experiments showed performance nearly identical to Al/Hg amalgam system.

Burner - 29-6-2014 at 14:46

TheCopperMan, thanks for your suggestion to use a bit of tin to reduce the MP. I will definitely keep that in mind for the next time.

Crypto - 29-6-2014 at 14:49

Any success recovering Ga? I have 10 grams of it just waiting to play with it. Would be nice to recycle it because it is quite expensive at my sources. About 3000 dollars per kilogram.

TheCopperMan - 29-6-2014 at 15:29

@Burner

Indeed, the amalgam is not liquid, but some mixture between liquid and solid.

@Crypto
It can be recycled, approx 95% is recovered per reaction. If one is less sloppy then more can be recovered. After reaction is finished, NaOH has been added (dissolving all sludge) and reaction extracted, the gallium should be a liquid pool at the bottom. Use your imagination to get it out, then wash it with some water, some NaOH and lastly some HCl or better yet H2SO4 to dissolve the aluminum oxide, and it's ready for another reduction.

10g Al per 10g substrate per 15g Ga is the ratio.

Also, 3000 per kilogram? On ebay it is sold for 340EUR per kilogram.

[Edited on 29-6-2014 by TheCopperMan]

pepsimax - 29-6-2014 at 15:43

Damn you copper man, I've only just got my shed clean from the copper experimentation.


I'd recommend gloves for making the alloy, the silver fingers last an eternity. I still have a very pretty mirrored beaker however! Try it in an old one :)

[Edited on 29-6-2014 by pepsimax]

Burner - 29-6-2014 at 16:46

My idea to use gallium came from this post - http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=11687 and was surprised that it worked extremely well, equivalently to Al/Hg amalgam.

I have been reading voraciously since I joined here! ;) The archives have some really great info.

arkoma - 29-6-2014 at 16:53

Quote: Originally posted by Burner  

I have been reading voraciously since I joined here! ;) The archives have some really great info.


Yes, Da, Si, Oui, Ja!!! Not to mention fantastic members.

Burner - 29-6-2014 at 17:02

BTW, this is what I used to realize that it was possible to use much less gallium.

Gallium Aluminum Phase Diagram.png - 203kB

TheCopperMan - 29-6-2014 at 17:07

Hm, it was tried to use less gallium at some points but this produced some kind of super-reactive dry powder. Seem to recall that it reacted instantly once it touched the surface of the reaction and never really made it to the bottom...but this is very long ago and the memory is fuzzy

Generally though the less gallium the better, and the more surface area the better. Sometimes if you add too thick pieces of amalgam into the reaction the piece will be covered in sludge and stops reacting unless you touch it with a stirr bar to expose the fresh amalgam underneath the surface and restart reaction.

BTW Burner what was the substrate you reduced?

[Edited on 30-6-2014 by TheCopperMan]

Burner - 29-6-2014 at 22:35

I used Al shot (about the size of a BB [3-4mm dia]) rather than powdered Al that I suspect that others may have tried, and the Ga-reacted Al shot provided a reactive material that was added through the reflux condenser a piece at a time, to control the speed of reaction.

I tested it against a number of unsaturated alkenes. I was pleasantly surprised that it worked so well. BTW, I am looking to test your Cu-mediated approach sometime in the future to compare results with the Ga approach that I used.

pepsimax - 20-7-2014 at 01:36

I can't seem to get the gallium to react properly. An alloy made with a few bits of aluminum and gallium bubbles in water but in this ratio it does nothing. I combined 750mg Ga with 500mg Al, it formed a dense liquid, some parts quite powdery. This was dropped in 15ml dH20, 20ml GAA, 15ml EtOH with 500mg nitrostyrene in a 100ml conical flask. No reaction occurred after 15 mins. This was heated to 65c, again no reaction. Before writing it off, I dropped 100mg copper chloride in there. Instantly it started bubbling so I began rapidly swirling the flask. The colour of the solution quickly faded from yellow to clear then grey, dark grey and when the Al had gone it was a dark grey/red colour.

This was worked up in the usual way to give 380mg of PEA, which seems to be my best result from copper or Ga. Not sure if the Ga helped or what.

