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Description of experiment
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experiment.
Needed compounds: ----------------- sulphuric acid : H2SO4 ethanol : CH3CH2OH sodium nitrite : NaNO2
Class: ------ elem=C,N organic
Summary: -------- Nitrite ion reacts very easily with ethanol in acidified solution to form ethyl nitrite. The ethyl nitrite easily escapes as gas from the liquid (it has a boiling point of 17 C). The gas can be ignited and burns with a grey flame.
Description: ------------ Take approximately 1 ml of ethanol and mix this with dilute sulphuric acid (appr. 2 M H2SO4): The liquids easily mix and a clear and colorless liquid is obtained.
In a separate test tube, dissolve several 100's of milligrams of sodium nitrite in 2 ml of water.
Heat both test tubes with your hands, such that the liquids are luke-warm.
Slowly add the solution of sodium nitrite to the solution of ethanol in dilute sulphuric acid: As soon as the solution of sodium nitrite reaches the acidified solution of ethanol, there is vigorous bubbling and a colorless gas is produced. This gas has a faint sweet odor, not unpleasant.
Keep a flame near the open end of the test tube: A small grey flame appears and is sustained.
Add a few more drops of the concentrated nitrite solution, while the small flame still exists: As soon as the drops of nitrite solution reach the acidified ethanol solution, there is vigorous bubbling and a larger flame erupts from the test tube. The flame is pale orange, due to the presence of the sodium ions. When the flame becomes smaller again, the color changes to grey again.
The liquid in the test tube also becomes somewhat turbid. Small oily droplets of liquid are dispersed in the liquid. When the liquid is shaken, then small bubbles escape from the liquid and the flame at the open end of the test tube flares up somewhat.
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In this experiment it is shown that the nitrite ester of ethanol is formed very easily and if the liquid is somewhat warm, then this easily escapes as a colorless gas.
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