Getting HCl from limescale remover?

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Isolating hydrochloric acid (HCl) from a blue, soapy limescale remover containing 6.75% HCl presents significant challenges. Heating the solution to evaporate HCl is deemed ineffective due to its low volatility, and boiling it poses safety risks, especially without proper equipment like a fume hood. The presence of a gelling agent in the remover may complicate the process, potentially causing uneven boiling and explosive reactions. While distillation could theoretically yield HCl, it would not exceed a concentration of 20%, and the viscosity of the solution would slow down the process considerably, possibly taking months. Alternative methods like outgassing are suggested, but their practicality and efficiency remain uncertain. Overall, the consensus is that isolating HCl from this solution is highly difficult and potentially dangerous.
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As a home chemist I don't have access to Hydrochloric acid, however I did find some limescale remover that claimed to contain 6.75% HCl. This substance is blue and soapy. Any ideas on how I could isolate just the HCl? (Obviously dissolved in water)
 
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You would need to heat up the substance in a container and then the HCl should evaporate after some time, have the container hooked up using a tube to another container and you should have HCl gas in your 2nd container, getting into liquid form is beyond me.
 
nst.john said:
You would need to heat up the substance in a container and then the HCl should evaporate after some time, have the container hooked up using a tube to another container and you should have HCl gas in your 2nd container, getting into liquid form is beyond me.

HCl is not volatile enough to make this method viable.
 
getting into liquid form is beyond me.

I'd imagine this would be a simple matter of bubbling it through water. It also could be worth noting that I don't need this to be a very strong concentration or very efficient.

HCl is not volatile enough to make this method viable.

Although heating the solution might not release the HCl, do you think boiling it could work? I understand this would probably be quite dangerous, but too dangerous for a home experiment?
 
It is possible to distill HCl from water solutions, but you won't get higher concentration than about 20%. Without a proper fume hood this is dangerous, plus, I am not sure I like the idea of heating the liquid as you described it. I guess it contains some gelling agent that makes it more viscous, if so, you can overheat the mixture locally and it will not boil evenly. That can make it explode.
 
Borek said:
It is possible to distill HCl from water solutions, but you won't get higher concentration than about 20%. Without a proper fume hood this is dangerous, plus, I am not sure I like the idea of heating the liquid as you described it. I guess it contains some gelling agent that makes it more viscous, if so, you can overheat the mixture locally and it will not boil evenly. That can make it explode.

You're, right the limescale remover is a bit too viscous. The only other solution I can think of is the method of outgassing proposed in this video: . Could the gelling agent in the limescale remover might prevent this? and although the perfume of the limescale remove would probably also get carried across, It would certainly be easier to distill.
 
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Fezziwig said:
The only other solution I can think of is the method of outgassing proposed in this video: .


To some extent - but I am not convinced it will work in any practical timescale. He started with highly concentrated acid, so the partial pressure of gaseous HCl over solution was high - but even then procedure takes at least a week. Partial pressure of HCl goes down with lowering concentration (faster than the concentration goes down), plus the viscosity will slow down the mixing, both factors will slow down the process substantially. No doubt you will get to HCl being split between containers eventually, but I would be not surprised if it will require several months or even longer. That's what I was aiming at with my first post.
 
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I cannot imagine a more difficult proposition than distilling a soapy solution successfully. Very likely you will get hot acidic foam in the receiver and little else.
 
Yeah, I gave up. Thanks for your help guys!
 
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