TheCopperMan - 21-7-2014 at 07:46

I take it your Ga is very pure. Usually with recycled Ga combined with Al it will react pretty fast once it touches the liquid, however with fresh Ga it would sometimes refuse to react at all. However if the heat is turned up to reflux for 2-3hrs, despite no bubbling or no seemingly activity, there would be a color change and once worked up it still produced a decent yield. So even if it seems like nothing happening, there still might be something going on. However this kind of behavior was as said only experienced with very pure, fresh Ga, once it was recycled it would become much more reactive.

Adding copper was an interesting twist though. Not sure if the copper or Ga did the work, perhaps you could retry once with only Al and copper.

pepsimax - 21-7-2014 at 17:28

Ah interesting, thanks! The Ga was sold as 99.999% though I usually take that with a pinch of salt. I ran the above again and it proceeded in the same way.

From the looks of things it seems that the gallium and copper help compliment each other. The "galluminium" sinks and breaks up so the Al is in the solution at all times. The copper chloride attacks it preventing any sludge building up and slowing the reaction. Though this could be wishful thinking!

Ga alone gave no product but I didn't try the 3h reflux, copper gave product but lots of strange side products which varied each time. The same nitrostyrene gave a pure and good result with the combo. Run out of gallium now but it would be interesting to see if anyone else reported the same :)

TheCopperMan - 21-7-2014 at 21:28

Generally Ga alone should give the same results you are seeing, assuming your amalgam actually shows a reaction once it touches the liquid. (even if it doesnt a 2-3hrs reflux should do and give the same yields). To make the amalgam more reactive one can for example use recycled Ga which is a bit more impure and allows easier access to the Al inside, or you can also use less Ga per Al. Like Burner who used 1/10 the amnt with Al shot.

As for the copper, it seems to be less clean than Ga indeed and side products were observed but they were always consistent and they seemed pretty insignificant. Of course nothing like NMR or gcms is available...what were yields for copper?

[Edited on 22-7-2014 by TheCopperMan]

chemrox - 22-7-2014 at 11:01

I think you should do some "scaling" experiments to see how little Ga you could use and write this up for ACS.

pepsimax - 22-7-2014 at 11:43

Wanting to try a different substrate, bit bored of phenethylamine after 20 odd experiments with your procedures... Nitromethane is the only thing I have to hand.

I must admit I'm uneasy about using the stuff, potential explosions are not something I'd look forward to. Been reading up and saw nitromethane and copper chloride are incompatible but can't figure out why, anyone know? Rest of the procedure shouldn't cause problems, except extra care when basing in case of residual nitro ?

pauldir - 17-8-2014 at 08:18

some tests with the Al/Gu, this show me first a strong reaction when the Al/Gu comes in contact with water, this reaction stops some seconds later and Al stay in the bottle. Some mixing will not help.
In acetic acid (80%) the reaction starts not (in pure dest. water starts immediately)

... we will see. Next time i try the preparation step by step from the first posting.

[Edited on 17-8-2014 by pauldir]

ChemicalCowboy84 - 17-9-2014 at 16:57

What about using nitromethane instead of methylamine? Will this reaction still work any precaution need to be taken ?

Templar - 26-6-2015 at 09:06

Quote: Originally posted by ChemicalCowboy84  
What about using nitromethane instead of methylamine? Will this reaction still work any precaution need to be taken ?


Yes absolutely. The addition of another exothermic reaction to an existing exothermic reaction (I think it reacts faster too? confusing..) definitely makes it less predictable for an Al/Hg, so I would take similar precautions. Get a good feel for the reaction at small scale in a large flask and scale it up slowly. Some people have had their reaction go from the flask to the roof using nitromethane in Al/Hg instead of methylamine.

Mush - 18-7-2016 at 14:09

Quote: Originally posted by pepsimax  
I can't seem to get the gallium to react properly. An alloy made with a few bits of aluminum and gallium bubbles in water but in this ratio it does nothing. I combined 750mg Ga with 500mg Al, it formed a dense liquid, some parts quite powdery. This was dropped in 15ml dH20, 20ml GAA, 15ml EtOH with 500mg nitrostyrene in a 100ml conical flask. No reaction occurred after 15 mins. This was heated to 65c, again no reaction. Before writing it off, I dropped 100mg copper chloride in there. Instantly it started bubbling so I began rapidly swirling the flask. The colour of the solution quickly faded from yellow to clear then grey, dark grey and when the Al had gone it was a dark grey/red colour.

