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Author: Subject: Potassium Dichromate synthesis (from Rhodium)
chloro
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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 10:16
Potassium Dichromate synthesis (from Rhodium)


Hello, Forum.

I've been trying to make potassium dichromate following the synthesis given by rhodium. I ude the Cr(III)salt - Cr2O3.
But i cant get the reaction with neither H2SO4 or HCl to go along. Have anyone tried to make potassium dichromate with this method using Cr2O3?

reference: http://www.rhodium.ws/chemistry/potassium.dichromate.html

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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 10:47


Quote:

This file was written for informational purposes only. You should not attempt to make it and to use this controlled (in Europe it is)


No it isn't. I bought a kilo from an online pottery store.

Chromates usually oxidize HCl to Cl2 gas...




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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 11:16


Bought a kilo dichromate from a pottery store? Seriously doubt that... Perhaps you meant Cr2O3?

Good.. but.. ehm.. That didnt help. I already posses Cr2O3. Have you tried to make dichromate?

You think the synthesis is a fake?
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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 11:39


Hmm, I think photography's suppliers are a better approch (for k2Cr2O7). Last I checked you can get it in the UK and Germany.
For Cr2O3, pottery suppliers are indeed the best option.




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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 12:17


Quote:

Bought a kilo dichromate from a pottery store? Seriously doubt that... Perhaps you meant Cr2O3?


I bought a kilogram of sodiumdichromate from a dutch online pottery store. I could take a picture with my webcam if you don't believe me.




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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 13:18


chloro, you dissolved the oxide in sodium hydroxide, then added the acid to that solution, and it didnt turn orange?

Was the solution strongly acid after you finished?

The colour change is not that marked I think. Just so long as its not green.
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[*] posted on 23-4-2004 at 16:33


Ceramic-grade Cr2O3 will not dissolve in HCl or H2SO4. Fuse it with KNO3 to make K dichromate.



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[*] posted on 24-4-2004 at 06:55


No, Marvin. I tried reacting the oxide with H2SO4 and HCl, to make a soluble chromium[III]salt that sould be reacted with NaOH.

Polverone: Do you at wich temperature this occurs? Just melting temperature?
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[*] posted on 24-4-2004 at 09:34


That might be a little extreme Polverone, though doubtless a mixture of hydroxide/nitrate would work for producing chromate.

Part of the process is devoted only to producing the hydrated oxide. I suggest using an equimolar amount of the ceramic oxide with the NaOH/Peroxide solution and see if it dissolves. If it does it would be a lot easier. If it doesnt, or isnt fast enough, you may be stuck with molten salt methods.
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[*] posted on 24-4-2004 at 11:19


I don't know exactly what temperature it occurs at. A while back I tried following an old method for producing chromates, heating a mixture of K2CO3 and KNO3 with Cr2O3. It worked, but required too much heat for my tastes (the Pyrex test tube I was using melted) and chromate seemed to be formed in only the very hottest parts of the tube.

More recently, I pleasantly discovered that fusing KNO3 or NaNO3 with Cr2O3 would permit the Cr2O3 to dissolve readily at alcohol-burner temperatures (with the evolution of much NO2), and that the end product was the dichromate rather than chromate, so no separate acidification step was needed to obtain dichromate.

Most of the Cr2O3 dissolved in the melt, but some did not, leaving me to wonder if there was some sort of physical difference that led some particles to resist attack or if something else were at work.

I tried this several times on a test tube scale and once on a pyrex dish scale. The main limiting factor in scaling it up was the abundant production of NO2, which the addition of hydroxide to the melt might mitigate.

I separated Cr2O3 particles by decantation (since I don't have any dichromate-resistant filters) and was able to obtain nice crystals of potassium and sodium dichromates from their respective solutions by evaporation at ambient temperatures. K dichromate, being much less soluble, is easier to separate as crystals.

A mixture of nitrate and hydroxide should fuse and work at a lower temperature, though I imagine you'll obtain chromate that way and not dichromate directly.




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[*] posted on 25-4-2004 at 02:14


I know the reaction with KNO3/Na2CO3/Cr2O3 (Na2CO3/KNO3 1:1 twice the amount as Cr2O3) as a decomposition for insoluble Cr-compounds in analytical chemistry. In this context I only used it with small batches (ca. 0,5-1g) I carried out this reaction in a porcelain-crucibles (which usually died during the strong heating).
Polverone I think you could try to filter your slns. through normal papers. I used to do this and they used to survive this treating.
Maybe it is possible with greater batches to melt it in some kind of metal-container (e.g. iron-dishes) for several hours. If the material of the container is attacked you may remove the contamination by adding NH4OH or KOH or H2S to precipiate unwanted heavy metals. The CrO4(2-) will stay unaffected.
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[*] posted on 29-4-2004 at 08:43


Vulture: Okay, i've never seen it for sale anywhere. But i assume you live in Holland then? Export of a toxic material such as chromate or dichromate, even within eu, would be impossible, or?

