Distilling Sulfuric Acid with Some Mishaps

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  • čas přidán 24. 01. 2018
  • In this video, I distill some sulfuric acid... but run into a few problems along the way!
    Patreon link: / dougslab
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 275

  • @NurdRage
    @NurdRage Před 6 lety +123

    Good having you back. I missed you.

  • @Jeffrey_Wong
    @Jeffrey_Wong Před 6 lety +54

    This video reminds me of a story my chem professor told in lecture...
    A few years ago, a student (undergrad) was working in the lab and accidentally emptied some organic waste into the acid waste container. Rather than alerting the TA, the student tried to hide his/her mistake by sealing the container (we use giant glass carboys that probably hold about 10 liters or so) and walking away like nothing happened. At the time, my professor was in her office and she heard an explosion next door followed by the sound of falling glass shards. She runs out of her office to find the entire lab group of 30 or so panicked students evacuating the lab followed by a cloud of HCl and NO2 gas. Several students had to be rushed to the hospital for burns and glass cuts and law enforcement was involved as well... just goes to show what happens when you don't properly fix your mistakes in the lab :)

    • @cantsolvesudokus
      @cantsolvesudokus Před 4 lety +3

      How did they found out?

    • @nabrialesadramelech3299
      @nabrialesadramelech3299 Před 2 lety +1

      what would be the appropriate thing to do in that situation tho?

    • @seibtyee637
      @seibtyee637 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nabrialesadramelech3299 leave it open, close the door and open the windows to allow the gas to escape

    • @SciDOCMBC
      @SciDOCMBC Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@seibtyee637Strong acids or bases must always be neutralized before being placed in the appropriate waste containers.

    • @seibtyee637
      @seibtyee637 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@SciDOCMBC yes. but i was referring to what to do after someone causes an explosion like that.

  • @dhawthorne1634
    @dhawthorne1634 Před 6 lety +59

    I love when NurdRage includes his mistakes and solutions. I think you managed to 1 up him by actually thinking through solutions in real time with footage to the experiment going awry.

  • @mickles1975
    @mickles1975 Před 6 lety +92

    It's not a proper lab bench unless it has acid burn marks on it.

    • @stamasd8500
      @stamasd8500 Před 6 lety +16

      It's not a proper lab bench until it has a big old hole with glowing perimeter. Bonus if the glow is due to radioactive fission byproducts.

    • @VerbenaIDK
      @VerbenaIDK Před rokem +1

      @@stamasd8500 it's not a proper lab bench if you never burnt a hole straight into it using a blowtorch because you got impatient

    • @MichaelLapore-lk9jz
      @MichaelLapore-lk9jz Před 9 měsíci +1

      A badge of pride!!!☝️

    • @dudetapedtoafridge3073
      @dudetapedtoafridge3073 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@VerbenaIDKit's not a lab bench if it doesn't have a hole going to earths core with a perimeter warping into the fith dimension

    • @VerbenaIDK
      @VerbenaIDK Před 6 měsíci

      @@dudetapedtoafridge3073 back when i did chemistry my "lab bench" had no holes, because it was stone :3

  • @j_sum1
    @j_sum1 Před 6 lety +32

    Lovely work as usual, Doug.
    Really good to see clean-up of a real spill. Such things are usually left out but they are extremely important. And the simulated situations found in safety videos really don't cut it.
    I am enjoying the increased video frequency. Thanks.

  • @bytergon
    @bytergon Před 6 lety +3

    OMG - even though you showed your mishaps, you still manage to make that look so easy. I've distilled H2SO4 before to purify it, and that was probably one the scariest days of my life!!!
    Thanks for sharing so many useful tips and tricks along the way - Especially about using a hot air gun to stop the water droplets falling back into the boiling acid mixture at the beginning. I must try that next time. Maybe then I'll need less changes of underwear when caring out this prep!

  • @terawattyear
    @terawattyear Před 6 lety +5

    I really like these basic task “how-to” videos. Good choice on your part Doug for showing us stuff to keep us from frying ourselves.

  • @pyromen321
    @pyromen321 Před 6 lety +10

    Holy crap! So many videos!!! Keep up the incredible work!

