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    Sulfuric Acid – Commercial Grade

    Product Specification

    H2SO4

    Formula Weight

     
    Properties
    Molecular formula H2SO4
    Molar mass 98.078 g/mol
    Appearance clear, colorless, odorless liquid
    Density 1.84 g cm−3, liquid
    Melting point

    10 °C, 283 K, 50 °F

    Structure
    Molecular shape  
    Dipole moment  
    Hazards
    Main hazards  
    NFPA 704  
    Risks Causes severe burns.
    Safety Keep locked up and out of the reach of children, In case of contact with eyes, rinse immediately with plenty of water and seek medical advice, Never add water to this product, In case of accident or if you feel unwell seek medical advice immediately.
    Flash point Non-flammable
    Autoignition
    temperature
     
    Related compounds
    Other anions  
    Other cautions  
    Related  
    Related compounds  

    Description

      Sulfuric acid (also spelled sulphuric acid, especially in the U.K.) is a strong mineral acid with the molecular formula H2SO4. It is soluble in water at all concentrations. It was once known as oil of vitriol, coined by the 8th-century alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan (Geber) after his discovery of the chemical.

    Sulfuric acid has many applications, and is one of the top products of the chemical industry. World production in 2001 was 165 million metric tons, with an approximate value of US$8 billion. Principal uses include metal ore processing, fertilizer and explosives manufacturing, oil refining, wastewater processing, and chemical synthesis of many kinds. Its ability to produce foul-smelling sulfur compounds has lent the word vitriol the additional meaning "bitter, abusive language".

    Uses

    Sulfuric acid is a very important commodity chemical, and indeed, a nation's sulfuric acid production is a good indicator of its industrial strength.[5] The major use (60% of total production worldwide) for sulfuric acid is in the "wet method" for the production of phosphoric acid, used for manufacture of phosphate fertilizers as well as trisodium phosphate for detergents. In this method, phosphate rock is used, and more than 100 million tonnes are processed annually. This raw material is shown below as fluorapatite, though the exact composition may vary. This is treated with 93% sulfuric acid to produce calcium sulfate, hydrogen fluoride (HF) and phosphoric acid. The HF is removed as hydrofluoric acid.

    Sulfuric acid is used in large quantities by the iron and steelmaking industry to remove oxidation, rust and scale from rolled sheet and billets prior to sale to the automobile and white-goods industry. Used acid is often recycled using a Spent Acid Regeneration (SAR) plant. These plants combust spent acid with natural gas, refinery gas, fuel oil or other fuel sources. This combustion process produces gaseous sulfur dioxide (SO2) and sulfur trioxide (SO3) which are then used to manufacture "new" sulfuric acid. SAR plants are common additions to metal smelting plants, oil refineries, and other industries where sulfuric acid is consumed in bulk, as operating a SAR plant is much cheaper than the recurring costs of spent acid disposal and new acid purchases.

    Ammonium sulfate, an important nitrogen fertilizer, is most commonly produced as a byproduct from coking plants supplying the iron and steel making plants. Reacting the ammonia produced in the thermal decomposition of coal with waste sulfuric acid allows the ammonia to be crystallized out as a salt (often brown because of iron contamination) and sold into the agro-chemicals industry.

    Another important use for sulfuric acid is for the manufacture of aluminum sulfate, also known as paper maker's alum. This can react with small amounts of soap on paper pulp fibers to give gelatinous aluminum carboxylates, which help to coagulate the pulp fibers into a hard paper surface. It is also used for making aluminum hydroxide, which is used at water treatment plants to filter out impurities, as well as to improve the taste of the water. Aluminum sulfate is made by reacting bauxite with sulfuric acid.

    Sulfuric acid is used for a variety of other purposes in the chemical industry. For example, it is the usual acid catalyst for the conversion of cyclohexanoneoxime to caprolactam, used for making nylon. It is used for making hydrochloric acid from salt via the Mannheim process. Much H2SO4 is used in petroleum refining, for example as a catalyst for the reaction of isobutane with isobutylene to give isooctane, a compound that raises the octane rating of gasoline (petrol). Sulfuric acid is also important in the manufacture of dyestuffs, pigments (such as titanium dioxide), solutions, and is the "acid" in lead-acid (car) batteries.

    Sulfuric acid is also used as a general dehydrating agent in its concentrated form (see Reaction with water).

    Sulfur-iodine cycle
    The sulfur-iodine cycle is a series of thermo-chemical processes used to obtain hydrogen. It consists of three chemical reactions whose net reactant is water and whose net products are hydrogen and oxygen.

    The sulfur and iodine compounds are recovered and reused, hence the consideration of the process as a cycle. This process is endothermic and must occur at high temperatures, so energy in the form of heat has to be supplied.

    The sulfur-iodine cycle has been proposed as a way to supply hydrogen for a hydrogen-based economy. It does not require hydrocarbons like current methods of steam reforming.

    The sulfur-iodine cycle is currently being researched as a feasible method of obtaining hydrogen, but the concentrated, corrosive acid at high temperatures poses currently insurmountable safety hazards if the process were built on large-scale.

     

    SAFETY

     

     

    International Chemical Safety Card

     

     

       
     

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