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Mon, 17 Jun 1996 11:29:22 -0700 |
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A number of years ago (9 to be more exact) I made a large batch of
phosporic acid using the standard recipe. The acid worked well, but two
years ago it started spending most of its time in a solid state rather than
liquid. This reqired that the acid be heated before use so that it could
be pipetted. After a about an additional 6 month the glass container in
which the acid was stored burst in the oven (and what a mess that was).
After so many years the acid had dissolved more than half of the glass and
rendered the container too weak. I now assume that the problem with the
crystallization of the acid was due to the presence of a substantial amount
of Si in the acid. I have been tolds that poly bottles will last an even
shorter lenght of time, so I quess the message here is that big batches are
fine, but don't make them so big that the shelf life approaches a decade.
I also wonder if this is a photo induced reaction, so keeping the acid in a
dark place might help.
Regards,
Bob Ilchik
Department of Geosciences
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
(520) 621-9792 (W)
(520) 621-2672 (FAX)
(520) 881-2002 (H)
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