  • @williamackerson_chemist
    @williamackerson_chemist Před 6 lety +2

    I love these weekday videos. Keep it up.

  • @raynaldchatillon7826
    @raynaldchatillon7826 Před 6 lety +22

    Look children, lets distill sulfuric Acid in the dark... They didn't teach you that in school..!!! ;-)
    I love your video's and greetings from the Netherlands...;-))

  • @2323Nod
    @2323Nod Před 6 lety +6

    Thank you for showing your mishaps, it increases the educational value of the videos!

  • @ScienceWithJames
    @ScienceWithJames Před 6 lety +2

    You are one of my favorite (if not my favorite) chemistry channels. Your videos are well made, fun, and always interesting. You inspired me to start making my own videos, and have given me many ideas for my own lab. You're awesome.

  • @tracybowling97
    @tracybowling97 Před 4 lety

    Great video! You're "learning experiences" we're the best parts! Lot's of ppl want their videos perfect. Thanks for showing us!

  • @dekeshaw5507
    @dekeshaw5507 Před 6 lety

    Holy crap, your video is so good and extremely educational, you have my Subscription and likes from now on sir, great work!

  • @jamesroseii
    @jamesroseii Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks, Doug. I'm not a chemist but I love chemistry and these simpler videos are very enjoyable for me.

  • @aga5897
    @aga5897 Před 6 lety

    Nice one Prax !
    Great to see Real experiment. Superb to see how you deal with accidents.

  • @CollegeChemistry
    @CollegeChemistry Před 6 lety

    Good video as always Doug, and good on you for showing the work around to a problem. It's not easy showing people screw ups, but when you do it helps people see the foibles, and know how to get past them.

  • @kevinbyrne4538
    @kevinbyrne4538 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for recording and posting this video. Good information about an important process. Much appreciated.

  • @MSteamCSM
    @MSteamCSM Před 6 lety +1

    Details explained in this video was very helpful. Keep it up.

  • @JFDhater
    @JFDhater Před rokem +1

    awesome video and extremely informative. it really helps us newbies just getting into chemistry with you explaining why certain methods are used and for what specific reasoning. thanks so much.

  • @feIps_
    @feIps_ Před 6 lety

    This is why I love Doug's Lab :)

  • @michaelf7093
    @michaelf7093 Před 6 lety

    Well done, Doug!

  • @jamesg1367
    @jamesg1367 Před 6 lety +1

    Very nice result. The mishaps were perfect for learning purposes. :-)

  • @dysprosiumion3269
    @dysprosiumion3269 Před 6 lety +1

    Perfect timing! Just recently made some cerium sulfate from CeO2 for myself and wanted to recover the extreme excess of Sulfuric Acid I had to use. Definitely not easy to come by for the average home chemist!

  • @shonaoneill5151
    @shonaoneill5151 Před 6 lety

    Super video Doug, good to see you are human 😀 Everyone makes mistakes, the important thing is that we learn from them.

  • @astralchemistry8732
    @astralchemistry8732 Před 6 lety

    Very cool and informative video! Keep them coming!

  • @unreachablechemistry5105
    @unreachablechemistry5105 Před 6 lety +1

    Neat! Distillation of sulfuric is kinda scary, but I intend to do it at some point. Very cool video and well thought out setup.

  • @mrhomescientist
    @mrhomescientist Před 6 lety

    I have the same thermocouple! Terra cotta pieces are also a good idea for boiling chips; I'll have to try that. I really liked all the real-world problem solving you did too. That's great to show how real chemistry in a real lab is. Good stuff!

  • @TheNCgunny
    @TheNCgunny Před 6 lety

    This was very interesting. hope to see more in the future

  • @michaeldessingue9482
    @michaeldessingue9482 Před 6 lety

    Keep up the excellent work, thank you.

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper Před 6 lety

    Mishaps with solutions are great to see.

  • @Mess-Lab-Kitchen-Show
    @Mess-Lab-Kitchen-Show Před 6 lety

    WELCOME BACK DOUG!!

  • @dominicconway1112
    @dominicconway1112 Před 2 lety

    Hey bud. I’ve just made some weak h2so4 myself. I worked out 6.25x10-4 mol concentration via titration. This video helped a lot, has inspired me tbh.

