Borek said:
OK, I see what you mean - but I am still confident you are wrong. I have a feeling you are mixing up personal ideas and made up facts, supported here and there but some true fact taken out of context.
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Nobody ever talked about a sealed container, please don't make up facts, it doesn't help the thread and only confuses those involved.
First off, if you read OP's opening question, they stated they were not using a burner to heat the Bicarbonate. They then asked, "if they put it in a vessel should they use a vacuum or positive pressure to speed up the process of decomposition." In order to maintain vacuum or positive pressure, the vessel would have to be sealed. I did not "Make anything up" on this point, it is the conditions of the OP's question.
On the matter of positive pressure, it would actually cause more than noticeable decrease in the temperature of the water. fwiw, I have more than a mere passing interest in refrigeration, and would certainly exchange opinions on cooling and superheat properties in another forum, we seem to be hijacking OP's thread.[/QUOTE]
No, I don't expect to see the liquid water, at least not in quantities that would matter. While we are well below the boiling point, even at 50°C pressure of water vapor is high enough for the produced water to become gaseous instantly. Yes, in increased pressures it can look differently, but we are not talking about increased pressures, we are talking about heating in vacuum.
Thermal decomposition of water requires high temperatures. You need above 2000°C for an observable fraction of H
2O to decompose (compare
http://www.eolss.net/sample-chapters/c08/e3-13-03-01.pdf). O-H bond in the hydrogencarbonate and O-H bond in water molecule are not easily comparable.
Respectfully, I suggest you boil some water on the stove and see decomposition for yourself. The water will not get any hotter that 100C, but the steam certainly can. I am confident that the water will decompose completely, long before it reaches 2000. In fact, the Decomposition of the glass container is likely to occur long before 2000C, even Borosilicate glass has a melting temperature of 1648C
Beyond the fact that I was using water as a comparative item to explain the relationship of Negative pressure and Temperature, it has no relevance to the OP's question. But, It may be worth reading the links I posted above,
https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/bicarbonate#section=Decomposition . It speaks to the process of decomposition of Bicarbonate and the residual products of doing so, which indicates that Water is one of the expected byproducts.
And I still strongly doubt the decomposition rate of bicarbonate at 50°C will be large enough for practical purposes. Do you have a thermogravimetric curve? Thats the only sure way of seeing how it behaves on heating, simple statements like the one from pubchem carry no practical information here.
Again, OP's opening question said, "they are heating it to 90-100C." Perhaps it is coincidental that 100C is the boiling point of water and it may be equally coincidental that 100C falls in the middle of the temperature range suitable for observing the Decomposition of Bicarbonate, but the design of the exercise seems a little less arbitrary than that.