ChemicalBook > Product Catalog >Inorganic chemistry >Inorganic acid >Sulfuric acid

Sulfuric acid

Sulfuric acid  Structure
CAS No.
7664-93-9
Chemical Name:
Sulfuric acid
Synonyms
Hydrogen sulfate;SULFURIC ACID REAGENT GRADE 95-98%;So42-;Sulfuric acid 96 %;Acide sulfurique;So4--;Acid Mist;Sulfur acid;Dipping acid;Inorganic acid
CBNumber:
CB9675634
Molecular Formula:
H2O4S
Molecular Weight:
98.08
MOL File:
7664-93-9.mol
MSDS File:
SDS
Modify Date:
2023/11/28 16:31:44

Sulfuric acid Properties

Melting point 10°C
Boiling point ~290 °C (lit.)
Density 1.840 g/mL at 25 °C (lit.)
vapor density <0.3 (25 °C, vs air)
vapor pressure 1 mm Hg ( 146 °C)
Flash point 11 °C
storage temp. no restrictions.
solubility H2O: soluble
form Viscous Liquid
pka -3-2(at 25℃)
color Pale yellow to slight tan
Specific Gravity 1.84
PH 2.75(1 mM solution);1.87(10 mM solution);1.01(100 mM solution);
Odor Odorless
Water Solubility miscible
Sensitive Hygroscopic
Merck 14,8974
Dielectric constant 84.0(20℃)
Exposure limits TLV-TWA air 1 mg/m3 (ACGIH, MSHA, and OSHA); TLV-STEL 3 mg/m3 (ACGIH). .
Stability Stable, but reacts with moisture very exothermically, which may enhance its ability to act as an oxidizing agent. Substances to be avoided include water, most common metals, organic materials, strong reducing agents, combustible materials, bases, oxidising agents. Reacts violently with water - when diluting concentrated acid, carefully and slo
LogP -1 at 25℃
CAS DataBase Reference 7664-93-9(CAS DataBase Reference)
NIST Chemistry Reference Sulfuric acid(7664-93-9)
EPA Substance Registry System Sulfuric acid (7664-93-9)

SAFETY

Risk and Safety Statements

Symbol(GHS) 
GHS05
Signal word  Danger
Hazard statements  H290-H314
Precautionary statements  P234-P280-P301+P330+P331-P303+P361+P353-P304+P340+P310-P305+P351+P338
Hazard Codes  C,T,F,Xi
Risk Statements  36/38-35-39/23/24/25-23/24/25-11
Safety Statements  26-30-45-36/37-16
OEB C
OEL TWA: 1 mg/m3
RIDADR  UN 3264 8/PG 3
WGK Germany  1
RTECS  WS5600000
3
TSCA  Yes
HazardClass  8
PackingGroup  II
HS Code  28070010
Toxicity LD50 orally in rats: 2.14 g/kg (Smyth)
IDLA 15 mg/m3
NFPA 704
0
3 2

Sulfuric acid price More Price(115)

Manufacturer Product number Product description CAS number Packaging Price Updated Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 68279 Sulfuric acid concentrate 0.1?M H2SO4 in water (0.2N), eluent concentrate for IC 7664-93-9 1L ₹4481.55 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 5.43827 Sulfuric acid 98% for HPLC LiChropur? 7664-93-9 100ML ₹11340 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 5.43827 Sulfuric acid 98% for HPLC LiChropur? 7664-93-9 250ML ₹24910.01 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 4.80364 Sulfuric acid c(H2SO4) = 2.5 mol/l (5 N), Titripur? 7664-93-9 1L ₹6860 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich 258105 Sulfuric acid ACS reagent, 95.0-98.0% 7664-93-9 100ML ₹4210.93 2022-06-14 Buy
Product number Packaging Price Buy
68279 1L ₹4481.55 Buy
5.43827 100ML ₹11340 Buy
5.43827 250ML ₹24910.01 Buy
4.80364 1L ₹6860 Buy
258105 100ML ₹4210.93 Buy

