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- From: Bruce Hamilton <B.Hamilton@irl.cri.nz>
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- Subject: Sci.chem FAQ - Part 6 of 7
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- Archive-name: sci/chem-faq/part6
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: 22 October 1999
- Version: 1.17
-
- Subject: 26. Electrochemical Techniques
-
- 26.1 What is pH?
-
- The pH scale determines the degree of acidity or alkalinity of a solution,
- but as it involves a single ion activity it can not be measured directly.
-
- pH = - log10 ( gamma H x m H )
-
- where gamma H = hydrogen ion single ion activity coefficient
- m H = molality of the hydrogen ion.
-
- As pH can not be directly measured, it is defined operationally according to
- the method used to determine it. IUPAC recommend several standardised methods
- for the determination of pH in solution in aqueous solutions. There are
- seven primary reference standards that can be used, including 0.05 mol/kg
- potassium hydrogen phthalate as the Reference Value Standard. There is an
- ongoing debate concerning the relative merits of having a multiple primary
- standard scale ( that defines pH using several primary standards, and their
- values are determined using a cell without a liquid junction ) or a single
- primary standard ( that requires a cell with a liquid junction ). Interested
- readers can obtain further information on the debate in [1]. Bates [2], is a
- popular text covering both theory and practise of pH measurement.
-
- 26.2 How do pH electrodes work?
-
- Contributed by Paul Willems <Paul.Willems@rug.ac.be>, and slightly modified
- by Bruce Hamilton.
-
- The most common type of pH electrodes are the "glass" electrodes. They
- consist of a special glass membrane that is sensitive to variations in pH,
- as pH variation also changes the electrical potential across the glass. In
- order to be able to measure this potential, a second electrode, the
- "reference" electrode, is required. Both electrodes can be present in a
- "combined" pH electrode, or two physically-separate electrodes can be used.
-
- The glass electrode consists of a glass shaft on which a bulb of a special
- glass is mounted. The inner is usually filled with 3 Mol/Litre aqueous KCl
- and sealed. Electrical contact is provided by a silver wire immersed in the
- KCl.
-
- For "combined" electrodes, the glass electrode is surrounded by a concentric
- reference electrode. The reference electrode consists of a silver wire in
- contact with the almost-insoluble AgCl. The electrical contact with the meter
- is through the silver wire. Contact with the solution being measured is via
- a KCl filling solution. To minimise mixing of the solution to be measured and
- the filling solution, a porous seal, the diaphragm, is used. This is usually
- a small glass sinter, however other methods which allow a slow mixing contact
- can also be used, especially for samples with low ionic strength. Besides the
- "normal" KCl solutions, often solutions with an increased viscosity, and
- hence lower mixing rate are used. A gel filling can also be used, which
- eliminates the necessity for slow mixing devices.
-
- In contact with different pH solutions a typical glass electrode gives, when
- compared to the reference electrode, a voltage of about 0 mV at pH 7,
- increasing by 59 mV per pH unit above 7, or decreasing by 59 mV per pH unit
- below 7. Both the slope, and the intercept of the curve between pH and
- generated potential, are temperature dependent. The potential of the
- electrode is approximated by the Nernst equation :
-
- E = E0 - RT log [H+] = E0 + RT pH
- Where E is the generated potential, E0 is a constant, R is universal
- gas constant and T is the temperature in degrees Kelvin.
-
- All pH-sensitive glasses are also susceptible to other ions, such as Na or K.
- This requires a correction in the above equation, so the relationship between
- pH and generated voltage becomes nonlinear at high pH values. The slope tends
- to diminish both as the electrode ages, and at high pH. As the electrode has
- a very high impedance, typically 250 Megohms to 1 Gigohm, it is necessary to
- use a very high impedance measuring instrument.
-
- The reference electrode has a fairly constant potential, but it is
- temperature dependent, and also varies with activity of the silver ions in
- the reference electrode. This occurs if a contaminant enters the reference
- electrode.
-
- Calibration
-
- From the preceding, it is obvious that frequent calibration and adjustment of
- pH meters are necessary. To check the pH meter, at least two standard buffer
- solutions are used to cover the range of interest. The pH meter should be
- on for at least 30 minutes prior to calibration to ensure that all components
- are at thermal equilibrium, and calibration solutions should be immersed for
- at least a minute to ensure equilibrium.
-
- First use the buffer at pH 7, and adjust the zero (or the intercept).
- Then, after thorough rinsing with water, use the other buffer to adjust the
- slope. This cycle in repeated at least once, or until no further adjustments
- are necessary. Many modern pH meters have an automatic calibration feature,
- which requires each buffer only once.
-
- Errors
-
- People assume pH measurements are accurate, however many potential errors
- exist. There can be errors caused by the pH-sensitive glass, reference
- electrode, electrical components, as well as externally generated errors.
-
- Glass Electrode Errors
-
- The pH-sensitive glass can be damaged. Major cracks are obvious, but minor
- damage can be difficult to detect. If the internal liquid of the pH-measuring
- electrode and the external environment are connected, a pH value close to 7
- will be obtained. It will not change when the electrode is immersed in a
- known solution of different pH. The electrical resistance of the glass
- membrane will also be low, often below 1 megohm, and it must be replaced.
-
- Similar results occur if the glass wall between the inner and outer part of
- a combined electrode breaks. This may occur if the outer part is plastic.
- The inner part can crack without any external signs. The electrical
- resistivity over the glass electrode is intact, but actual measuring between
- both electrodes reveals a low resistivity. The electrode must be replaced.
-
- The glass can wear out. This gives slow response times, as well as a lower
- slope for the mV versus pH curve. To rejuvenate, immerse the electrode in a
- 3 Molar KCl solution at 55 degrees Celsius for 5 hours. If this does not
- solve the problem, try removing a thin layer of the glass by immersion for
- two minutes in a mixture of HCl and KF (be careful, do not breathe the fumes,
- and wear gloves). The electrode is then immersed for two more minutes in HCl,
- and rinsed thoroughly. As an outer layer of glass has been removed, the new
- surface will be like a new electrode, however the thinner glass will result
- in a shorter electrode life. Frequent recalibration will be required for
- several days.
-
- The glass can be dirty. A deposit on the glass will slow the response time,
- make the response sensitive to agitation and ionic strength, and also give
- the pH of the film, not the sample solution. If the deposit is known, use a
- appropriate solvent to remove it, and rehydrate the electrode in 3M KCl.
- If the deposit is not known, first immerse the electrode for a few minutes
- in a strongly alkaline solution, rinse thoroughly, and immerse it in a
- strong acid (HCl) solution for several minutes. If this does not help, try
- using pepsin in HCl. If still unsuccessful, use the above HCl/KF method.
-
- Reference Electrode Errors
-
- The diaphragm of the reference can become blocked. This is seen as unstable
- or wrong pH measurements. If the electrical resistivity of the diaphragm is
- measured, high values are reported (Most multimeters will give an over-range
- error). The most common reason is that AgS formed a precipitate in the
- diaphragm. The diaphragm will be black in this case. The electrode should be
- immersed in a solution of acidic thiourea until the diaphragm is white, and
- then replace the internal filling liquid of the reference electrode
-
- There is no contact across the diaphragm, due to air bubbles. This appears
- as if the diaphragm were blocked, except that the diaphragm is white. Ensure
- that the filling solution level in the reference electrode is always well
- above the sample, so that liquid is always slowly flowing from the reference
- electrode towards the sample.
-
- The electrode filling solution is contaminated. This appears as unstable or
- wrong pH measurements. Often the 0mV pH differs considerably from pH 7. The
- diaphragm has its normal colour and the electrical resistivity is normal.