Polverone: Sounds interessting. How large a batch did you use with the xNO3/Cr2O3 - method? And at with wich ratios? Also, you describe adding NaOH to the mix to absorb - have you tried this? Couldn one lead the NOx with kind of a tube into water, making HNO3 ? Or...

Thanks
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[*] posted on 29-4-2004 at 14:19


http://www.adorama.com/PYPD100G.html

Expensive but it's there.
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[*] posted on 29-4-2004 at 14:59


I ran several test-tube size batches and one batch in a pyrex dish with probably 15 grams or so of Cr2O3. As I said, I was discouraged from scaling up any further due to the fumes and my lack of open spaces to do this sort of thing. I wasn't particularly careful with the ratios, using nitrates in excess since I have a lot of them and the dichromate isn't hard to separate.

My idea about adding the NaOH is merely an idea, not tested. But I see no reason why it would not work. I don't recall seeing any NO2 when using the carbonate/nitrate mixture, and I would thing hydroxide would similarly suppress production of NO2. The NO2 might be used for something or other, but from such a high temperature reaction I wouldn't want to try taming it for other purposes, at least not without better equipment than I have currently.




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[*] posted on 29-4-2004 at 15:03
What a joke!


The Photographer's Formulary says they require a DEA form to order potassium dichromate or any of a number of other chemicals (including dilute sulfuric acid!)

Is it even possible to get a DEA form that says "this person is authorized to purchase 48% H2SO4"? It'd be like trying to get a permit to buy distilled water, I would think! And I can't imagine how the company sells those materials at all if they require this mysterious form that no photographer has any reason to possess in the first place. It's a mystery why they are even listed on the site.




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[*] posted on 23-5-2004 at 03:24


I've successfully tested the KNO3/Cr2O3/KOH procidure, where dichromate were precipitated by acetic acid.

But on testing K2Cr2O7 in simple isopropanol oxidation, I realised that stuff is not that soluble, which made me use twice as much water :(
So, now I wanna produce Na2Cr2O7 by NaNO3/Cr2O7/NaOH, but the problem is how to separate and purify the product.. The only thing I've came up with is to use the good solubility of Na2Cr2O7..

Basically, if we ubtain (from experiment above) a mix of Na2CrO4, NaNO2 and some traces of NaOH and NaNO3.. On addition of H2SO4 (with a tiny excess) while heating, one would get Na2Cr2O7, Na2SO4 and lots of NOx.
The NOx could be easily collected, but how would one destroy them? Would bubbling through NaOH soln. work?

Then on partial evaporation and cooling, Na2SO4 would precipitate. Leaving pretty pure Na2Cr2O7 soln. This could be evaporated again and redissolving/cooling is repeated... does this sound practical? or have I forgotten something obvious?..

Only thing is, finding source of NaNO3 is hard. I don't think they use it today as a fertiliser.

Oh another unanswered question that have bugged me a long time, I've noticed that when I add acid to precipitate dichromate to abovementioned reaction mix, there evolves a colorless gas that have no smell.. what could this be??
Only thing that could evolve is NOx from decomposition of nitrite.. but I sure would've noticed this!! :)
This happens also when some acetic acid is poured on homemade KNO2 from Pb/KNO3 method.. no color/smell..

Btw, this gas evolves until solution becomes acidic..

[Edited on 23-5-2004 by frogfot]
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[*] posted on 24-5-2004 at 08:15


Quote:
Originally posted by frogfot
I've noticed that when I add acid to precipitate dichromate to abovementioned reaction mix, there evolves a colorless gas that have no smell.. what could this be??
[Edited on 23-5-2004 by frogfot]


It could be oxygen gas produced by the reduction of Cr<sup>6+</sup> to Cr<sup>3+</sup>.

The NOx should get absorbed by NaOH I think, to give the corresponding NOx salts which have N in the same oxidation state.
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[*] posted on 29-4-2005 at 11:35


I've had some success getting the calcined pottery Cr2O3 to react with H2SO4 and HCl in test-tube experiments. The secret weapon was MnO2, also from the pottery supply.

This might not be worthwhile as a preparative method, but I thought that I would mention it anyways.

Cr2O3, MnO2, and 90% H2SO4 were heated to around 70C for 8 hours. There was a green liquid and a black solid. The whole was neutralized with excess NaOH, H2O2 was added, and a lovely yellow chromate layer was filtered from a typical brown precipitate of MnO2.

Cr2O3, 30% HCl, and MnO2 were allowed to sit for 8 hrs. Then cold, conc. NaOH was added. 4 hours later the solids were separated by decantation and washed, then NaOH soln and H2O2 was added, again giving chromate and MnO2.

This was only a qualitative test, but there seemed to be very little unreacted Cr2O3. The amounts of the other materials used, while in excess, were nowhere near excessive.

P.S. - I am sure that I got a good yield of Na chromate (in solution at least). It was isolated as a light yellow heavy Ba salt by adding CaCl2 sol'n, filtering, and BaCl2 sol'n was then added to the filtrate.