  • @henricoderre
    @henricoderre Před 10 měsíci +1

    'Hi Doug. I'm relatively new to chemistry. I had extreme violent bumping recently when I tried to extract HCl (9.5% w/w, active ingredient) from Lysol Power Toilet Bowl Cleaner through distillation. I'd bought this product at the dollar store. A 1 litre bottle of HCl acid costs 73$ on Amazon. I wanted, no needed, to save money. I'd researched all the ingredients to the Lysol product, but for some reason C10-16 Pareth (or C12, or C16) had escaped me. It turns out this ethoxylated alcohol is explosive (or is an explosive) when heated. I'm lucky nothing major happened during my HCl extraction experiment. Today, I attempted to concentrate some sulfuric acid I'd made from Epsom salt through electrolysis. My r.b. boiling flask survived the Lysol HCL extraction experiment, but it finally cracked during the sulfuric acid distillation, and acid leaked onto my homemade heating mantle and work table. It hadn't had time to concentrate, so it caused no major damage to my mantle or work table.

  • @janbeck8269
    @janbeck8269 Před 6 lety +1

    Great video. Thanks! Are you going to make some videos on analysis? For example, how would you figure out compounds are left in the undistilled portion?

  • @davegeorge7094
    @davegeorge7094 Před 3 lety +2

    I found my RB flask dissolved the glass enough to see a ripple around the acid level was!
    Had some violent back flashes when acid sucked the water vapor back.
    I used activated charcoal to purify our additives and limit splashing so it could have caused interior of flask dissolving!

  • @arinwendeeriadorskaya6917

    I love this Bunsen burner. Such a neat well-stocked lab, and such a post-apocalyptic, Fallout style burner...

  • @michael3263
    @michael3263 Před 6 lety

    Very cool. Concentrated sulfuric acid is so cheap and easily available that I don't think I'd ever try this. However, it is good to know how it's done.

  • @luclalonde6931
    @luclalonde6931 Před 6 lety

    glad you're back with gusto. hope nothing depressing happened lol

  • @RandomExperiments
    @RandomExperiments Před 6 lety

    God I would be so scared that the flask might break! Nice video!

  • @tysons1075
    @tysons1075 Před 6 lety

    Nice video Doug's Lab, keep up the good work! , i am wondering why you didn't do a vacuum distillation thus avoiding these extremely high temperatures..

  • @TheBackyardChemist
    @TheBackyardChemist Před 6 lety +4

    I would be very reluctant to do this in glassware like this, the thermal stress on the glass is enormous. Given how high the flask was, if it shattered it would have splashed boiling hot concentrated acid everywhere. Also the pinging coming from the condenser is a very bad sign, the condenser was also highly stressed and could have cracked.
    I am glad nothing bad happened, but I would not want to stress my glassware like this.

    • @willowpine2604
      @willowpine2604 Před 5 měsíci

      Take an quartz glassware instead and you will be more safe 😊

  • @Grove332
    @Grove332 Před 6 lety

    Gas is both elegant and simple at the same time. Saw some other youtuber mess with a heating mantle.

  • @anotherdayisforever
    @anotherdayisforever Před 6 lety

    Im so glad youre back. Do you have a patreon?

  • @bobmoandfriend
    @bobmoandfriend Před 2 lety +1

    15:30 were you worried about thermal shock cracking glassware with that boiling occurring inside the condenser column? Those 'clicks' sounded angry xD
    Love the vids man. Thank you!

  • @RobertSzasz
    @RobertSzasz Před 6 lety +2

    One thing to stay aware of is that boiling chips might have enough water in/on them to cause a problem. Baking them or making sure whatever you are adding the chips to is around or below 100c would be a bit safer.

  • @markbell9742
    @markbell9742 Před 6 lety +1

    Great job; combination of preparation, technique, and recovery. Yes, I have a gallon or so of drain cleaner sulfuric acid, and have been holding-off with a bit of trepidation. Having watched a few videos, but now, with caution, I will give it a go.
    PS
    I have click your channel for sometime (since, 'The Fischer Esterification: Methyl Salicylate', more than a year ago) hoping for an update, Ta-Da!
    Charge on and keep breaking bonds!
    Cheers, Mark
    ********************************************************

  • @alexabbey1
    @alexabbey1 Před 6 lety

    Probably my favourite video demonstration of this task so far. What thermometer/probe do you use to measure the temperature in the flask? I have a surface temp IR one but need to find a cost effective +300°c one. Regards.

