eugene.rogers
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2012
- Messages
- 10
Now I now chemistry is rather exact science, but being more like an hobbyist, I'd like to approximate a little bit. I don't remember much from my chemistry classes, except the safety regulations of protecting eyes and wearing protective clothing (something I always do in my little kitchen lab). So, maybe someone with more skills in chemistry could say am I even getting close here.
The Wikipedia page (and several other sources) cite Marquis reagent to be 20:1 95-98% sulfuric acid and 40% formaldehyde. This gives me an the idea of a final solution of Marquis reagent being 1.9% formaldehyde. From a textbook example I see that the recipe for Marquis reagent is given as 100mL of 95-98% sulfuric acid added to 5mL of 40% formaldehyde ie. the final strength of formaldehyde is 1.9% (= 40% x (5mL/105mL). Should I have at my hands 37% (w/w) formaldehyde and 98% sulfuric acid, mixing those into a solution of 5.5mL of 40% formaldehyde and 99.5mL of 98% sulfuric acid would give me something quite close to 1.9% formaldehyde in the final solution, but is this close enough to be considered as working Marquis reagent?
And then there is also Erlich's reagent (1:1 ~95% ethanol mixed w/ 2mg p–dimethylaminobenzaldehyde and concentrated hydrochloric acid)? Now the ingredients aren't too exotic either, except maybe p–dimethylaminobenzaldehyde, but concentrated hydrochloric acid is a task definitely not suitable for my amateur kitchen lab and a 50% solution of hydrochloric acid would probably boil at my face too. But the final solution of Erlich's reagent is 50% of hydrochloric acid, right? If I mix concentrated hydrochloric acid in ratio of 1:1 with anything, the final solution would be something close to 50%, assuming that my concentrated hydrochloric acid was actually somewhere near 100% to begin with. I'm really confused here now, as I see that Erlich's reagent is being sold on the internets and thus the product can not be something that boils in around 40°C, right? Thus I've misunderstood something and the final solution of hydrochloric acid in the Erlich's reagent is not 50% but something else, I guess?
The Wikipedia page (and several other sources) cite Marquis reagent to be 20:1 95-98% sulfuric acid and 40% formaldehyde. This gives me an the idea of a final solution of Marquis reagent being 1.9% formaldehyde. From a textbook example I see that the recipe for Marquis reagent is given as 100mL of 95-98% sulfuric acid added to 5mL of 40% formaldehyde ie. the final strength of formaldehyde is 1.9% (= 40% x (5mL/105mL). Should I have at my hands 37% (w/w) formaldehyde and 98% sulfuric acid, mixing those into a solution of 5.5mL of 40% formaldehyde and 99.5mL of 98% sulfuric acid would give me something quite close to 1.9% formaldehyde in the final solution, but is this close enough to be considered as working Marquis reagent?
And then there is also Erlich's reagent (1:1 ~95% ethanol mixed w/ 2mg p–dimethylaminobenzaldehyde and concentrated hydrochloric acid)? Now the ingredients aren't too exotic either, except maybe p–dimethylaminobenzaldehyde, but concentrated hydrochloric acid is a task definitely not suitable for my amateur kitchen lab and a 50% solution of hydrochloric acid would probably boil at my face too. But the final solution of Erlich's reagent is 50% of hydrochloric acid, right? If I mix concentrated hydrochloric acid in ratio of 1:1 with anything, the final solution would be something close to 50%, assuming that my concentrated hydrochloric acid was actually somewhere near 100% to begin with. I'm really confused here now, as I see that Erlich's reagent is being sold on the internets and thus the product can not be something that boils in around 40°C, right? Thus I've misunderstood something and the final solution of hydrochloric acid in the Erlich's reagent is not 50% but something else, I guess?
