Calcium Carbonate -> Calcium Oxide, but only getting Hydroxide. Ideas?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the calcination of Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3) and the unexpected result of obtaining Calcium Hydroxide (Ca(OH)2). The initial test with vinegar failed to produce gas, indicating that the substance may not have been CaCO3. Subsequent mixing of the powder with water and passing CO2 resulted in a milky white solution, suggesting the presence of Ca(OH)2, but it was noted that this does not confirm the original powder was Calcium Hydroxide. Concerns were raised about the adequacy of the heating process, as the temperature of 920°C may not have been sufficient for complete conversion to CaO. The need for a nitrogen or argon gas purge was dismissed, with participants suggesting that simpler methods could suffice for the calcination process. Overall, the conversation highlights the importance of proper testing and heating conditions in identifying chemical compounds.
Voltux
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I was trying to calcine some CaCO3 (Calcium Carbonate), but ended up with Calcium Hydroxide.

To test if I had Calcium Carbonate I added it to some vinegar, no gas was produced. I then mixed in a small amount of the powder with a large amount of water and passed CO2 through it, and it became a milky white which led me to believe I have Calcium Hydroxide. I also tried added the final powder to water, which did not heat up.

I heated up my CaCO3 in a laboratory furnace (Electric) at roughly 920°C for 30 minutes which left me with my current product.

Do I need to have a nitrogen/argon gas purge of some sort??

Any ideas are appreciated! Thanks!
 
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You are doing strange tests and drawing strange conclusions.

Voltux said:
To test if I had Calcium Carbonate I added it to some vinegar, no gas was produced.

Some gas should be produced, so this test - if anything - shows you didn't have a calcium carbonate. I wonder if you didn't mean you were testing for oxide?

I then mixed in a small amount of the powder with a large amount of water and passed CO2 through it, and it became a milky white which led me to believe I have Calcium Hydroxide.

Sorry, no idea what you are trying to test for. Assuming the powder was CaO, after mixing it with water it became Ca(OH)2. It doesn't mean your powder WAS calcium hydroxide.


I also tried added the final powder to water, which did not heat up.

How much powder, how much water?
 
You are doing strange tests and drawing strange conclusions.



Some gas should be produced, so this test - if anything - shows you didn't have a calcium carbonate. I wonder if you didn't mean you were testing for oxide?

I was testing with vinegar to verify a change had taken place, and that it was heated long enough. This would only show that I did not have a carbonate.



Sorry, no idea what you are trying to test for. Assuming the powder was CaO, after mixing it with water it became Ca(OH)2. It doesn't mean your powder WAS calcium hydroxide.
I suppose you're right that both CaO, and Ca(OH)2 would form a milky white mixture, but when I added the powder to water (just enough water to cover the powder ~20-50ml) there was absolutely no change in temperature as measured with an IR thermometer and by touch.




How much powder, how much water?

20-50ml, just enough to cover the powder.
 
Voltux said:
I was testing with vinegar to verify a change had taken place, and that it was heated long enough. This would only show that I did not have a carbonate.

Have you checked that the carbonate before roasting was reacting with the acid?

20-50ml, just enough to cover the powder.

How much powder? A pinch, or so much that the water was only a thin layer on the surface?
 
I wonder if you got the CaCO3 hot enough. Wikipedia gives the minimum temperature as 825C.

You certainly don't need a gas purge. Cement making isn't "high tech" chemistry! Heating a 10mm diameter limestone chip directly with a roaring bunsen burner flame for a couple of minutes should work. But a bunsen flame is about 1500C, not 920C.
 
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