  • @felixcat4346
    @felixcat4346 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for posting, nice to see a CZcams video without a cat wandering around in the background, although it probably would increase your subs.

    • @glasslinger
      @glasslinger Před 4 lety

      Cat hater. :) Cats always spruce up a video! But a cat in the lab is not a good idea!

  • @winfield1984
    @winfield1984 Před 6 lety

    great video

  • @PauloConstantino167
    @PauloConstantino167 Před měsícem

    hi Doug when are you back? your channel is the best here and we need you. what are you up to?

  • @ScienceUAofficial
    @ScienceUAofficial Před 5 měsíci

    Where I can buy a funnel with grindstone for pouring liquids from flasks like you have on 17:20?? What is the name of this glass?

  • @lajoswinkler
    @lajoswinkler Před 6 lety +48

    It's not this simple, Doug, and you made few errors.
    First thing, to turn this type of drain cleaner (not sure why this is used instead of much better NaOH, but who cares if this makes sulfuric acid easily obtainable :) ) into a very pure sulfuric acid, you really need to reflux it a bit with small addition of hydrogen peroxide. That will create weak piranha in situ which will destroy organic compounds and oxidize pretty much everything to CO2, H2O, N2. And it really is something that has to be done because sulfuric acid doesn't render organic compounds (they're listed as "inhibitors") to the very simplest ones, but leaves you with hot fumes that still contain reactive species that distill over.
    Weak piranha reflux is simply essential and produces very clean acid.
    Second, water condenser and this distillation don't go together. Temperature difference is over the borosilicate glass limit and introduces such stress that there is a plausible chance of glass breaking. Use an air condenser. Those are cheap (it's just a tube, afterall) and do their job well. Of course, it must be angled. If it goes straight down, it heats itself and then overheats.
    Third, NEVER EVER heat borosilicate flasks with an open flame. That's an open invitation for a very bad day. Not only it can break and let out boiling corrosive liquid, but it wears the glass down, introduces stress and material aging. If one doesn't have a heating mantle and the heating plate is too weak even with additional insulation, flash has to be wrapped with steel wire mesh. At least two layers. That delivers almost all of the heat, but there isn't a temperature spike of the open flame involved. Steel mesh lets through hot gas and also radiates heat into the flask.
    Fourth, use glass shards for the boiling chips. Porcelain is harder than borosilicate glass so each time it touches the glass, it scratches it and gradually erodes the inner surface, making it prone to cracking. Bubbling moves the shards up and down, scratching their way around.
    All in all, you did manage this quite well and you have a good sense of solving problems when they occur. Panic is always a stupid thing to do.
    I've purified several litres of this tamed beast in my life so I was glad to share some things with you.

    • @THEGREATONE420
      @THEGREATONE420 Před 6 lety +2

      for the first method I don't even think distillation is required. add the H2O2 and heat and drive off all the water in an open vessel and you should have clean concentrated acid left over.

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler Před 6 lety +5

      No, because inhibitors include insoluble, nonvolatile salts. Distillation is essential.

    • @THEGREATONE420
      @THEGREATONE420 Před 6 lety

      well if they're insoluble why don't they drop out of solution? would you happen to know the name of these salts?

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler Před 6 lety +1

      My mistake. I meant to say nonvolatile only. They are soluble. I think some phosphates are the guilty party.

    • @THEGREATONE420
      @THEGREATONE420 Před 6 lety

      I do have some on hand prepared in this fashion. I guess the best way to verify is to boil a small amount to dryness and see if any sort of film/particulate is left behind... is this something you have done?

  • @allenhonaker4107
    @allenhonaker4107 Před 2 lety

    Do you think you would have been better off putting a claison adapter in the system to control the boiling and foaming? I liked the vid and love looking at different setups especially with good explanations.

