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Author: Subject: Two colors from same nails and HCl
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[*] posted on 3-3-2017 at 17:08
Two colors from same nails and HCl


A couple weeks ago, I wanted to recycle some iron nails from a small construction project I was helping with. To do this, I took nails from old, worn wood from an old fence and submerged them in hydrochloric acid (11.82 M) in a 600ml. beaker.

A few days passed and the solution turned yellow, indicating iron chloride(s).
I filtered the solution to get the iron chloride(s) and put the nails back in the beaker to react them once again with more hydrochloric acid.

This time however, the solution turned a light shade of green through the course of a week...
I looked up what other components could've caused this...

http://www.madehow.com/Volume-2/Nail.html

According to this site, nails additionally tend to have copper and nickel in them. Looking at the MSDS for the chloride salts for these metals, they also are green.

Nickel: http://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9926213

Copper: http://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9923592




Iron Solution.jpg - 2MB Nickel Solution.png.jpg - 1.8MB

I suspect that the green color is more likely to be nickel as copper on an activity series chart is higher placed and also the complex created between copper(II) chloride and HCl tends to be a much deeper green.

Does anyone have a better idea of what else this would be, if it is something else? Would the green product be worth extracting?
Thank you!
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pantone159
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[*] posted on 3-3-2017 at 17:47


Could the green color be ferrous ion? In contact with the metal Fe, it might stay as Fe+2 despite the surface exposed to the air.
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[*] posted on 3-3-2017 at 18:21


Quote: Originally posted by pantone159  
Could the green color be ferrous ion? In contact with the metal Fe, it might stay as Fe+2 despite the surface exposed to the air.


According to Sciencelab: https://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9924050

But the previous solution turned yellow despite being in contact with the fresh nails though...

Both solutions were in similar conditions... Is there a coating on a nail that could've prevented the reaction between iron(III) with iron during the first go?
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[*] posted on 3-3-2017 at 18:38


Were the nails somewhat rusty? (If you got them from an old fence, they probably were.) In that case, there may have been enough Fe(III) present at the beginning to turn it yellow.



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[*] posted on 3-3-2017 at 22:48


I think Metacelsus is most likely correct. The nails should be primarily iron. The Fe(III) hexachloro complex is very strongly colored, and you can clearly see it as a bright yellow even at very low concentrations. At higher concentrations, it is dark reddish brown. You can demonstrate this by dissolving a nail in nitric acid- iron(III) nitrate is very weakly colored, and then simply adding a drop of HCl to a dilute solution of it. It will go from colorless to bright yellow as you swirl it together. Add some peroxide to your green solution and you should see it immediately begin to go yellow-brown.



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