- However, the solution often becomes contaminated due to low filling solution
- levels, and air bubbles may also appear in the diaphragm, which obviously
- affects electrical resistivity. Replacing the reference filling solution
- several times should solve the problem, but the electrode may have been
- permanently damaged. The problem can be avoided by choosing gel-filled
- reference electrodes, double-junction electrodes, or ensuring there is an
- outflow of reference filling solution towards the sample.
-
- The electrode was filled with the wrong reference solution. This appears as
- as displaced pH measurements. Flush and replace the reference liquid.
-
- Electrical errors
-
- Condensation or sample contamination of the electrode connecting cable. This
- appears as an almost-constant measurement of about pH 7, even when the pH
- electrode is disconnected from the cable, or as a pH which changes less than
- it should, when tested with two standard solutions. If the cable is
- disconnected from the meter, the pH will start to drift.
-
- There is a short circuit in the cable. The symptoms are similar to the above
- case, except that bending the cable may create sharp, spurious readings. In
- most pH cables, between the two copper conductors there are two layers which
- appear to be insulators. The inner layer is an insulator, whereas the outer
- layer is a conductor to avoid trace electrical effects. If this outer layer
- does contact the inner conductor, there will be a short circuit. Replace
- suspect cables.
-
- The input stage of the meter is contaminated with conducting liquid. The
- symptoms are the same as above, except that removing the cable has no
- effect. Closely examine the input stage of the meter for liquid or deposits.
- If present, rinse with distilled water, then ethanol, and dry thoroughly.
-
- The input stage of the meter is faulty. This gives random measurements.
- Shorting both input wires does not make any difference. Repair the meter.
-
- The input stage appears faulty. Shorting both input wires gives a stable
- pH measurement of about 7. The meter may be faulty, but probably the problem
- is elsewhere in the electrical circuit.
-
- Externally-generated Errors
-
- If a significant flow of liquid passes the electrode, then there can
- be a minor electrical effect. This generates a potential on the glass
- membrane, which is superimposed on the actual pH measurement. This effect
- becomes negligible for highly-conducting liquids. It is seldom observed.
- If the trace electric effect does influence pH measurements, the addition
- of a little salt to increase the conductivity, or changing the flux of
- liquid around the electrode, should solve the problem.
-
- Ground loops and spurious electrical currents may generate unexpected
- electrical signals. Such signals can strongly influence pH measurements.
- A pH reading in the range of -15 to +20 is possible, even if the pH is 7.
- Ground loops can be eliminated by grounding the system according to the
- manufacturer's instructions, and ensuring insulation is in good condition.
- Often these problems can be extremely difficult to detect and remedy.
-
- Low ionic strength samples can be affected by electrolyte from the electrode,
- and special electrodes are available.
-
- 26.3 What are ion-selective electrodes?
-
- Ion selective electrodes are electrochemical sensors whose potential varies
- with the logarithm of the activity of an ion in solution. Available types:
- 1. The membrane is a single compound, or a homogeneous mixture of compounds.
- 2. The membrane is a thin glass whose chemical composition determines the
- response to specific ions.
- 3. The support, containing an ionic species, or uncharged species, forms the
- membrane. The support can be solid or porous.
- Popular texts on applications of ion-selective electrodes include
- "Ion-Selective Electrodes in Analytical Chemistry" [3], and "Ion-selective
- Electrode Methodology" [4].
-
- 26.4 Who supplies pH and ion-selective electrodes?
-
- The best known manufacturer of ion-selective electrodes is Orion Research.
- There are several pH electrode manufacturers, including Radiometer and
- Metrohm.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 27. Fuel Chemistry
-
- 27.1 Where does crude oil come from?.
-
- The generally-accepted origin of crude oil is from plant life up to 3
- billion years ago, but predominantly from 100 to 600 million years ago [1].
- "Dead vegetarian dino dinner" is more correct than "dead dinos".
- The molecular structure of the hydrocarbons and other compounds present
- in fossil fuels can be linked to the leaf waxes and other plant molecules of
- marine and terrestrial plants believed to exist during that era. There are
- various biogenic marker chemicals such as isoprenoids from terpenes,
- porphyrins and aromatics from natural pigments, pristane and phytane from
- the hydrolysis of chlorophyll, and normal alkanes from waxes, whose size
- and shape can not be explained by known geological processes [2]. The
- presence of optical activity and the carbon isotopic ratios also indicate a
- biological origin [3]. There is another hypothesis that suggests crude oil
- is derived from methane from the earth's interior. The current main
- proponent of this abiotic theory is Thomas Gold, however abiotic and
- extraterrestrial origins for fossil fuels were also considered at the turn
- of the century, and were discarded then. A large amount of additional
- evidence for the biological origin of crude oil has accumulated, however
- Professor Gold still actively promotes his theory worldwide, even though
- it does not account for the location and composition of all crude oils.
-
- 27.2 What are CNG/LPG/gasoline/kerosine/diesel?.
-
- Crude oil consists mainly of hydrocarbons with carbon numbers between one and
- forty. The petroleum refinery takes this product and refines it into several
- fuel fractions that are optimised for their intended application. For spark
- ignition engines, the very volatile and branched chain alkane hydrocarbons
- have desirable combustion properties, and several fractions are produced.
-
- CNG ( Compressed Natural Gas ) is usually around 70-90% methane with 10-20%
- ethane, 2-8% propanes, and decreasing quantities of the higher HCs up to
- pentane. The major disadvantage of compressed gaseous fuels is the reduced
- range. Vehicles may have between one to three cylinders ( 25 MPa, 90-120
- litre capacity), and they usually provide about 50% of the gasoline range.
-
- LPG ( Liquefied Petroleum Gas ) is predominantly propane with iso-butane
- and n-butane. It has one major advantage over CNG, the tanks do not have
- to be high pressure, and the fuel is stored as a liquid. The fuel offers
- most of the environmental benefits of CNG, including high octane - which
- means higher compression, more efficient, engines can be used. Approximately
- 20-25% more fuel than gasoline is required, unless the engine is optimised
- ( CR 12:1 ) for LPG, in which case there is no decrease in power or any
- significant increase in fuel consumption [4,5].
-
- Gasoline contains over 500 hydrocarbons that may have between 3 to 12
- carbons, and gasoline used to have a boiling range from 30C to 220C at
- atmospheric pressure. The boiling range is narrowing as the initial boiling
- point is increasing, and the final boiling point is decreasing, both
- changes are for environmental reasons. A detailed description of the
- composition of gasoline, along with the properties and compositions of CNG,
- LPG, and oxygenates can be found in the Gasoline FAQ, which is posted monthly
- to rec.autos.tech.
-
- Kerosine is a hydrocarbon fraction that typically distils between 170-270C
- (narrow cut kerosine, or Jet A1) or 100-250C ( wide cut kerosine, or JP-4 ).
- It contains around 20% of aromatics, however the aromatic content will be
- reduced for high quality lighting kerosines, as the aromatics reduce the
- smoke point. The major use for kerosines today is as aviation turbine (jet)
- fuels. Special properties are required for that application, including high
- flash point for safe refuelling ( 38C for Jet A1 ), low freezing point for
- high altitude flying ( -47C for Jet A1 ), and good water separation
- characteristics. Details can be found in any petroleum refining text and
- Kirk Othmer.
