Home  About Us  Contact Us  Join Us
 
Information | Articles | Images | Questions | Discussion | Categories  
 
SHOW HOW MUCH YOU KNOW ! Dedicate a Page to your Favorite Topic
 Home >>Sodium acetate
 > Sodium acetate
 View All | Upload more images (0  Images)

 Page Start By:Administrator Last edited on February 5th 2008
 Date: February 5th 2008   0 Page Views
0 Peer Articles   0 Comments
0 Questions   0 Discussions
 Font  + -  
Rating :     Email  |  Print  |  PDF

Sodium acetate
Sodium acetate
IUPAC name sodium acetate (IUPAC)

sodium ethanoate (systematic)

Other names sodium salt
Properties
Molecular formula CH3COONa
Molar mass 82.03 g/mol (anhydrous)

136.08 g/mol (trihydrate)

Appearance White deliquescent powder
Density 1.45 g/cm³, solid
Melting point

Decomposes at 324 °C

Boiling point

Decomposes

Solubility in water 76 g/100 ml (0°C)
Basicity (pKb) 9.25
Structure
Crystal structure monoclinic
Hazards
MSDS External MSDS
Main hazards Irritant
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for
materials in their standard state
(at 25 °C, 100 kPa)

Infobox disclaimer and references

Sodium acetate, (also rarely, sodium ethanoate) is the sodium salt of acetic acid. It is an inexpensive chemical produced in industrial quantities for a wide range of uses.

Contents

Applications

Sodium acetate is used in the textile industry to neutralize sulfuric acid waste streams, and as a photoresist while using aniline dyes. It is also a pickling agent in chrome tanning, and it helps to retard vulcanization of chloroprene in synthetic rubber production.

Sodium acetate is the chemical that gives salt and vinegar chips their flavor. It may also be added to foods as a preservative; in this application it is usually written as "sodium diacetate" and labeled E262.

As the conjugate base of a weak acid, a solution of sodium acetate and acetic acid can act as a buffer to keep a relatively constant pH. This is useful especially in biochemical applications where reactions are pH dependent.

Sodium acetate is also used in consumer heating pads or hand warmers and is also used in "hot ice". When sodium acetate trihydrate crystals (melting point 58 °C) are heated to around 100 °C, they melt. When this melt cools, it gives a supersaturated solution of sodium acetate in water. This solution is capable of supercooling to room temperature, well below its melting point, without forming crystals. By clicking on a metal disc in the heating pad, a nucleation center is formed which causes the solution to crystallize into solid sodium acetate trihydrate again. The bond-forming process of crystallization is exothermic, hence heat is emitted. The latent heat of fusion is about 264–289 kJ/kg.

Preparation

Sodium acetate is inexpensive, and is usually purchased from chemical suppliers, instead of being synthesized in the laboratory. It is sometimes produced in a laboratory experiment by the reaction of acetic acid with sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, or sodium hydroxide. These reactions produce sodium acetate(aq), water, and carbon dioxide which leaves the reaction vessel as a gas.

This is the well-known "fizzing" reaction between baking soda and vinegar. 84 grams of sodium bicarbonate react with 750 g of 8% vinegar to make 82 g sodium acetate in water. By subsequently boiling off most of the water, one can refine either a concentrated solution of sodium acetate or actual crystals.

Reactions

Sodium acetate can be used to form an ester with an alkyl halide such as bromoethane:

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Crystallization of Supersaturated Sodium Acetate. Journal of Chemical Education.
  2. ^ "Fake" latent heat and supersaturation
  3. ^ How do sodium acetate heat pads work?. HowStuffWorks. Retrieved on 2007-09-03.
  4. ^ Thermal Energy Storage: Systems and Applications, By Ibrahim Dincer, Marc A. Rosen, p. 155

    Sources
Subscribe to this blog's feed
  Peer Articles   Comments
 
Opps ! No article published for this information.
Click Here to post new article



 
 
Opps ! No comments posted for this information.
Click Here to post your comment



 
  Questions   Discussions
 
Opps ! No Questions posted for this information.
Click Here to post new Questions



 
 
Opps ! No topic posted for this information.
Click Here to post the topic



 
  Post a Comment
Sign in

 
 

Home   |  About Us   |  Sign Up   |  My Account   |  Advertise With Us   |  Contact Us   |  Terms Of Services   |  
© Copyright 2008 jigfo.com, All Rights Reserved.