Sulfuric acid Chemical Properties,Uses,Production

Description

Reactivity
Sulfuric acid is very reactive and dissolves most metals, it is a concentrated acid that oxidizes, dehydrates, or sulfonates most organic compounds, often causes charring. Sulfuric acid reacts violently with alcohol and water to release heat. It reacts with most metals, particularly when diluted with water, to form flammable hydrogen gas, which may create an explosion hazard. Sulfuric acid is not combustible, but it is a strong oxidizer that enhances the combustion of other substances, does not burn itself. During fire, poisonous gases are emitted. Hazardous decomposition products are as follows: sulfur dioxide, sulfur trioxide, and sulfuric acid fumes. Note: Use great caution in mixing with water due to heat release that causes explosions. Always add the acid to water, never the reverse.
Where Found
l Car battery acid
l Certain detergents
l Chemical munitions
l Some fertilizers
l Some toilet bowl cleaners
Derivation
Sulfuric acid is made from sulfur, pyrite (FeS2), hydrogen sulfide, or sulfur-containing smelter gases by the contact process (vanadium pentoxide catalyst). The first step is combustion of elemental sulfur, or roasting of iron pyrites, to yield sulfur dioxide. Then follows the critical reaction, catalytic oxidation of sulfur dioxide to sulfur trioxide.

Chemical Properties

Sulfuric acid is a colorless to dark brown, odorless, oily liquid which is commercially sold @ 93% to 98% H2SO4, the remainder being water.

History

Sulfuric acid is a colorless, oily, dense liquid that is one of the most important industrial chemicals. More than 40 million tons are produced in the United States annually and approximately 170 million tons are produced globally. Sulfuric acid has a long history and was first produced by ancient alchemists. Its discovery is credited to the Persian physician Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (Rhazes, 854 925), who produced sulfuric acid from the dry distillation of minerals. Dry distillation typically involves heating a substance in a closed container to limit oxygen and combustion. As the substance is heated, it decomposes and the volatile components can be captured. Because sulfuric acid was obtained from distilling minerals, it is called a mineral acid. The ancient method of sulfuric acid production involved heating either iron (II) sulfate heptahydrate (FeSO4 7H2O), which was called green vitriol, or copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO4 5H2O), called blue vitriol. When minerals containing these compounds were heated, the products included sulfur trioxide (SO3) and water. The combination of sulfur trioxide and water produced sulfuric acid: SO3(g) + H2O(l) H2SO4(aq). The production of sulfuric acid from natural minerals called vitriols and its oily appearance led to the common name oil of vitriol for sulfuric acid.

Uses

Sulfuric Acid is an acidulant that is a clear, colorless, odorless liquid with great affinity for water. it is prepared by reacting sulfur dioxide with oxygen and mixing the resulting sulfur trioxide with water, or by reacting nitric oxide with sulfur dioxide in water. it is very cor- rosive. it is used as a modifier of food starch and is used in caramel production and in alcoholic beverages.

Production Methods

Sulfuric acid may be prepared industrially by either the contact process or the chamber process.
Contact Process
2SO2+O2→2SO3
SO3+H2O→H2SO4
Chamber Process
2NO+O2→2NO2
NO2+SO2+H2O→H2SO4+NO

General Description

Sulphuric acid may be prepared by catalytic oxidation of sulphur dioxide. It is a very strong electrolyte and has high affinity to water.

Air & Water Reactions

Reaction with water is negligible unless acid strength is above 80-90% then heat from hydrolysis is extreme, may cause severe burns [Merck, 11th ed. 1989]. During sulfonation of mononitrobenzene by fuming Sulfuric acid , a leak from an internal cooling coil permitted water to enter the reaction tank. A violent eruption occurred due to the heat of solution [MCA Case History 944 1963].

Hazard

Strong irritant to tissue. Pulmonary function inhibitor. Confirmed carcinogen.

Health Hazard

Concentrated sulfuric acid is a highly corrosive liquid that can cause severe, deep burns upon skin contact. The concentrated acid destroys tissue because of its dehydrating action, while dilute H 2SO4 acts as a skin irritant because of its acid character. Eye contact with concentrated H2SO4 causes severe burns, which can result in permanent loss of vision; contact with dilute H2SO4 results in more transient effects from which recovery may be complete. Sulfuric acid mist severely irritates the eyes, respiratory tract, and skin. Because of its low vapor pressure, the principal inhalation hazard from sulfuric acid involves breathing in acid mists, which may result in irritation of the upper respiratory passages and erosion of dental surfaces. Higher inhalation exposures may lead to temporary lung irritation with difficulty breathing. Ingestion of sulfuric acid may cause severe burns to the mucous membranes of the mouth and esophagus. Animal testing with sulfuric acid did not demonstrate carcinogenic, mutagenic, embryotoxic, or reproductive effects. Chronic exposure to sulfuric acid mist may lead to bronchitis, skin lesions, conjunctivitis, and erosion of teeth.

Fire Hazard

Sulfuric acid is highly reactive and capable of igniting finely-divided combustible materials on contact. When heated, Sulfuric acid emits highly toxic fumes. Avoid heat; water and organic materials. Sulfuric acid is explosive or incompatible with an enormous array of substances. Can undergo violent chemical change at elevated temperatures and pressure. May react violently with water. When heated, Sulfuric acid emits highly toxic fumes. Hazardous polymerization may not occur.