-
- Diesel is used in compression ignition engines, and is a hydrocarbon fraction
- that typically distils between 250-380C. Diesel engines use the Cetane
- (n-hexadecane) rating to assess ignition delay. Normal alkanes have a high
- cetane rating, ( nC16=100 ) whereas aromatics ( alpha methylnaphthalene = 0 )
- and iso-alkanes ( 2,2,4,4,6,8,8-hexamethylnonane = 15 ) have low ratings,
- which represent long ignition delays. Because of the size of the hydrocarbons,
- the low temperature flow properties control the composition of diesel, and
- additives are used to prevent filter blocking in cooler temperatures. There
- are usually summer and winter grades. Environmental legislation is reducing
- the amount of aromatics and sulfur permitted in diesel, and the emission of
- small particulates ( diameters of <10um ) that are considered possibly
- carcinogenic, and are known to cause other adverse health effects. Details
- can be found in any petroleum refining text and Kirk Othmer.
-
- 27.3 What are oxygenates?.
-
- Oxygenates are just pre-used hydrocarbons :-). They contain oxygen, which can
- not provide energy, but their structure provides a reasonable anti-knock
- value, thus they are good substitutes for aromatics, and they may also reduce
- the smog-forming tendencies of the exhaust gases [6]. Most oxygenates used
- in gasolines are either alcohols ( Cx-O-H ) or ethers (Cx-O-Cy), and contain
- 1 to 6 carbons. Alcohols have been used in gasolines since the 1930s, and
- MTBE was first used in commercial gasolines in Italy in 1973, and was first
- used in the US by ARCO in 1979. The relative advantages of aromatics and
- oxygenates as environmentally-friendly and low toxicity octane-enhancers are
- still being researched.
-
- Ethanol C-C-O-H C2H5OH
-
- C
- |
- Methyl tertiary butyl ether C-C-O-C C4H9OCH3
- (aka tertiary butyl methyl ether ) |
- C
-
- They can be produced from fossil fuels eg methanol (MeOH), methyl tertiary
- butyl ether (MTBE), tertiary amyl methyl ether (TAME), or from biomass, eg
- ethanol(EtOH), ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE)). MTBE is produced by
- reacting methanol ( from natural gas ) with isobutylene in the liquid phase
- over an acidic ion-exchange resin catalyst at 100C. The isobutylene was
- initially from refinery catalytic crackers or petrochemical olefin plants,
- but these days larger plants produce it from butanes.
-
- Oxygenates have significantly different physical properties to hydrocarbons,
- and the levels that can be added to gasolines are controlled by the EPA in
- the US, with waivers being granted for some combinations. Initially the
- oxygenates were added to hydrocarbon fractions that were slightly-modified
- unleaded gasoline fractions, and these were commonly known as "oxygenated"
- gasolines. In 1995, the hydrocarbon fraction was significantly modified, and
- these gasolines are called "reformulated gasolines" ( RFGs ). The change to
- reformulated gasoline requires oxygenates to provide octane, but also that
- the hydrocarbon composition of RFG must be significantly more modified than
- the existing oxygenated gasolines to reduce unsaturates, volatility, benzene,
- and the reactivity of emissions.
-
- Oxygenates that are added to gasoline function in two ways. Firstly they
- have high blending octane, and so can replace high octane aromatics
- in the fuel. These aromatics are responsible for disproportionate amounts
- of CO and HC exhaust emissions. This is called the "aromatic substitution
- effect". Oxygenates also cause engines without sophisticated engine
- management systems to move to the lean side of stoichiometry, thus reducing
- emissions of CO ( 2% oxygen can reduce CO by 16% ) and HC ( 2% oxygen can
- reduce HC by 10%)[7]. However, on vehicles with engine management systems,
- the fuel volume will be increased to bring the stoichiometry back to
- the preferred optimum setting. Oxygen in the fuel can not contribute
- energy, consequently the fuel has less energy content. For the same
- efficiency and power output, more fuel has to be burnt, and the slight
- improvements in combustion efficiency that oxygenates provide on some
- engines usually do not completely compensate for the oxygen.
-
- There are huge number of chemical mechanisms involved in the pre-flame
- reactions of gasoline combustion. Although both alkyl leads and oxygenates
- are effective at suppressing knock, the chemical modes through which they
- act are entirely different. MTBE works by retarding the progress of the low
- temperature or cool-flame reactions, consuming radical species, particularly
- OH radicals and producing isobutene. The isobutene in turn consumes
- additional OH radicals and produces unreactive, resonantly stabilised
- radicals such as allyl and methyl allyl, as well as stable species such as
- allene, which resist further oxidation [8,9].
-
- The major concern with oxygenates is no longer that they may not be
- effective at reducing atmospheric pollution, but that their greater water
- solubility, and very slow biodegradability, can result in groundwater
- pollution that may be difficult to remove. Their toxicological and
- environmental effects are also still being researched.
-
- 27.4 What is petroleum ether?.
-
- Petroleum ether ( aka petroleum spirits ) is a narrow alkane hydrocarbon
- distillate fraction from crude oil. The names "ether" and "spirit" refer
- to the very volatile nature of the solvent, and petroleum ether does not
- have the ether ( Cx-O-Cy ) linkage, but solely consists of hydrocarbons.
- Petroleum ethers are defined by their boiling range, and that is typically
- 20C. Typical fractions are 20-40C, 40-60C, 60-80C, 80-100C, 100-120C etc.
- up to 200C. There are specially refined grades that have any aromatic
- hydrocarbons removed, and there are specially named grades, eg pentane
- fraction (30-40C), hexane fraction (60-80C, 67-70C). It is important to
- note that most "hexane" fractions are mixtures of hydrocarbons, and pure
- normal hexane is usually described as "n-hexane".
-
- 27.5 What is naphtha?.
-
- Naphtha is a refined light distillate fraction, usually boiling below 250C,
- but often with a fairly wide boiling range. Gasoline and kerosine are the
- most well-known, but there are a whole range of special-purpose hydrocarbon
- fractions that can be described as naphtha. The petroleum refining industry
- calls the 0-100C fraction from the distillation of crude oil "light virgin
- naphtha" and the 100-200C fraction " heavy virgin naphtha". The product
- stream from the fluid catalytic cracker is often split into three fractions,
- <105C = "light FCC naphtha", 105-160C = "intermediate FCC naphtha" and
- 160-200C "heavy FCC naphtha".
-
- 27.6 What are white spirits?.
-
- White spirits are petroleum fractions that boil between 150-220C. They can
- have aromatics contents between 0-100%, and Shell lists eight grades with
- aromatics contents below 50%, and six grades with aromatics contents above
- 50%. The two common "white spirits" are defined by British Standard 245,
- which states Type A should have aromatics content of less that 25% v/v and
- Type B should have an aromatics content of 25-50% v/v. The most common
- " white spirit" is type A, and it typically has an aromatics content of
- 20%, boils between 150-200C, and has an aniline point of 58C, and is
- sometimes known as Low Aromatic White Spirits. The next most common is
- Mineral Turpentine (aka High Aromatic White Spirits ), which typically has
- an aromatics content of 50%, boils between 150-200C and has an aniline
- point of 25C. For safety reasons, most White Spirits have Flash Points
- above ambient, and usually above 35C. Note that "white gas" is not white
- spirits, but is a volatile gasoline fraction that has a flash point below
- 0C, which is also known by several other names. Do not confuse the two
- when purchasing fuel for camping stoves and lamps, ensure you purchase the
- correct fuel.
-
- 27.7 What are biofuels?.