This was worked up in the usual way to give 380mg of PEA, which seems to be my best result from copper or Ga. Not sure if the Ga helped or what.


If my math is correct, yield was 93.58 % amine ( calculated as free base) :o. Well impressive! This anomaly should be investigated in my opinion.:D

[Edited on 18-7-2016 by Mush]

Loptr - 19-7-2016 at 05:05

Is an aluminum alkoxide a participating reagent in this reaction? Or are their formation too slow?

I know that aluminum triethoxide is a reducing agent for aldehydes and ketones, but not sure about what else.

[Edited on 19-7-2016 by Loptr]

Mush - 19-7-2016 at 11:49

Quote: Originally posted by Loptr  
Is an aluminum alkoxide a participating reagent in this reaction?

[Edited on 19-7-2016 by Loptr]

This is a dissolved metal reduction (internal electrolytic). Aluminum alkoxide can't form due to H2O persent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium_amalgam

CRUSTY - 20-7-2016 at 04:34

I've heard the use of gallinstan (Ga/In/Sn) works pretty well as a lowered MP substitute for straight amalgam, as well as just tin, if one can't come across and indium.

Melgar - 20-7-2016 at 11:33

I've done this preparation myself recently. The best way to do it is to melt pure aluminum, then add the galinstan while it's still molten. It's VERY important that the aluminum be at least 99% pure or so. I used to use scrap electric fence wire, but now that I live in a city, I've found that really cheap dollar-store aluminum pans are usually pure aluminum. Once you have experience working with pure aluminum, it's pretty easy to tell if that's what you have or not. When you melt it, it sort of flows around inside its oxide shell, leaving a paper-thin bit of oxide crust behind, which your torch will immediately heat to glowing. Alloys don't really flow when they melt, and they melt at much higher temperatures. It's sort of like metallic concrete, as opposed to the much more readily melted pure aluminum. Pure aluminum is really lightweight and easy to bend. I ripped up a dollar-store aluminum pot with my hands and a very small pair of pliers. I don't think I could have done that with an alloy. Pure aluminum is also lighter-colored. As far as what contains pure aluminum, it's usually used in applications where electrical or thermal conductivity is more important than mechanical strength. So cookware and wire, mostly. Probably the rotors of AC induction motors too, if you don't mind tearing them apart. As far as tests you can do, the main alloying elements of aluminum are iron and silicon. If you dissolve a sample in dilute hydrochloric acid, you should have a totally transparent solution at the end. A yellow tint indicates iron, and a brownish precipitate indicates an aluminum-silicon complex that you don't want.

Once you have your pure aluminum, melt it down into a blob. It doesn't really matter the shape, but it has to be one contiguous piece. Then, while it's molten, add the galinstan. You can probably use as little as 100:1 aluminum to galinstan. Your metal will immediately change physical properties. It will get black and will break into chunks instead of flowing when you prod it. Once you've confirmed that the whole blob is like this, cover it to protect it from air, and let it cool off. If you want, you can break it into chunks that are convenient sizes for use first. Store the chunks of aluminum in a small glass jar. You can even handle them with your hands once they've cooled off.

When you want to use one for a reaction, just pluck it out, toss it in the reaction vessel, and turn on stirring. The aluminum will break up within a few minutes, eventually into pieces about the size of sand, and give off hydrogen at a slow but steady rate. If you use a ratio of galinstan to aluminum that's 1:10 or more, the reaction will be much more vigorous. Also, there's a temperature (thirty-something degrees C or so? possibly gallium's melting point.) that if your vessel reaches it, the reaction will go much faster. You may or may not want that to happen, so control vessel temperature appropriately.

Also, for a solvent, water works well, and methanol works well. I'd expect ethanol to work well too, but if you use isopropanol, just be aware that this will result in the formation of aluminum isopropoxide, which has the tendency of converting ketones to alcohols. It can also do the reverse in the presence of excess acetone, via Oppenhaur oxidation, if that's something you need to do.