  • @nivikliriak
    @nivikliriak Před 6 lety

    Yeah, I added boiling chips to some extremely concentrated coffee I was boiling down (in an attempt to make a homemade ink). That was...exciting. Extremely exciting.

  • @lesterbaker1880
    @lesterbaker1880 Před 2 lety +1

    its 2021 October and Dougs video "Nitric acid day" has now been deleted by youtube.

  • @parcydwr
    @parcydwr Před rokem

    Great video.
    My two son's and I are getting into doing some home chemistry.
    It seems getting hold of chemicals here in the UK is more difficult than in the US.
    We live off grid and have about half a ton of dead lead acid batteries so thinking utilising that acid would be good and any bi products can be poured back into the batteries when I recycle them.
    I am wondering if your distillation method would be a good route to take to get clean concentrated sulphuric acid from the battery acid? I appreciate starting at such a low concentration would result in a lot of weak distillate to distill off first but wondering if this would be a good way to remove the lead and other battery plate doping materials from the original acid?

  • @GMCLabs
    @GMCLabs Před 6 lety

    I was making nitric acid with ammonium nitrate from cold packs. The packs said ammonium nitrate, but they must have been Ca Ammonium nitrate, because as soon as I added the acid it started foaming up. Had to disassemble and dunk the flask in a bucket of water, then added baking soda but ran out, and then dumped a whole bottle of 10% ammonia solution into the bucket to ensure neutralization. Lesson learned, test your NH4NO3 before you commit to a large batch.

    • @GMCLabs
      @GMCLabs Před 6 lety

      Ammonium is available over the counter. Also the ammonium sulfate left over is extremely water soluble and easy to wash out. Doug has a video of him using potassium nitrate and he pushes the reaction to form potassium bisulfate instead of sulfate, for the reason that potassium sulfate is much less soluble and harder to clean out. But that reaction requires more sulfuric acid than if you pushed the reaction to get K2SO4. So by using ammonium nitrate I can push the reaction to ammonium sulfate instead of bisulfate, get more nitric acid by using less sulfuric, and its easy to wash out. All that and there weren't many videos on yt showing how to make nitric acid with NH4NO3. My video is here, but I have another one coming out when I get the editing done, bc I have better footage the 2nd time around. czcams.com/video/dCxs_tlJaIg/video.html

  • @rpearson
    @rpearson Před 6 lety +9

    Doug, what are your thoughts on a vac distillation in this case instead of the high temps? Great video!

    • @chemomania927
      @chemomania927 Před rokem +1

      you can prolly do a vac distill...but it will be much more dangerous as the risk of implosion is there...and hot conc sulfuring acid is not a match to hot exploding sulfuric acid

    • @aaianoenan237
      @aaianoenan237 Před 2 měsíci

      Why would vacuum distillation cause an implosion

  • @StevenSchoolAlchemy
    @StevenSchoolAlchemy Před 4 lety

    that looks exciting

  • @StreuB1
    @StreuB1 Před 6 lety

    Likely the best sulfuric acid (or acid in general) distillation video on YT. Glad you're back, Doug!!
    Doug, do you think you could do a short video on the suggested PPE for distillation of high purity acids, including nitric where you will deal with NOx as well? Do you personally wear anything specific? I noticed once the acid spill happened, you had your real lab coat on and what looked like gauntlet gloves. Was that due to the elevated risk at that moment?

  • @miguelyoutobe1
    @miguelyoutobe1 Před 2 lety

    Greetings Excellent Video I have a question Can you increase the acid concentration using a vacuum pump Or you can decrease the process time by applying a vacuum to the distillation.

  • @nilamotk
    @nilamotk Před 6 lety +1

    Doug, can you make the video you always promised on drying concentrated acetic acid to glacial?

  • @gilbertvelez4756
    @gilbertvelez4756 Před 5 lety

    LOL, I predicted the acid would start spitting out of the side of the flask
    It used to happen to me in the kitchen all the time when I'm concentrating the H2SO4 I synthesize.
    You can insure no presence of water during distillation by heating at about 80-100c in a glass boro kettle, and drop a cone shaped drinking glass with some water in it, in the opening to keep the acid in and the water escapes. Don't be impatient with the temp because you'll end up with a spitting acid situation again. It takes a while but the distillation goes seamlessly.
    I just came up with a synth process and started making my own, that way all I have to do is evaporate the water until it reaches it's azeotrope.