-
- Biofuels are produced from biomass ( land and aquatic vegetation, animal
- wastes, and photosynthetic organisms ), and are thus considered renewable
- within relatively short time-frames. Examples of biofuels include wood,
- dried animal dung, methyl esters from triglyceride oils, and methane from
- land-fills. The renewable aspect of most biofuels is essentially the use
- of solar energy to grow crops that can be converted to energy. There is
- a large monograph "Fuels from Biomass" in Kirk Othmer, and the subject
- is frequently discussed in alt.energy.renewable, sci.energy, and
- sci.energy.hydrogen.
-
- 27.8 How can I convert cooking oil into diesel fuel?.
-
- Diesel engines can run on plant and animal triglycerides such as tallow
- and seed oils, however most trials have resulted in reduced engine life, or
- increased service costs. The solution is to transesterify the triglycerides
- into esters, taking care to avoid the formation of monoacylglycerides
- that will precipitate out at low temperatures or when diesel is encountered.
- There are several plants in Austria that produce Rapeseed Oil Methyl Esters
- as fuels for diesel engines. The economics of the process are very
- dependant on the price of diesel and the market for the glycerol byproduct.
-
- The common catalysts used to transesterify triglycerides are sodium
- hydroxide, sodium methoxide and potassium carbonate. If the esters are to
- be blended with diesel fuel, then a two stage reaction is usually required
- to ensure that monoacylglycerides are kept below 0.05%. Usually this
- involves using 22g of methanol ( containing 0.6g of sodium hydroxide ) and
- 100g of tallow refluxed for 30 minutes. The mixture is cooled, the glycerol
- layer removed, and a further 0.2g of sodium hydroxide is reacted for 5
- minutes at 35C in a stirred reactor. The glycerol phase is allowed to
- separate, and the ester phase is washed with water to remove residual
- catalyst, glycerol and methanol. Note that sodium hydroxide is the most
- cost-effective catalyst, but also has the worst tendency to form soaps.
- The catalyst and methanol can be of industrial grade without further
- purification required, however care should be taken to prevent additional
- water entering the reaction [10].
-
- The fuel can be converted into other esters, such as ethyl and butyl, but
- it really depends on the availability of cheap alcohol along with the
- desired properties of the fuels. The effect of catalysts, reagent ratio,
- temperature, and moisture on the production of methyl, ethyl, and butyl
- esters from some common oils has been investigated [11]. The New Zealand
- government investigated a wide range of techniques for turning various
- vegetable and animal triglycerides into esters for diesel, and the reports
- cover many aspects of the kinetics and efficiencies [12]. There is a general
- overview of the current processes and technology available in Inform [13].
- A specific technique for analysing the monoglycerides has been published
- [14], however I have found that acetylation followed by narrow bore
- ( 0.1mm ID ) capillary chromatography is faster and cheaper.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 28. Pharmaceutical Chemistry
-
- 28.1 Does Thalidomide racemise in humans?.
-
- Thalidomide ( N-phthaloyl-alpha-aminoglutarimide ) is well known as an
- enantiomeric sedative-hypnotic drug that caused tragic birth defects in
- the early 1960s. It has often been claimed that the defects were caused by
- the presence of the other isomer in the production batches, and if the pure
- enantiomer had been sold, then the tragic defects would have been avoided.
-
- Unfortunately, thalidomide is optically unstable in solution; the pure
- isomers of thalidomide racemise by the opening of the phthalimide ring, with
- half-lives of 4-5 hours in buffer at pH 7.4, and less than 10 minutes in the
- blood. Thus shortly after administration of either enantiomer, the other
- enantiomer will be present in significant quantities [1].
-
- Some recent work has revealed that thalidomide inhibits the production of
- tumour necrosis factor alpha. Elevated levels of TNF-alpha are associated
- with several inflammatory conditions. This has led to the development of
- analogues that are chirally stable in reconstituted human plasma, and which
- are undergoing development as anti-inflammatory drugs [2].
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 29. Adhesive Chemistry
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 30. Polymer Chemistry
-
- 30.1 How can I simply identify common plastics?.
-
- Read the recycle code :-). Alternatively, give it to the nearest IR
- spectroscopist who has a polymer library. But if you want some fun, try the
- following.
-
- There are several simple tests that can be performed in the home that can
- assist in separating common plastics, however it is important to realise that
- formulated products contain large quantities of pigments, plasticisers, and
- fillers that can dramatically alter the following properties. If possible
- repeat the tests on a reference sample of the plastic.
-
- a. Visually examine the sample, looking for recycle codes :-)
- While you are at it, you can check for indications of how the plastic
- was made - moulded, injected, rolled, machined etc.
- b. Try assessing the flexibility by bending, and look at the bending zone
- - does the material stretch or is it brittle?
- c. Test the hardness, try scratching it with pencils of differing hardness
- ( B,HB,1-6H ) to ascertain which causes a scratch in the plastic.
- Alternatively, attempt to scuff the sample with a fingernail.
- d. Cut a small slither with a sharp knife. Does the sample cut cleanly
- ( thermoplastic )?, or does it crumble ( thermosetting )?.
- e. Hold sample in small flame, note whether it burns, self-extinguishes on
- removal from the flame, colour of the flame, and smell/acrid nature of
- fumes when flame is blown out ( Caution - the fumes are likely to be
- toxic ). Also attempt to press melted sample against a cold surface, and
- pull away - does sample easily form long threads.
- f. Drop onto a hard surface, does the sample "ring" or "thud"?
- g. Place it in water. Does it float, sink slowly, or sink rapidly?
- If it sinks rapidly, it is likely to be halogenated ( PVC, Viton, PTFE )
- If it sinks slowly, possibly nylon
- If it floats possibly polyethylene or polypropylene.
- - you can ascertain the actual density by adding measured volumes of a
- low density solvent like methanol until the sample neither rises nor
- sinks.
-
- Cutting thin slivers results in powdery chips ( thermosetting )
- - carbolic smell in flame, self extinguishing = phenol formaldehyde
- - self extinguishing, black smoke, acrid = epoxide
- - fishy smell = urea formaldehyde, or melamine formaldehyde
-
- cutting thin slivers results in smooth sliver ( thermoplastic )
- - metallic "ring", burns (styrene smell) = polystyrene
- (note that high impact polystyrene may not give "ring" )
- - "thud", floats, hard, glossy surface, burns (paraffin wax smell) =
- polypropylene
- - "thud", floats, medium-hard surface, burns (sealing wax smell) =
- high density polyethylene
- - "thud", floats, soft surface, burns (paraffin wax smell) =
- low density polyethylene
- - "thud", sinks, burns ( fruity smell ) = acrylic
- - "thud", sinks, burns ( burning paper smell ) = cellulose acetate or
- propionate.
- - "thud", sinks, burns ( rancid butter smell ) = cellulose acetate butyrate
- - "thud", sinks, difficult to ignite ( greenish tinge ) = PVC
- - "thud", sinks, difficult to ignite ( yellow colour, formaldehyde smell )
- = polyacetal
- - "thud", sinks, difficult to ignite ( yellow colour, weak smell ), draws
- into long threads = Nylon
- - "thud", sinks, difficult to ignite ( minimal flame, decomposition but no
- charring, cellular structure forms = polycarbonate.
-
- 30.2 What do the plastics recycling codes mean?.
-
- The recycle codes for plastics are currently being reviewed, and new codes
- ( probably inside a totally different symbol ) will soon be introduced.
-
- 1 = PET
- 2 = High density polyethylene
- 3 = Vinyl
- 4 = Low density polyethylene
- 5 = Polypropylene
- 6 = Polystyrene
- 7 = Others, including multi-layer
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 31. Others
-
- 31.1 How does remote sensing of chemical pollutants work?.