CRUSTY - 22-7-2016 at 16:20

Quote: Originally posted by Melgar  
I'd expect ethanol to work well too, but if you use isopropanol, just be aware that this will result in the formation of aluminum isopropoxide, which has the tendency of converting ketones to alcohols. It can also do the reverse in the presence of excess acetone, via Oppenhaur oxidation, if that's something you need to do.


Ooh, thanks for pointing that out. I actually wasn't familiar with the Oppenhaur oxidation until now, I'll have to try that one.

careysub - 22-7-2016 at 17:18

I think the thin rolled aluminums (foil, and foil ware) are probably 1000 series alloys that are almost pure aluminum (e.g. 1145, 1235, etc.) - ~0.65% silicon and rest being aluminum, so >99% aluminum.

Reynolds foil is apparently 8111 alloy now, which 98.5% aluminum, the rest iron and silicon (roughly half and half).

http://www.reynoldskitchens.com/media/10246730/reynolds_wrap...

Any reason for using galinstan instead of the much cheaper pure gallium?

[Edited on 23-7-2016 by careysub]

Melgar - 22-7-2016 at 20:40

Quote: Originally posted by careysub  
Any reason for using galinstan instead of the much cheaper pure gallium?

Gallium was the most expensive metal in the alloy when I made the alloy myself. Indium is slightly more expensive per gram, but you don't need nearly as much of it as you do gallium. And the tin was essentially free, since I just used lead-free solder, which is 95% tin.

Also, by using galinstan, you can have a MUCH higher aluminum content and still have it work. So it actually ends up being considerably cheaper. And finally, galinstan can be purchased cheaply in the form of mercury-free thermometers that clearly have some sort of metal in their bulbs. They're like $5 at drugstores, and maybe half that on Amazon.

[Edited on 7/23/16 by Melgar]

careysub - 22-7-2016 at 21:41

Quote: Originally posted by Melgar  
Quote: Originally posted by careysub  
Any reason for using galinstan instead of the much cheaper pure gallium?

Gallium was the most expensive metal in the alloy when I made the alloy myself. Indium is slightly more expensive per gram, but you don't need nearly as much of it as you do gallium. And the tin was essentially free, since I just used lead-free solder, which is 95% tin.

Also, by using galinstan, you can have a MUCH higher aluminum content and still have it work. So it actually ends up being considerably cheaper. And finally, galinstan can be purchased cheaply in the form of mercury-free thermometers that clearly have some sort of metal in their bulbs. They're like $5 at drugstores, and maybe half that on Amazon.

[Edited on 7/23/16 by Melgar]


Ah so, the indium and tin are actually contributing to the amalgam performance? I had supposed you were just using galinstan as an OTC gallium source. The eutectic aspect did not seem important since gallium is so easily melted.

From Rotometals you can get gallium for 60 cents per gram, indium for a dollar a gram, and tin for 4 cents per gram, so the price for galinstan ingredients is about the same as gallium alone, 60 cents per gram. I am sure that a $5 thermometer does not contain anything like 8 grams of galinstan, so that is not really a cheap source by weight, though with a 100:1 ratio you obviously don't need much.

Melgar - 23-7-2016 at 09:04

Quote: Originally posted by careysub  
Ah so, the indium and tin are actually contributing to the amalgam performance? I had supposed you were just using galinstan as an OTC gallium source. The eutectic aspect did not seem important since gallium is so easily melted.

Yes, but there are a lot more factors at play than just gallium's melting point. I'm not sure what they all are exactly, but I do know that experimentally, the indium and tin really do make the reaction run a lot better. It's also a pretty simple matter to collect the unreacted galinstan and reuse it once the reaction is done, whereas I was never able to do that with gallium for whatever reason.

Also, if you can find a better source of aluminum than foil, I'd recommend using it. Aluminum foil has the highest surface area to volume ratio of any source of aluminum, and you need to melt it down into a blob with a relatively low surface area in order to properly alloy the metals.

careysub - 23-7-2016 at 09:46

I just checked eBay and discovered that you can get galinstan in bottles for $1 to $1.75/gram depending on size. 15 g for $26 with shipping.

I'll probably make galinstan from scratch though, just for fun.

careysub - 23-7-2016 at 22:29

This reduction agent preparation should have a write-up in pre-publication.

If it can replace the use of mercuric chloride in aluminum amalgam preparation that is a major improvement. Mercuric chloride is a very hazardous substance.