TmNhRhMgBrSe
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My zinc oxide not pure, have carbonate, can ZnO absorb CO2?
people gived 2 parts ZnO me, I tryed mix ZnO and sulphuric acid to make zinc sulphate, have bubles come out, 1 part out more bubles, other part out
less bubles, so I guess ZnO have zinc carbonate, not pure, and 1 part have more zinc carbonate, other part less zinc carbonate, so I guess only 2
possibility, one is people made ZnCO3, then burned it but not yet burned finish, so had ZnCO3 left, other is people made ZnO, then ZnO absorbed CO2,
like lime water, then which more possible?
sorry for bad english
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woelen
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Both are possible.
Any really basic oxide can absorb CO2 from air. I have similar experience with CdO (a brown powder, which turned somewhat lighter on storage and now
bubbles a little when added to acid).
ZnCO3, when heated insufficiently, or for a short time, certainly can have left-over carbonate in it.
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Pumukli
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I have old (20+ years) pharmacy grade ZnO stored in a paper bag. So it could have absorbed CO2 from air if wanted. But did not. So I assume ZnO does
not absorb CO2 from air or not readily for sure.
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Tsjerk
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I think it depends on whether the oxide reacts with water from the air to form hydroxide, which would absorb CO2.
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Triflic Acid
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Might also be some sulphide contamination, did it smell like rotten eggs?
There wasn't a fire, we just had an uncontrolled rapid oxidation event at the power plant.
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AJKOER
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Be mindful on the source of your ZnO. For example, a paper "Cost-effective large-scale synthesis of ZnO photocatalyst with excellent performance for
dye photodegradation" at https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2012/cc/c2cc1... . The abstract, to quote:
"Zinc oxide with excellent photocatalytic performance for the photodegradation of dyes (superior to Degussa P25 TiO2) could be easily prepared in
large quantity by direct calcination of zinc acetate (Zn(Ac)2·2H2O)."
So, in the presence of a light source (especially UV rich) your ZnO may be a quite good photocatalyst depending on how it was prepared.
Implications, typically for a photocatalyst per a source (see https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/photocataly...) where in the presence of any water, for example, to quote:
"Photocatalysts can produce hydroxyl radicals (OH•) and superoxide (•O2-) which are scavenger radicals produced from water when in contact with
the photocatalyst. These scavenger radicals then nonselectively attack organic pollutants and degrade them ..."
Possible reactions include:
CO + OH• → CO2 + H• (see https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2002/cp/b2048... )
So, CO2 also from any CO presence which leads to Zinc Hydrogen Carbonate (see discussion in this thesis https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=h... ) and yes, eventually a carbonate (actually, per Wikipedia on Zinc carbonate, a
"basic zinc carbonate (Zn5(CO3)2(OH)6)", see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zinc_carbonate).
[Edited on 1-12-2021 by AJKOER]
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theAngryLittleBunny
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From my experience it doesn't. I had like 150g of ZnO in a 1L container which isn't even air tight for probably 3 or 4 years. Recently I dissolved it
in dilute H2SO4 to make some ZnSO4, when adding the ZnO it just disappeared with the solution heating up, no gas was evolved. To avoid any excess acid
I would just use a bit of excess ZnO and add small amounts of acid until it was almost clear, then it could be filtered to get a clean solution. You
could just assume that it is all ZnCO3 and add the stochiometric amount of acid to it, and then just add small portions of acid until it is almost
gone (wait for 2 or 3 minutes between additions, ZnO seems to take a bit to fully react).
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