-
- The are several techniques, but the one of most interest to the public is
- the system being used to identify grossly polluting vehicles. The system
- consists of an infra-red source on one side of the road, and a detector
- system on the other. The collimated beam of IR is directed at a gas filter
- radiometer equipped with two liquid-nitrogen-cooled indium antimide
- photovoltaic detectors. The beam is split, and passes through a 4.3um
- bandpass filter to isolate the CO2 spectral region, a 4.6um filter to
- isolates the CO region, and a third filter to isolate the HC region.
- A non-absorbing region is also used to compensate for signal strength.
- There are various specific enhancements, such as the spinning gas-filter
- correlation cell in the University of Denver FEAT ( Fuel Efficiency
- Automobile Test ) system used to cost-effectively identify grossly-polluting
- vehicles [1]. "Optical remote sensing for air pollutants - review " by
- M.Simonds et al [2], provides a good introduction to the diverse range of
- instruments used for remote sensing of pollutants.
-
- 31.2 How does a Lava Lamp work?.
-
- Contributed by: Jim Webb <jnw4347@email.unc.edu>
-
- A container filled with clear or dyed liquid contains a non-water-soluble
- substance (the "lava") that's just a little bit denser (heavier), and has
- a greater thermal coefficient of expansion, than the liquid around it.
- Thus, it settles to the bottom of the container. A heat source at the
- bottom of the container warms the substance, making it expand and become
- less dense than the liquid around it. Thus, it rises. As it moves away
- from the heat source, it cools, contracts a bit, and becomes (once again)
- heavier than the medium. Thus, it falls. Heavy, light, heavy, light.
- Sounds like a Milan Kundera novel.
- (Actually, to be more precise: dense, less dense, dense, less dense.)
-
- 31.3 How do I make a Lava Lamp?.
-
- Contributed by: Jim Webb <jnw4347@email.unc.edu>
-
- Method 1. A new, easy, simple, cheap lava lamp recipe
-
- Use mineral oil as the lava. Use 90% isopropyl alcohol (which most
- drugstores can easily order) and 70% isopropyl alcohol (grocery-store
- rubbing alcohol) for the other ingredient. In 90% alcohol the mineral oil
- will sink to the bottom; slowly add the 70% alcohol (gently mixing all
- the while; take your time) until the oil seems lighter and is about to
- "jump" off the bottom. Use the two alcohols to adjust the responsiveness
- of the "lava."
-
- This mixture is placed in a closed container (the "lava lamp shape" is
- not required, although something fairly tall is good) and situated over a
- 40-watt bulb. If the "lava" tends to collect at the top, try putting a
- dimmer on the bulb, or a fan at the top of the container.
-
- To dye the lava, use an oil-based dye like artists' oil paints or a
- chopped-up sharpie marker. To dye the liquid around it, use food
- coloring.
-
- Two suggestions for better performance: 1) Agitation will tend to make
- the mineral oil form small bubbles unlike the large blobs we're all used
- to. The addition of a hydrophobic solvent to the mixture will help the
- lava coalesce. Turpentine and other paint solvents work well. To make
- sure what you use is hydrophobic, put some on your hand (if it's so toxic
- you can't put it on your hand, do you want to put it in a container that
- could break all over your room/desk/office?) and run a little water on
- it. If the water beads, it should work fine. 2) For faster warm-up time,
- add some antifreeze or (I've not tried it) liquid soap. Too much will
- cloud the alcohol. Keep in mind that the addition of these chemicals may
- necessitate your readjusting the 90% to 70% alcohol mixture.
-
- Method 2. The "official" way - from a patent [3].
-
- The patent itself is not very specific as to proportions of ingredients.
- The solid component (i.e., the waxy-looking stuff that bubbles) is said
- to consist of "a mineral oil such as Ondina 17 (R.T.M.) with a light
- paraffin, carbon tetrachloride, a dye and paraffin wax."
-
- The medium this waxy stuff moves in is roughly 70/30% (by volume) water
- and a liquid which will raise the coefficient of cubic thermal expansion,
- and generally make the whole thing work better. The patent recommends
- propylene glycol for this; however, glycerol, ethylene glycol, and
- polyethylene glycol (aka PEG) are also mentioned as being sufficient.
-
- This mixture is placed in a closed container (the "lava lamp shape" is
- not required, although something fairly tall is good) and situated over a
- 40-watt bulb. If the "lava" tends to collect at the top, try putting a
- dimmer on the bulb, or a fan at the top of the container.
-
- Method 3. The "less official" way - from Popular Electronics [4].
-
- Several non-water-soluble chemicals fall under the category of being
- "just a little bit heavier" than water, and are still viscous enough to
- form bubbles, not be terribly poisonous, and have a great enough
- coefficient of expansion. Among them: Benzyl alcohol (Specific Gravity
- 1.043 g/cm3), Cinnamyl Alcohol (SG 1.04), Diethyl phthalate (SG 1.121)
- and Ethyl Salicylate (SG 1.13). [The specific gravity of distilled water
- is 1.000.]
-
- Hubscher recommends using Benzyl Alcohol, which is used in the
- manufacture of perfume and (in one of its forms) as a food additive. It can
- be obtained from chemical or laboratory supply houses (check your yellow
- pages); the cheapest I could find it for was $25 for 500 ml (probably 2,
- maybe 3 regular-sized lava lamps' worth). An oil-soluble dye is nice to
- color the "lava"; Hubscher soaked the benzyl in a chopped up red felt-tip
- pen and said it worked great. [Benzyl alcohol is "relatively harmless",
- but don't drink it, and avoid touching & breathing it.]
-
- Hubscher found that the benzyl and the water alone didn't do much, so he
- raised the specific gravity of the water a little bit by adding table
- salt. A 4.8% salt solution (put 48 grams of salt in a container and fill
- it up to one liter with water) has a specific gravity of about 1.032,
- closer to benzyl's 1.043. I find that the salt tends to cloud the water a
- bit.. you might want to experiment with other additives. (Antifreeze?
- Vinegar?)
-
- This is put into a closed container and placed above a 40-watt bulb, as
- above. Either way, I would suggest using distilled water and consider
- sterilising the container by immersing it in boiling water for a few
- minutes.. algae growing in lava lamps is not very hip.
-
- Caveat: Some of these chemicals are not good for you. Caveat 2: Some of
- these companies are not good for you if they find you've been infringing
- on their patent rights and trying to sell your new line of "magma
- lights." Be careful.
-
- 31.4 What is Goretex?.
-
- Goretex is a dispersion-polymerised PTFE that is patented by W.L.Gore and
- Associates [5]. It is classed as a stretched semi-crystalline film, and is
- produced by extrusion under stress ( faster take-up rate than extrusion
- rate ). The extrudate is stretched below the melting temperature, often
- in the presence of an aromatic hydrocarbon that swells the amorphous region,
- creating porosity. The hydrophobic nature of the PTFE means that liquid
- water is repelled from the pores, whereas water vapour can pass through.
- It is important to realise that once the PTFE pores are filled with liquid
- water, the fabric can allow liquid water to pass though until it is dry
- again. Thus Goretex-containing fabrics ( such as Nomex/Goretex - which
- consists of an outer aramid fabric, a central Goretex layer, and a cotton
- backing ) should never be used as protection from chemicals as many will
- pass straight through. Any water-miscible solvent ( eg alcohol ) can fill
- the pores, and then liquid water can displace it and continue to rapidly
- pass through until the fabric is fully dried out.
-
- 31.5 What causes an automobile airbag to inflate?.