  • @pyromen321
    @pyromen321 Před 6 lety +27

    Just heads up, you showed part of your face at 2:25. I'm not sure if you're fine with that or if it was a mistake, but I figured I should mention it

    • @DougsLab
      @DougsLab  Před 6 lety +45

      I noticed! Anonymity is not really a concern for me. I usually don't show my face because I want people to stay for the chemistry, not because I'm being a quirky TV personality.

    • @tobinator680
      @tobinator680 Před 6 lety +4

      At 4:56 you can see it again ;)

    • @flaplaya
      @flaplaya Před 6 lety +3

      He's not making Dimethylonepentamethamphetahydroxazine here guys. Just a simple, yet ballsy, distillate of H2S04.

    • @gabor_kov
      @gabor_kov Před 6 lety

      love that!

    • @michaelplus-trojan_dc8687
      @michaelplus-trojan_dc8687 Před 6 lety +3

      I`ll be honest, I kinda want to see who this person that runs "Doug's Lab" is now. :P

  • @mistertheguy3073
    @mistertheguy3073 Před 6 lety +4

    I was wondering why you didn't add boiling stones :)

  • @robertlittlejohn8666
    @robertlittlejohn8666 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This scares the hell out of me. I keep thinking, what happens and what do I do if that thing breaks (the flask)? What does the 320 degree acid (with SO3 fumes) do when it hits the wood? Explode in flames? What if it happens while I'm reaching over to attend the apparatus? What if some of it splashes on me?
    Would it be safer to use quarz equipment?

  • @omsingharjit
    @omsingharjit Před 2 lety

    Does sulphuric acid also form azeotrope with water just like HCL ?

  • @leeknoz935
    @leeknoz935 Před rokem +1

    could you use vacuum distillation to lower the boiling point instead of using flame to get the right temp?

  • @zbeekerm
    @zbeekerm Před 6 lety +1

    And the award for most dangerous H2SO4 distillation goes to...

  • @papaversomniferum5247
    @papaversomniferum5247 Před 6 lety

    Awesome skeleton watch bro! And great video! Taught me something :) could I do this distillation with car battery acid?

    • @DougsLab
      @DougsLab  Před 6 lety

      Haha thanks, but it's nothing special. It's an Armitron 20/4406BISV, about $85 at Sears. And yes, you can do this with battery acid, except you'll just have to take off a lot more water at the beginning.

    • @AltoidJTP
      @AltoidJTP Před 6 lety

      I am certain you could. I seem to remember that the solution in car batteries is fairly dilute. You'll have to remove a lot of water, so I wouldn't expect an amazing yield.

  • @joeestes8114
    @joeestes8114 Před 6 lety +2

    I have a question, i have my concentrated sulfuric acid in a cool dark place but it still turned dark.Will this cause the acid to be weaker than 98% ?

  • @BadPete81
    @BadPete81 Před 4 lety

    Did you titrate the product? At 17:15 it looks like there is separate layers of liquids and when you pour the produck in the first storage vessel it seems like those layers are mixing and the liquid goes a bit hazy.

  • @alexabbey1
    @alexabbey1 Před 6 lety

    What is that piece of glassware that your thermocouple probe sits in called

  • @user-wd6cd5vn5k
    @user-wd6cd5vn5k Před 6 lety

    hello doug! please upload video "synthesis PCl5"

  • @Max_Chooch
    @Max_Chooch Před 2 měsíci

    How long you think that condenser is? 200mm? Asking for a friend 😅

  • @bryanmaudlin9047
    @bryanmaudlin9047 Před 5 lety

    Do you think you could do a video on extracting magnesium metal from Epsom salt?

  • @JustinKoenigSilica
    @JustinKoenigSilica Před 6 lety +1

    Do you have the Index of Refraction?
    and, do you have access maybe to IR or NMR spectroscopy? would love to see the results of said analyses.
    Refractometers shouldn't be too expensive.
    EDIT: I lied, the one we use in our lab (the cheapest of the cheap) is like, $1000...