P.P.S. - When I made the BaCl2, I opened a new batch of BaCO3 from a major US pottery supplier, rather than using "recycled" BaCO3 on hand. I had never used this suppliers chems before but assumed that it was what they said it was. Well, the fact that it contains BaS was not mentioned anywhere and I did not discover this until I added the HCl to it. Another good reason to always be ready for unlikely dangers when in the lab.

[Edited on 29-4-2005 by S.C. Wack]
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[*] posted on 17-4-2006 at 00:07


I recently had a more pleasant experience with chromate production from pottery-grade Cr2O3. I used a mixture of Na2CO3 and NaNO3, prepared by fusing Na2CO3 and ammonium nitrate. Chromium oxide dissolved in it with much bubbling and no production of nitrogen oxides, which was a big plus over using nitrate alone. My earliest experiments used nitrate:carbonate ratios taken from some old industrial text (maybe Muspratt), which was optimized for economy rather than small-scale convenience. Using more nitrate, it is possible to achieve an easily-fused mixture that is more convenient to work with, but some carbonate is still useful to prevent the evolution of nitrogen dioxide.

I'll have to try S.C. Wack's methods one of these days, but if you want to go for the high-temperature methods, this is very convenient. I also found it more convenient this time around to use a small stainless steel dish in place of a test tube, since it holds up better to the heat and will never annoy you with frothing as test tubes are so prone to do.




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[*] posted on 17-4-2006 at 09:17


I found something quite easy around the time that I wrote the last post, but I had a series of experiments planned. But this led to another...and...so on. So despite quite a few exacting experiments using various amounts of this and that I never found the best method with KMnO4, Cr2O3, and H2SO4, but it is quite fast, hot, vigorous, and led to the isolation of large amounts of potassium dichromate. It is preferable to MnO2. The yields can be high and isolation easy. I did these tests on a large scale rather than use my very many dust gathering test tubes. I suppose I should order some more Cr2O3 get serious with it.

Now I know that it might not make sense to make a weaker oxidizer from a stronger oxidizer, but oh well. But if anyone else wants to pick this up before I try it again...

The reaction can proceed instantly to a hot purple cloud with H2SO4 >50%. There is also not enough liquid and/or time to entirely wet the solids. The yield is lower and the reaction much slower with less concentrated acid and external heating. It was found best to make the reaction happen fast to take advantage of the Mn while it is in some +7 form, yet with enough liquid to mix everything together, yet maintain a very exothermic reaction.

The Cr2O3 and KMnO4 are mixed quite well and the H2SO4 is dumped in with stirring, and a reaction soon ensues. When the reaction stops, it is allowed to cool down and it forms a cement. This all takes just 2-3 minutes. The brown/black mass was then heated with water until the water had evaporated. The mass is then leached with boiling hot water 4 times. KOH is added to make the pH 3.6-4. There is some contamination but all of this can be worked out due to the low solubility of the dichromate in the cold.
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[*] posted on 17-4-2006 at 11:46


This site shows Cr2O3 dissolving in NaOH and oxidized to CrO4 2- with H2O2 in basic solution.
http://www.public.asu.edu/~jpbirk/qual/qualanal/chromium.htm...

[Edited on 4/17/2006 by guy]




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[*] posted on 17-4-2006 at 14:27


Of course, there is a difference between the chromic oxide they use and the stuff sold in pottery stores. Theirs was freshly precipitated Cr(OH)<sub>3</sub> with a very high surface area which made it relatively reactive. The material pottery stores sell is dried and solid Cr<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> with a very low surface area. Pottery grade oxide is also probably calcined to an inert crystal structure.



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[*] posted on 21-4-2007 at 22:39
Chromate Synthesis


Performed my own. Second time with this method, this time more controlled and, most importantly, photographed.

http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms/Chem_Chromate.h...

Did anyone know potassium chromate is thermochromic? ;)

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[*] posted on 22-4-2007 at 04:26


Why did you add KCl? Thats a very bad idea, as you will be unable to obtain dichromate from this. Upon acidification, the dichromate will oxidise the chloride to chlorine.
Thats the reason that Frogfots site uses acetic acid for acidification, which is the best acid to use as acetates are very soluble and there is no risk of crystallizing potassium acetate along with the dichromate.

Potassium chromate is best obtained by combining K-dichromate with KOH and evaporating the solution, as the chromate is too soluble to make crystallization directly from the leached melt economic.

[Edited on 22-4-2007 by garage chemist]




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[*] posted on 22-4-2007 at 07:28


If you read my article in detail you would notice I mentioned I don't have KOH.

I haven't had a problem so far as far as chloride. Actually, the solution I didn't acidify smelled like bleach for the longest time (its color seems to be weak and turbid now), whereas the dichromate solution is currently forming crystals. Both produced (yellow-stained) salt first.

My solubility table says potassium chromate is 60-75g/100ml soluble (from 0-100C respectively), no especially big problem.

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