-
- The final cause is the production of nitrogen from 10s of grams of sodium
- azide, but there are some extra chemicals involved along the way.
- Sodium azide is toxic, The airbag inflators are aluminium-encased units
- that contain an igniter (squib), gas generating pellets ( or wafers of
- sodium azide propellant ), and filters to screen out combustion products.
- The electrical signal ignites a few milligrams of initiator pyrotechnic
- material. The pyrotechnic material then ignites several grams of booster
- material, which ignites the tens of grams of sodium azide, and the azide
- burns very rapidly to produce nitrogen gas and sodium.
-
- The sodium azide is pelletised to control the rate of gas generation by
- controlling its surface area. The free sodium would form sodium
- hydroxide when it contacts the water in people's noses, mouths, and
- eyes so, to prevent this, the manufacturers mix in chemicals that will
- produce sodium salts ( silicates, aluminates, borates ) on combustion.
-
- Inflator units also often have a layer of matted material of alumina and
- silica called Fiberfrax in the particulate filter. The Fiberfrax mat reacts
- with most of the remaining free sodium in the generated gas. A typical
- reaction pathway is as follows [6];-
-
- 300C
- 2 NaN3 ------> 2 Na + 3 N2
- 10 Na + 2 KNO3 ------> K2O + 5 Na20 + N2
- K2O + Na2O + SiO2 ------> alkaline silicate glass.
-
- There are apparently also corn starch and talcum powder used as lubricants
- in the bag, and if the bag explodes these are the powders that contaminate
- people - not the toxic chemicals in the inflator.
-
- One article quotes 160 grams of propellant for a drivers-side bag
- ( 60 litres of gas) and 450 grams for a passengers-side bags
- ( which are 3-5 times larger) . I suspect that may include all of the
- above ingredients in the igniter, but not the bag lubricants.
-
- The bag fills until it reaches slightly above atmospheric pressure, and
- the manufacturers now control the bag inflation speed to 90-200mph, which
- is less than the early models - because they were too violent and could
- harm occupants. The actual sequence goes something like:-
-
- 0 - Impact
- 15 - 20 milliseconds - sensors signal severe frontal collision.
- 18 - 23 milliseconds - pyrotechnic squib fired
- 21 - 27 milliseconds - nylon bag inflates
- 45 - 50 milliseconds - the driver ( who has moved forward 5 inches)
- slams into the fully inflated bag
- 85 -100 milliseconds - the driver "rides the bag down" as the air
- cushion deflates.
-
- Recently, there have been calls to change the crash testing procedures to
- allow the test dummy to be belted in, as seat belt usage is now about 67%.
- Having a belted dummy would permit the use of slower inflating airbags, as
- the deaths of 30 children ( up to Dec. 1996 ) have been attributed to the
- speed of inflation of the larger passenger-side bag. Early in 1997, the
- US NHTSA finally permitted depowering and/or disabling of passenger-side
- airbags. A major airbag supplier is Breed Automotive, Boonton Township, N.J.
-
- More details can be found in specialist articles [7-9], and research is
- continuing into alternative inflation mechanisms, such as compressed gases.
- There has been extensive work over the last decade on "hybrid" airbag
- systems. These two-stage systems often use cylinders of compressed gas,
- which can be released at ambient temperatures for situations where low-speed
- deployment is appropriate, or the gas can be rapidly heated for high-speed
- deployment.
-
- 31.6 How hazardous is spilt mercury?.
-
- First step - ensure any broken thermometer actually contained mercury, as
- many only contain alcohol. Mercury has an appreciable vapour pressure at
- ambient temperatures, thus if the mercury has split somewhere warm and with
- limited air circulation, then vapour concentrations can accumulate. When
- mercury drops any distance onto a surface, it splatters into hundreds of
- minute globules, resulting in a large surface area. The major hazard is
- the mercury vapour produced from the spill. Mercury usually ends up in carpet
- or cracks in the surface, and so really is only a significant hazard to
- children crawling around the floor. Do not over-react. If the location is
- relatively cool and well-ventilated, there is little danger to adults. Remove
- as much mercury as conveniently possible, and just remember when toddlers
- come visiting that there is a slight potential hazard if the area is not
- well-ventilated and is warm. Obviously, if you increase the ventilation, the
- concentrations will decrease faster. The USA ACGIH TLV for mercury vapour is
- 0.05mg/m3, whilst the DFG ( Germany ) limit is 0.01mg/m3, and the vapour
- pressure of mercury at 25C is 0.0018mm. At 25C, the equilibrium concentration
- would be about 20mg/m3, which is 400 times the permitted TLV. It is unlikely
- that this equilibrium would be reached in areas where there are significant
- airflows, unless the mercury had been finely dispersed ( as in a blown
- manometer, or dropped onto a very rough surface ).
-
- Mercury vapour is rapidly oxidised to divalent ionic mercury by the tissues
- of the body. Human volunteers exposed to tracer doses of elemental Hg
- demonstrated first order kinetics for excretion with a half life of 60 days.
- The lethal concentration for humans is apparently not known, but acute
- mercurialism has resulted from exposures to concentrations within the range
- 1.2 - 8.5mg/m3. The human organism is able to absorb and excrete substantial
- amounts of mercury, in some cases as high as 2 mg/day without exhibiting
- any abnormal symptoms or physical signs [10].
-
- The Dietary uptake for mercury was estimated to be :-
- 3 micrograms/day Adults
- 1 " " young children
- 1 " " infants.
- and the adult uptake was estimated to comprise of
- 0.3 air via Hg(0),
- 0.1 water via Hg(2+),
- 3 food via Hg(CH3Hg+).
- ( EPA Mercury Criteria Document 1979 )
-
- The CRC Handbook of Laboratory Safety [11] has a chapter on mercury hazards.
- A good discussion of mercury ( and other metals ) is found in "Metals and
- their Compounds in the Environment: Occurrence, Analysis and Biological
- Relevance" [12].
-
- The best method of removing spilt mercury is to use a vacuum with a flask
- and pasteur pipette and chase the little globules around the floor while not
- breathing :-). Seriously, a simple vacuum system, or even a pasteur pipette,
- can remove most of the large globules. There are special commercial vacuum
- cleaners, but never use a household one - as the expelled air will contain
- mercury vapour, and the fine metal globules will contaminate the cleaner.
- For nooks, crannies, and cracks - where the mercury is likely to remain
- undisturbed, you can either apply flowers of sulfur ( fine elemental sulfur )
- or zinc dust, with vigorous brushing to facilitate contact, and sweep up the
- excess. If the mercury is going to be re-exposed ( by cleaning, foot traffic
- etc., ), then the zinc dust may be preferred because of an apparently faster
- reaction rate. However, if you have a light-coloured carpet, pouring yellow
- or grey powder is not usually an option, and if the location is warm and not
- well-ventilated near ground level, ensure that toddlers do not spend hours
- every day playing there.
-
- There have been several studies on the best methods to clean up spills,
- including "Vaporisation of Mercury spillage" [13]. The abstract reports " A
- report on an investigation of the problem in laboratories and industries of
- mercury (Hg) vaporisation from small droplets in cracks and floors. The
- efficacy of other fixing agents besides flowers of sulfur was metered.
- The results show that the use of a sulfur, calcium oxide and water mixture
- was the most successful mixture for fixing mercury droplets. A second
- convenient technique is the use of an aerosol hair spray. A chelating soap
- is available in some countries, and this would presumably be the method of
- choice in dealing with spillages."