  • @jpdemer5
    @jpdemer5 Před 6 lety +1

    The main thing I'd recommend doing differently is the use of a metal bath (Wood's metal or Rose's metal*) rather than putting the flask directly in a flame. That's a lot of stress, even for a quality flask, and tiny scratches in an older flask could prove to be weak points.
    Along the same lines, blowing air through the condenser instead of water (use a cheap aquarium pump, or an aspirator) would stress the condenser less. Failure is not likely, but would be spectacular (in a bad way) if it happened.
    And your distilled acid isn't as pure as it looks - the anticorrosion ingredients in the drain cleaner degrade, but they aren't destroyed, so there are sulfonic acids that distill over, and probably a fair amount of SO2. Adding 30% hydrogen peroxide at the beginning will make a big difference; about 10% of the mass of the acid should do the trick. Distilling the water out won't take all that long. Finally, avoid exposing the distilled acid to air, because it absorbs moisture instantly.
    *I prefer Rose's, since it doesn't contain cadmium.

  • @googacct
    @googacct Před 6 lety

    What could be used for containment under the whole aparatus in the event of a catastrophic failure or even minor leakage like demonstrated.

  • @pietrotettamanti7239
    @pietrotettamanti7239 Před 6 lety

    9:43 a friend of my mother died in that way distilling diethyl ether (in the university lab, not at home).

    • @pietrotettamanti7239
      @pietrotettamanti7239 Před 6 lety +1

      Pseudo Memes only a total idiot would distill old ether. She was just recycling a 5L gallon of 2 week old ether used for various purposes. She was distilling 1L of it (in a 2L flask of course). The temperature was well above 37°C when she realized that she forgot to add boiling chips.
      Now, forgetting to add boiling chips is quite a bad mistake, specially when distilling ether. But it can happen, it was just a distraction. But the really bad error that she did was not to let the whole thing cool. The ether was like 20 degrees above its boiling point. If there were peroxides, they were really dilute, peroxides in the distillations of ethers are a concern only when the thing comes to an end.
      The ether overflowed so violently that it spit hot liquid and vapor all over the fumehood, and then it catched fire. I wasn't born at the time, luckily, but my mother
      told me that there was literally a bubble of fire.
      Anyways, my mother's friend went to the hospital with 3rd grade burns all over her body (lab coats weren't fire proof, so she literally became a human torch), and then she died because her skin couldn't work. If a person has 3rd grade burns there isn't a cure that you can apply. You can give her only first aid and hope that the surface of the undamaged skin is big enough to allow the body to expell toxins, sweat and things. If it isn't, the person will just die. You can't do anything.

  • @eduardoribeiro2222
    @eduardoribeiro2222 Před 5 lety

    Hey @Doug's Lab could you please tell me what thermocouple you are using at 11:25? I really can't find one good enough to use in an acid destillation environment without it getting all destroyed...

    • @glasslinger
      @glasslinger Před 4 lety

      Note that it is placed in the glass protection tube.

  • @SolarSeeker45
    @SolarSeeker45 Před 2 lety

    I find that simply adding hydrogen peroxide to the rooto brand drain cleaner will oxidize all the organic impurities. It works a lot faster with hot acid but it can also be done at room temperature.

  • @Qwertypp10
    @Qwertypp10 Před 6 lety +1

    Pretty scary video, fortunately nothing bad happened :D. I have my self bad experience with only dehydrating the acid, not distillation, some broken glass, because of that. Is it safe to cool hot H2SO4 with water jacked? I mean I only read about air jacked used for this purpose since its boiling over 300*C and we could see ourselves, that water was boiling in contact with H2SO4 steam. I know that even laboratory glass is save to use only when there are max differences in temperature, about 100*C, then it can crack?

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler Před 6 lety +1

      It is not safe at all. Temperature difference is over 150 degrees which is kind of a textbook limit. This simply requires an air condenser.