Flammability and Explosibility

Sulfuric acid is noncombustible but can cause finely divided combustible substances to ignite. Sulfuric acid reacts with most metals, especially when dilute, to produce flammable and potentially explosive hydrogen gas.

Pharmaceutical Applications

Sulfuric acid is used as an acidifying agent in a variety of pharmaceutical and food preparations. It may also be used to prepare dilute sulfuric acid, which, in addition to its use as an excipient, has some therapeutic use for the treatment of gastric hypoacidity, as an astringent in diarrhea, or to stimulate appetite. Sulfuric acid has been used in parenteral, oral, topical, and ophthalmic pharmaceutical formulations.

Industrial uses

Sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is the most widely used acid for pH control in mineral flotation. Sulfuric acid can be manufactured by several processes including the burning of pure sulfur, roasting of pyrite and from the recovery of SO2 stack gas from a smelter operation. Sulfuric acid is a colorless to amber, slightly cloudy and oily liquid with a specific gravity of 1.84 at 95% strength. In mineral flotation, sulfuric acid is used in almost all applications involving acid pH control. It is also used as a pulp pretreatment chemical during flotation of oxidic and industrial minerals. Pulp pretreatment with sulfuric acid improves flotation of ilmenite, perovskite, phenacite, beryl and other minerals.

Safety

Sulfuric acid is widely used in a variety of pharmaceutical formulations. Although concentrated sulfuric acid is very corrosive, it is normally used well diluted in formulations. Concentrated sulfuric acid will react violently with water and much heat is generated. When diluting sulfuric acid, the acid should always be added to the other liquid with great caution.
The concentrated solution is extremely corrosive and can cause severe damage or necrosis on contact with the eyes and skin. Ingestion may cause severe injury or death. Inhalation of concentrated vapors can cause serious lung damage.
LD50 (rat, oral): 2.14 g/kg

Potential Exposure

Used as a chemical feedstock in the manufacture of acetic acid, hydrochloric acid; citric acid; phosphoric acid; aluminum sulfate; ammonium sulfate;barium sulfate; copper sulfate; phenol, superphosphates, titanium dioxide; as well as synthetic fertilizers, nitrate explosives; artificial fibers; dyes, pharmaceuticals, detergents, glue, paint, and paper. It finds use as a dehydrating agent for esters and ethers due to its high affinity for water; as an electrolyte in storage batteries; for the hydrolysis of cellulose to obtain glucose; in the refining of mineral and vegetable oil; and in the leather industry. Other uses include fur and food processing; carbonization of wool fabrics; gas drying; uranium extraction from pitchblende; and laboratory analysis. Sulfuric acid is among the highestvolume produced chemical in the United States.

Carcinogenicity

Strong inorganic acid mists containing sulfuric acid are known to be human carcinogens based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity from studies in humans.

Environmental Fate

Although sulfuric acid can be extremely harmful, it is a naturally occurring compound. The release of sulfur into the biosphere is not from anthropogenic sources. It is also a major compound that is released in volcanic eruptions when oxides of sulfur are emitted:
Sulfur trioxide will dissolve in rainwater to form sulfuric acid SO3 + H2O → H2SO4:
Sulfur dioxide will dissolve in rainwater to form sulfurous acid (H2SO3), and is then oxidized to form sulfuric acid, which leads to acid rains.
The presence of sulfuric acid is related with the natural ability of microorganisms that can be found in or isolated from acid mine water or from sulfur and iron sulfide mines as well as volcanoes.
The examples of such bacteria are:
Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans (Thiobacillus ferrooxidans) that lives in pyrite deposits, metabolizing iron and sulfur and producing sulfuric acid.
Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans (Thiobacillus thiooxidans, Thiobacillus concretivorus) that utilizes sulfur and produces sulfuric acid.

storage

Splash goggles and rubber gloves should be worn when handling this acid, and containers of sulfuric acid should be stored in a wellventilated location, separated from organic substances and other combustible materials. Containers of sulfuric acid should be stored in secondary plastic trays to avoid corrosion of metal storage shelves due to drips or spills. Water should never be added to sulfuric acid because splattering may result; always add acid to water

Shipping

UN1830 Sulfuric acid with >51% acid or sulfuric acid with not >51% acid, Hazard class: 8; Labels: 8-Corrosive material. UN1831 Sulfuric acid, fuming with 30% or more free sulfur trioxide and Sulfuric acid, fuming, with <30% free sulfur trioxide, Hazard class: 8; Labels: 8-Corrosive material. UN1832 Sulfuric acid, spent, Hazard class: 8; Labels: 8-Corrosive material.