-
- Another article includes methods based on amalgamating with zinc impregnated
- in a metal sponge or scrubbing pad for picking up mercury [14], and another
- investigates substances that can be used to remove spilled mercury - such as
- iodised activated carbon, copper or zinc powders, molecular sieves of copper
- or silver ions, and silica gel [15].
-
- Dental amalgam is apparently a finely divided powder of a silver, tin,
- and copper alloy that is mixed with the mercury. The setting time probably
- is a function of the slow dissolution of the alloy in the mercury due to
- the particle size of the powder used. The mass % of each individual metal
- amalgam when mercury is saturated at 20C is Ag = 0.04, Cu = 0.0032, and
- Sn = 0.62, but I've no idea if that is the ratio actually used. I presume
- the ratio may be varied to obtain the desired physical properties, and that
- there would be a theoretical excess of the alloy to ensure minimal free
- mercury. The actual amount of mercury vapour from dental amalgam is low, but
- directly measurable by sensitive mercury vapour analysers. The significance
- of mercury vapour from dental amalgam to health has been very controversial,
- however there are now practical alternatives in widespread use.
-
- 31.7 Did molasses really kill 21 people in Boston?.
-
- From: mica@world.std.com (mitchell swartz) Date: Sun, 4 Jul 1993
- Subject: Molasses Accident
- [excerpt from the Book of Lists #3 (Wallace et alia)]
-
- THE GREAT BOSTON MOLASSES FLOOD
- "On Jan. 15, 1919, the workers and residents of Boston's North End, mostly
- Irish and Italian, were out enjoying the noontime sun of an unseasonably
- warm day. Suddenly, with only a low rumble of warning, the huge cast-iron
- tank of the Purity Distilling Company burst open and a great wave of raw
- black molasses, two stories high, poured down Commercial Street and oozed
- into the adjacent waterfront area. Neither pedestrians nor horse-drawn
- wagons could outrun it. Two million gallons of molasses, originally
- destined for rum, engulfed scores of persons - 21 men, women, and children
- died of drowning or suffocation, while another 150 were injured. Buildings
- crumbled, and an elevated train track collapsed. Those horses not
- completely swallowed up were so trapped in the goo they had to be shot by
- the police. Sightseers who came to see the chaos couldn't help but walk in
- the molasses. On their way home they spread the sticky substance throughout
- the city. Boston smelled of molasses for a week, and the harbor ran brown
- until summer."
-
- From this we see 21 people were killed, the half life was fairly short for
- the contaminants. Long term effects were probably negligible.
-
- 31.8 What is the active ingredient in mothballs?.
-
- Mothballs were originally made from camphor ( C10H16O, [76-22-2], MP 176C,
- BP 204C ), or naphthalene ( C10H8, [91-20-3], MP 82C, BP 218C ),
- but para-dichlorobenzene ( C6H4Cl2, [106-46-7], MP 55C, BP 173C ), became
- cheaply available as an unwanted by-product of ortho-dichlorobenzene
- production, and thus became the most common active ingredient. However
- para-dichlorobenzene is also a suspected carcinogen, and naphthalene
- has again become a common active ingredient. Consequently, the best
- method of finding the active ingredient is to read the label on the packet,
- Note that adding mothballs to modern gasolines will not increase the octane
- rating of the fuel - refer to the Gasoline FAQ posted in rec.autos.tech for
- more details.
-
- 31.9 Is vinegar just acetic acid?.
-
- Most countries have food regulations that permit the use of acetic acid as
- clearly-labelled "synthetic white vinegar". Most vinegars are actually malt
- vinegars ( fermented ), and synthetic acetic acid is not allowed to be sold
- as Malt Vinegar. Most natural, unfortified, malt vinegars are appropriately
- labelled. The classification can get rather messy when bulk suppliers dilute
- malt vinegar concentrates with acetic acid, which itself could either be
- synthetic, or from another fermentation process. Regulations usually require
- any addition of acetic acid to be clearly marked on the label, and the
- product is not normally legally sold as pure "malt vinegar". The amount of
- acetic acid in "natural" malt, cider, or wine vinegars usually ranges from
- 4% - 6%, but some examples can have up to approximately 20%. Vinegar is
- produced by the exothermic aerobic bacterial oxidation of ethanol to acetic
- acid via acetaldehyde.
-
- 31.10 What are the different grades of laboratory water?.
-
- There are several techniques used in chemical laboratories to obtain the
- required purity of water. There are several grading systems for water, but
- the most well-known is the ASTM system, although certain applications (HPLC)
- often require purer water than ASTM Type I, consequently additional
- treatments such as ultrafiltration and UV oxidation may also be used to
- reduce concentrations of uncontrolled impurities, such as organics.
-
- ASTM Type I II III
- Specific Conductance (max. uMhos/cm.) <0.06 <1.0 <1.0
- Specific Resistance (min. Mohms/cm.) >16.67 >1.0 >1.0
- Total Matter ( max. mg/l ) <0.1 <0.1 <1.0
- Silicate ( max. mg/l ) N/D N/D 0.01
- KMnO4 Reduction ( min. mins ) >60.0 >60.0 >10.0
-
- Type A B C
- Colony Count (Colony forming units/ml) 0 Bacteria <10 <100
- pH NA NA 6.2-7.5
-
- The techniques to purify natural waters - which may be almost saturated
- with some contaminants - are frequently used in combination to obtain high
- purity laboratory water. Some purification techniques use less energy than
- distilling the water, and may be used in combination where large volumes of
- "pure" water are required. The design of purified water systems, and the
- materials used for construction, are selected according to the important
- contaminants of the water. For some applications, 316L stainless steel may
- be required, whereas other applications may require polyvinylidene difluoride
- and polytetrafluoroethylene materials. Systems are carefully designed to
- minimise the volume of water remaining static and in "dead ends" - where
- microbes could grow.
-
- The first treatment is usually a coarse physical filtration using a depth
- filter that can remove undissolved large particles and other insoluble
- material in the feed water.
-
- For smaller volumes, distillation is the pretreatment method of choice.
- Distilled water is water that has been boiled in a still and the vapour
- condensed to obtained distilled water. While many impurities are removed
- ( especially dissolved and undissolved inorganics that make water "hard",
- most organisms, etc. ), some impurities do remain ( volatile and some
- non-volatile organics, dissolved gases, and trace quantities of fine
- particulates ). Distilled water has lost many of the ionic species that
- provided a pH buffer effect so, as it dissolves some CO2 from the air
- during condensation and storage, the pH moves to around 5.5 ( usually from
- close to the neutral pH of 7.0 ). Distilled water has the vast majority of
- impurities removed, but often those residual compounds still make it
- unsuitable for demanding applications, so there are alternative methods of
- purifying water to remove specific undesirable species.
-
- The next common treatment is ion-exchange, which involves using a bed of
- resin that exchanges with unwanted dissolved species, such as those that
- cause "hardness" ( calcium, magnesium ) in water. Two resins are used, one
- that exchanges anions ( usually a strong anion exchanger such as Amberlite
- IRA-400 - a quaternary ammonium compound on polystyrene ), and one that
- exchanges cations ( usually a strong cation exchanger such as Amberlite
- IR-120 - a sulfonic acid compound on polystyrene ). These resins can also
- be combined in "mixed bed" resins, such as Amberlite MB-1A, which is a
- mixture of IRA-400 [OH- form] and IR-120 [H+ form]. The porosity of the
- polystyrene-based resin is dependant on the amount of cross-linking, which
- is, in turn, dependant on the proportion of divinyl benzene used in the
- process. Unfortunately, selectivity of a highly porous resin is inferior
- to that of a less porous, more cross-linked, resin, so a balance between
- the rate of exchange and the selectivity is sought. Agarose, cellulose,
- or dextran can be used in place of the polystyrene base. Sophisticated
- systems can have many beds in sequence, using both stronger and weaker
- ion exchange resins.