  • @SuperAngelofglory
    @SuperAngelofglory Před 6 lety +1

    Actually, the azeotrope is 98.2% H2SO4. How long would it take to get azeotropic H2SO4 from bettery acid (40% H2SO4) - asking because H2SO4 based drain cleaners are not easily available here

  • @THEGREATONE420
    @THEGREATONE420 Před 6 lety

    hot sulfuric acid... always makes for a sketchy day haha

  • @Max_Chooch
    @Max_Chooch Před měsícem +1

    Serious question: If super hot h2so4 is so dangerous, why are there no videos of the vacuum distillation of h2so4? Wouldn't that allow for better control of the temperatures? As, if there was a glass failure, the pressure would instantly increase, and boiling would stop.. seems safer. Before saying the gasses would eat your vacuum pump, what about a cold trap with liquid nitrogen innit or even dry ice and isopropyl? Also, why is nobody using a bump trap?

  • @S730SD
    @S730SD Před 3 lety +1

    Is there a way to distill under reduced pressure? That would help lower the temp needed & hopefully reduce bumping a bit. Anyhow, thank you for uploading!

    • @jonathanwienke512
      @jonathanwienke512 Před 4 měsíci

      Sulfuric acid vapor doesn't play nice with vacuum pumps.

    • @aaianoenan237
      @aaianoenan237 Před 2 měsíci

      True but boiling at such high temperature might increase the chance of an explosion

  • @fmdj
    @fmdj Před 3 měsíci

    I didn't hear the customary warning about SO3 gas making its way out and killing you, how big of a concern is this? (I noticed the big sucking fan, I'm not planning to do this without a fume extraction mechanism but I'm still not done building it)

  • @omsingharjit
    @omsingharjit Před 2 lety

    12:28 why it's 609c instead of somthing like 300 c which is BP of H2so4 ?

  • @electric_photon4660
    @electric_photon4660 Před 4 lety

    I was doing this once and needed to add boiling chips. The moment I took the the thermometer adapter off it exploded, luckily it only got on my fingers and arm. I cant think of any reason that would happen though??

  • @ghulamfarid4849
    @ghulamfarid4849 Před rokem

    I have to extremely need to know how we can sulphonation by sulfuric acid with benzene or any alkyl group...????
    Can you make video on sulphonation?
    My target is to prepare Sulphonic Acid.

  • @jhyland87
    @jhyland87 Před 4 lety

    17:22 nice watch! What kind?

  • @MobscastBlackOut
    @MobscastBlackOut Před 3 lety

    Rip Douglas

  • @daviddavid1733
    @daviddavid1733 Před 6 lety

    What happens with the inhibitors? Are they attacked by the hot acid?

  • @Mr-yf5tl
    @Mr-yf5tl Před 3 měsíci

    What is the condenser water temperature?

  • @kleetus92
    @kleetus92 Před 6 lety

    Instead of using terracotta pots for your chips, how about a couple pieces of broken glass tubing? Stays inert and with the exception of hydrofloric acid, it won't mess with any other reactions, can be cleaned easily, and then reused.

    • @bpark10001
      @bpark10001 Před 5 lety

      Broken glass doesn't work! See my comment above. You need pores in the chip, and they need to be open when you start.

  • @matty8944
    @matty8944 Před 5 lety

    Bumping happens so much when i concentration this acid... that i have to fill the flask with broken glass and tap the flask every 10 secs or so to prevent a build up

  • @jadentonkin466
    @jadentonkin466 Před 2 lety

    found out strong stirring stops the bumping

  • @gavinhansen1361
    @gavinhansen1361 Před 4 lety

    what is your glassware made of that it can withstand those temperatures? mine is borrosilicate and thus fractures at 165 C. So what is yours and where did you get it?

    • @glasslinger
      @glasslinger Před 4 lety

      Pyrex does not fracture at 165C. Note that the fracture temperature depends on the glassware configuration. A round boiling flask for example will take much higher temperature than an erlenmeyer flask. Whatever, it is EXTREMELY DANGEROUS to heat an open flask like that in the video with no catch basin under it in case of a fracture. It is best to have a sand filled box under the setup so if it cracks and all the hot acid splashes down it will be contained instead of splashing all over the place. Half and half sand and baking soda is best.

    • @aaianoenan237
      @aaianoenan237 Před 2 měsíci

      The temperature of the acid was over 300 degrees and still the glass didn’t crack what sort of glass is this ?