Sulphuric Acid
Sulphuric Acid
Sulphuric Acid
Sulphuric acid is a strong dibasic acid It is oxidizing and dehydrating agent toward organic compounds. Boiling Point: 335 C. Melting Point: 10 C
In either case, an excess of air is used so that the sulphur dioxide produced is already mixed with oxygen for the next stage.
MANUFACTURE OF SULPHURIC ACID BY THE CONTACT PROCESS Oxidation of sulphur dioxide to sulphur trioxide
This is a reversible reaction, and the formation of the sulphur trioxide is exothermic.
2SO2(g) + O2(g) 2SO3(g) H=-196kJmol-1
Sulphur trioxide
MANUFACTURE OF SULPHURIC ACID BY THE CONTACT PROCESS Hydration of sulphur trioxide to sulphuric acid
This cant be done by simply adding water to the sulphur trioxide- the reaction is so uncontrollable that it creates a fog of sulphuric acid. Instead, the sulphur trioxide is first dissolved in conc. sulphuric acid: H2SO4(l) + SO3(g) H2S2O7(l)
Oleum
This can then be diluted with water to produce concentrated sulphuric acid. H2S2O7(l) + H2O(l) 2H2SO4(l)
Rayon is made with sulfuric acid. It serves as the electrolyte in the lead-acid storage battery commonly used in motor vehicles (acid for this use, containing about 33% H2SO4 and with specific gravity about 1.25, is often called battery acid).
It is used in petroleum refining to wash impurities out of gasoline and other refinery products.
DETAILS OF USES
Sulphuric acid is a very important commodity chemical, and indeed, a nation's sulphuric acid production is a good indicator of its industrial strength. Most of sulphuric acid production (~60%) is consumed for fertilizers, particularly superphosphates, ammonium phosphate and ammonium sulphates. About 20% is used in chemical industry for production of detergents, synthetic resins, dyestuffs, pharmaceuticals, petroleum catalysts, insecticides and antifreeze, as well as in various processes such as oil well acidizing, aluminium reduction, paper sizing, water treatment. About 6% of uses are related to pigments and include paints, enamels, printing inks, coated fabrics and paper, and the rest is dispersed into a multitude of applications such as production of explosives, cellophane, acetate and viscose textiles, lubricants, non-ferrous metals and batteries.
Another important use for sulphuric acid is for the manufacture of aluminium sulphate, also known as paper maker's alum. This can react with small amounts of soap on paper pulp fibres to give gelatinous aluminium carboxylates, which help to coagulate the pulp fibres into a hard paper surface. It is also used for making aluminium hydroxide, which is used at water treatment plants to filter out impurities, as well as to improve the taste of the water. Aluminium sulphate is made by reacting bauxite with sulphuric acid:
Al2O3 + 3 H2SO4 Al2(SO4)3 + 3 H2O Sulphuric acid is also important in the manufacture of dyestuffs solutions.
SULPHUR-IODINE CYCLE
The sulphur-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. 2 H2SO4 2 SO2 + 2 H2O + O2 (830 C) I2 + SO2 + 2 H2O 2 HI + H2SO4 (120 C) 2 HI I2 + H2 (320 C) The sulphur 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 sulphur-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. But note that all of the available energy in the hydrogen so produced is supplied by the heat used to make it. The sulphur-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 a large scale.
CLEANING AGENTS
Sulphuric acid is used in large quantities by the iron and steel making industry to remove oxidation, rust and scaling from rolled sheet and billets prior to sale to the automobile and major appliances 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 sulphur dioxide (SO2) and sulphur trioxide (SO3) which are then used to manufacture "new" sulphuric acid. SAR plants are common additions to metal smelting plants, oil refineries, and other industries where sulphuric 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.