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Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: Veronica on July 09, 2009, 12:18:22 PM

Title: Black mystery substance - what did I make? and How?
Post by: Veronica on July 09, 2009, 12:18:22 PM
I cooked some chick peas as per the pack instructions - boiling them in water with a spoonful of bicarbonate of soda. After an hour of boiling the water turned completely black and the pot gave off a smell of rotten eggs. What was this substance? And what would have been contaminating the water to produce this substance by reacting with bicarbonate of soda?
Title: Re: Black mystery substance - what did I make? and How?
Post by: jcjlf on July 12, 2009, 04:34:19 PM
Undoubtedly the peas will have contained proteins with the amino-acid cysteine as one of the building-blocks. That would explain the rotten egg odour: H2S was produced. But still it is strange that H2S is produced while you increased the pH by adding sodium bicarbonate, which reacts alkaline in water.
HCO3- + H2O  :rarrow: H2CO3 + OH-
The freed (hydrolysed) amino-acids from the proteins could have neutralised this bicarbonate.

And then the black colour: no idea, but wasn't it ordinary carbon? A thermal decomposition of the organic substances?
What material was the pan made of? Iron or steel could give off iron ions that form a black precipitate with sulfide-ions:
Fe2+ + S2-  :rarrow: FeS(s) (is black.)