-
- The exchange potential for ions depends on a number of factors, including
- molecular size, valency and concentration. In dilute solutions, exchange
- potentials increase with increasing valency, but in concentrated solutions
- the effect of valency is reversed, favouring the absorption of univalent
- ions rather than polyvalent ions. This explains why calcium and magnesium
- can be strongly absorbed from feedwater in softening processes, but then are
- easily removed from the ion exchange resin when concentrated sodium chloride
- is used as regenerant. In dilute solutions, the order of common anion
- exchange potentials on strong anion exchangers is sulfate > chromate >
- citrate > nitrate > phosphate > iodide > chloride. In dilute solutions, the
- order of common cation exchange potentials on strong cation exchangers is
- Fe3+ > Al2+ > Ba2+ > Pb2+ > Ca2+ > Cu2+ > Zn2+ = Mg2+ > NH4+ = K+ > Na+ >
- H+ > Hg2+.
-
- There are two forms of ion exchange for water purification. To "deionise"
- feed water, the resins are in the OH- ( anion exchanger ) and H+ ( cation
- exchanger ) forms. If sodium chloride was present in the feed water, the
- sodium ion would displace the hydrogen ion from the cation resin, while
- the chloride would displace the hydroxyl ion from the anion resin. The
- displaced ions can combine to form water. Separate beds of resins can be
- regenerated using 1 Normal acid ( HCl or H2SO4 ) for strongly-acid cation
- resins, or 1 Normal sodium hydroxide for strongly-basic anion resins.
- The amount of regenerant is approximately 150 - 500% of the theoretical
- exchange capacity of the bed.
-
- If the intention is to merely "soften" the feed water to reduce deposits,
- the beds can be in the Cl- ( anion exchanger ) and Na+ ( cation exchanger )
- forms. These are replaced by the dilute polyvalent species in the water that
- rapidly form undesirable insoluble deposits as process water evaporates,
- like calcium, magnesium and sulfate. The beds can be regenerated by passing
- highly concentrated salt ( sodium chloride ) solutions through them until
- all the polyvalent ions on the resins have been replaced. This technique
- produces "soft" process water that used in industry.
-
- When a dilute feedwater solution containing salt passes through a cation
- exchange resin bed in the hydrogen form, the reaction that occurs is:-
- Na+ + Cl + R.SO3H <=> H+ + Cl- + R.SO3Na
- Obviously, the acidity of the water strongly increases as it moves down the
- bed, which inhibits the exchange process. If a mixed bed is used, the
- products soon encounter the anion exchange resin and are also removed:-
- H+ + Cl- + R.NH2 <=> R.NH3 + Cl-
- H+ + Cl- + R.NH3OH <=> R.NH3 + Cl- + H2O
- Mixed bed resins are usually more efficient than equivalent single beds.
-
- If the water feeding the resin beds has already been distilled ( very common
- in laboratories - the resin beds then last much, much longer, and the
- distillation has also removed other impurities ), then the water is called
- "distilled and deionised". Laboratory water that has had most of the ionic
- impurities removed will have a high electrical resistance, and is often known
- as "18.3 megohm" water because the electrical resistance is >18,300,000
- ohm/cm, but note that non-ionic impurities may still be present.
-
- An alternative process that has increasingly replaced ion-exchange is
- reverse-osmosis, which uses osmotic pressure across special membranes to
- remove most of the impurities. It is called reverse-osmosis because the feed
- side is pressurised to drive the purified water through the membrane in the
- opposite direction than would occur if both sides were the same pressure.
- The two common membrane materials are cellulose acetate or polysulfone
- coated with polyamine, and typical rejection characteristics are:-
- Monovalent Divalent Pyrogens, Bacteria
- Ions Ions Organics > 200 MW
- Cellulose Acetate >88% >94% >99%
- Polyamine >90% >95% >99%
-
- The huge advantage of RO is that membranes can easily be maintained
- ( occasional chemical sterilisations ), are largely self-cleaning, and can
- produce large amounts of water with no chemical regeneration and minimal
- energy requirements - just the pressure ( 200 psi ) required to push the
- water along the membrane surfaces and improve the osmotic yield. RO is
- commonly used as a pretreatment stage when very pure water is required, and
- for situations where large volumes of reasonably pure water are required.
-
- Organic species and free chlorine are usually removed from water by passing
- the water through a bed of activated carbon where they form a low energy
- chemical link with the carbon. These filters are often installed upstream
- of the ion-exchange and reverse osmosis stages to protect them from chlorine
- and organics in the feed water. Polyamine RO membranes require feedwater
- containing <0.1ppm free chlorine, however cellulose acetate membranes can
- tolerate up to 1.5ppm free chlorine.
-
- The final stage of producing "pure" laboratory water usually involves
- passing the deionised water through a 0.22um filter, which is sufficiently
- small to remove the vast majority of organisms ( the smallest known
- bacterium is around 0.3um ), thus sterilising the water.
-
- Recently, ultrafiltration has become popular as a means of reducing pyrogens
- ( they are usually lipopolysaccharides from the degradation of gram negative
- bacteria ). They are measured by either injecting a sample into test rabbits
- and measuring body temperature increase or by the more sensitive Limulus
- Amebocyte Lysate (LAL) test. The internal membrane of an ultrafiltration
- system has a pore size of <0.005um. This will remove most particles,
- colloidal silica, and high MW organics such as pyrogens, down to about
- 10,000MW. These are usually for cell-culture and DNA research, and are
- located at the point of use, however the ultrafiltration unit has to be
- regularly sanitized to prevent microbial growth.
-
- Ultraviolet irradiation can be used as a bactericide (254nm) or to destroy
- organics by photo-oxidation (185nm). The water is exposed to UV for periods
- up to 30 minutes, and the UV interacts with dissolved oxygen to produce
- ozone. The ozone promotes hydroxyl radical formation, which result in the
- destruction of organic material. Usually a high intensity, quartz mercury
- vapour lamp is used, and is followed by an ion exchange and organic scavenger
- cartridge to collect decomposition products. The product water is very low in
- total organic carbon.
-
- Dissolved gases can be removed by passing the water through a vacuum
- degassing module that utilises an inert, gas-permeable membrane surrounded
- by a vacuum to remove dissolved gases from the water.
-
- The purest laboratory water is usually obtained after passing through a
- system that can include reverse osmosis or distillation of the feed water,
- followed by activated carbon to remove chlorine and organics. The water is
- passed through ion exchange resins to remove inorganic ions, through a
- UV oxidation stage, followed by a combined ion exchange and organic scavenger
- cartridge, and finally through a 0.22um filter. An additional stage of vacuum
- degassing to remove dissolved gases may be added for some applications - such
- as for semiconductor production.
-
- These pure water systems are regarded as " point-of-use ", because it is
- extremely difficult to prevent the reintroduction of contamination during
- storage and distribution. The water is commonly known as " 18.3 Megohm "
- water, because it has a specific resistance greater than 18.3 Megohm-cm
- at 25C. It also contains < 5 ppb of total organic carbon, < 10 ppb of total
- dissolved solids, and < 1 colony forming unit / mL of micro-organisms.
-
- Details of laboratory and industrial water-purification processes are
- available in the catalogues of equipment suppliers such as Barnstead [16]
- and Millipore [17].
-
-