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Topic: HydroxylammoniumCL -->HyrdroxylammoniumBR  (Read 2337 times)

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Offline flick-a-bic

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HydroxylammoniumCL -->HyrdroxylammoniumBR
« on: April 14, 2016, 01:37:25 PM »
Hey I need to swap anions on my hydroxyl ammonium from chlorine to bromine.

I figure just doing this with a 1:1 stoicheometric amounts of HBr added to the hydroxyl ammonium chloride (dissolved in a little water) will work just fine. Then boil off the water and HCl gas formed.

Is there anything wrong with this procedure? Maybe a better way or should I add excess HBr? How about purifying steps after.

Offline Dan

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Re: HydroxylammoniumCL -->HyrdroxylammoniumBR
« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2016, 02:27:16 PM »
What's the boiling point of HBr?

I would use a large excess.
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Offline flick-a-bic

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Re: HydroxylammoniumCL -->HyrdroxylammoniumBR
« Reply #2 on: April 15, 2016, 12:04:40 AM »
I thought about adding excess. Turns out not to matter. I found hydroxyl amine and can just add HBr to that instead for a pure product instead of the shady ion displacement.

Thanks

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: HydroxylammoniumCL -->HyrdroxylammoniumBR
« Reply #3 on: April 15, 2016, 09:43:33 AM »
If I were starting with the chloride salt, I would use an ion-exchange resin in the bromide form.  The relative selectivities of various anions is known for many resins, and I would choose how much of an excess to use based upon that.

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