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Ammonium sulfite


32.4g/100mL at 0 degrees Celsius

60.4g/100mL at 100 degrees Celsius | NFPA-F = 0 | NFPA-H = 2 | NFPA-R = 0 Potassium sulfite

Ammonium sulfite is the ammonium salt of sulfurous acid with the chemical formula (NH4)2SO3.

Preparation

Ammonium sulfite can be prepared by the reaction of ammonia with sulfur dioxide in aqueous solution:

:

Ammonium sulfite is produced in gas scrubbers, now obsolete, consisting of ammonium hydroxide to remove sulfur dioxide from emissions from power plants. The conversion is the basis of the Walther Process. The resulting ammonium sulfite can be air oxidized to give ammonium sulfate.

Uses

Ammonium sulfite is the precursor to ammonium thiosulfate, by reaction with elemental sulfur.

Niche

For cosmetics, ammonium sulfite is used as a hair straightening agent and a hair waving agent. Ammonium based hair products have been made to replace sodium hydroxide-based products due to the destructive nature of sodium hydroxide on hair.

The most common food product with ammonium sulfite is caramel coloring E150d. According to the FDA, caramel coloring contains ammonium, potassium, or sodium sulfite.

Ammonium sulfite is used as a preservative for fixers in photography. When film photographs are being developed ammonium sulfite can be one of the reducing agents used to preserve the hypo (sodium thiosulfate or ammonium thiosulfate).

Ammonium sulfite can also be used in the making of bricks. The bricks made using ammonium sulfite are mainly used for blast furnace linings.

Ammonium sulfite can be included in lubricants for cold metal working. The lubricants are intended to reduce friction to keep heat production down and keep impurities out of the metals.

Chemical properties

Ammonium sulfite is a reducing agent.

It emits sulfur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen upon heating to decomposition.

The specific gravity of ammonium sulfite is 1.41. The refractive index of ammonium sulfite is 1.515.

References

References

  1. "Chemical Entity Data Page".
  2. (2012). "Ammonium Compounds". Wiley-VCH.
  3. "Stack gas cleanup by ammonia injection", ''Chem. Eng. News'', 1972, 50 (37), pp. 54–56
  4. "Acid Plant Gas Scrubber", ''Chem. Eng. News'', 1955, 33 (20), pp. 2148–2149
  5. [http://ec.europa.eu/consumers/cosmetics/cosing/index.cfm?fuseaction=search.details&id=31900 Europe. European Commission. Health and Consumers. Cosmetics] - CosIng [Cosmetics Directive (v.1)]. European Commission. Web. 26 Oct. 2011.
  6. [https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/CFRSearch.cfm?FR=73.85 United States. FDA. CFR - Code of Federal Regulations Title 21. Health and Human Services. 1 Apr. 2011. Web]
  7. Haist, Grant Milford. (1979). "Modern photographic processing.". Wiley.
  8. O'Neil, Maryadele J. ''The Merck Index: an Encyclopedia of Chemicals, Drugs, and Biologicals''. Whitehouse Station, NJ: Merck, 2001. 561. Print.
  9. "Ammoniumsulfit - 10196-04-0".
  10. "Material Safety Data Sheet: Ammonium sulfite MSDS".
  11. Pubchem. "SID 167823 - PubChem".
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