Purification Methods

Sulfuric acid, and also 30% fuming H2SO4, can be distilled in an all-Pyrex system, optionally from potassium persulfate. It has been purified by fractional crystallisation of the monohydrate from the liquid. It has a very strong dehydrating action and attacks skin—wash immediately with cold H2O; otherwise the skin can be scarred for life. It is very hygroscopic and has been used as a desiccant in desiccators. Dilution with H2O is highly exothermic, and because the concentrated acid is much more dense than H2O it is diluted by running the concentrated acid down the side of the container of H2O with slowly stirring while cooling the outside of the container. If these precautions are not taken, the H2O is likely to boil vigorously.

Incompatibilities

Avoid storage in close proximity to water, most common metals, organic materials, strong reducing agents, combustible materials, strong bases, carbonates, sulfides, cyanides, strong oxidizing agents, and carbides.
Sulfuric acid is a powerful oxidizer and may ignite or explode on contact with many materials.
It can react violently with the evolution of a large amount of heat. Oxides of sulfur and hydrogen can be generated during reactions.
Great care must be exercised when mixing with other liquids. Always add sulfuric acid to the diluent with great caution.

Waste Disposal

Add slowly to solution of soda ash and slaked lime with stirring; flush to drain with large volumes of water. Recovery and reuse of spent sulfuric acid may be a viable alternative to disposal, and processes are available.

Regulatory Status

GRAS listed. Accepted for use as a food additive in Europe. Included in the FDA Inactive Ingredients Database (IM, IV, and IP injections, inhalation solutions, irrigation solutions, nasal, ophthalmic solutions and suspensions, oral solutions, and topical emulsions and creams). Included in nonparenteral and parenteral medicines licensed in Europe. Included in the Canadian List of Acceptable Non-medicinal Ingredients.
The United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988) lists sulfuric acid as a chemical frequently used in the illicit manufacture of narcotic drugs or psychotropic substances. In the USA, sulfuric acid is included in the list of essential or precursor chemicals established pursuant to the Chemical Diversion and Trafficking Act. Accordingly, transactions of sulfuric acid such as imports, exports, sales, and transfers are subject to regulation and monitoring by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Sulfuric acid Preparation Products And Raw materials

Raw materials

chevron_left

1of3

chevron_right

Preparation Products

chevron_left

1of8

chevron_right
0,05 MOL SULFURIC ACID FIXANAL SULFURIC ACID 30% 1 L SULFURIC ACID 98% TECHNICAL 5 L SULFURIC ACID 95-97%, 4X25 ML SULFURIC ACID 30% 0.5 L SULFURIC ACID STD SOLUTION 5 MOL/L (10N) SULFURIC ACID ~72%, F. THE DETERMINATION OF FLUORINE SULFURIC ACID STD SOLUTION 0.05 MOL/L N25, 1 L Sulfuric Acid, 2/3 N, Analytical Concentrate Sulfuric Acid, 5N Analytical Concentrate Sulfuric Acid, 90.5-92.7% Sulfuric Acid, 95.0-98.0% Sulfuric Acid, N/10 (0.1N) Analytical Concentrate Sulfuric Acid, Standard, 1.0 N Volumetric Solution Sulfuric Acid, 66Be Koslow Soln #1 Orica Sulphuric Acid Commercial (72.9%) sulfuric acid with <= 51% acid Sulfuric acid for storage battery Sulfuric acid, fuming (20%) Sulfuric acid (98%) acidesulfurique acidesulfurique(french) Acido solforico acidosolforico acidosulfurico caswellno815 dihydrogensulfate dippingacid Electrolyte acid electrolyteacid epapesticidechemicalcode078001 Hydgogen sulfate Matting acid mattlingacid Nordhausen acid O2S(OH)2 Schwefelsaeureloesungen Spent sulfuric acid Spirit of alum Spirit of vitriol spiritofsulfur Sulfuric acid, spent sulfuricacid(concentrated) sulfuricacid(dilute) sulfuricacid,spent Sulfuricacid,Sulphuricacid Vitriol brown oil Vitriol, oil of vitriolbrownoil Zwavelzuuroplossingen Oil of vitriol,Hydrogen sulfate,Battery acid BOU sulfuric acid for accumulator ACID DETERGENT AMINE-SULFURIC ACID REAGENT METHANOL/SULFURIC ACID Oil of vitrol