Ammonia
| Ammonia | | Ammonia 3D representation |
|
| General |
|---|
| Systematic name | Ammonia Azane (See Text) |
| Other names | Hydrogen nitride Spirit of hartshorn Nitrosil Vaporole |
| Molecular formula | NH3 |
| Molar mass | 17.0304 g/mol |
| Appearance | Colourless gas with strong pungent odor |
| CAS number | |
| Properties |
|---|
| Density and phase | 0.6813 g/L, gas. |
| Solubility in water | 89.9 g/100 ml at 0 °C. |
>| Melting point-77.73 °C (195.42 K) |
| Boiling point | -33.34 °C (239.81 K) |
| Acidity (pKa) | ≈34 |
| Basicity (pKb) | 4.75 |
| Structure |
|---|
| Molecular shape | Terminus |
| Dipole moment | 1.5 D |
| Hazards |
|---|
| MSDS | External MSDS |
| Main hazards | Toxic and corrosive. |
| NFPA 704 | |
| Flash point | 11 °C |
| R/S statement | R: , , , S: , , , , |
| RTECS number | BO0875000 |
| Supplementary data page |
|---|
Structure and properties | n, εr, etc. |
Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid, liquid, gas |
| Spectral data | UV, IR, NMR, MS |
| Related compounds |
|---|
| Other ions | Ammonium (NH4+) :hydroxide (NH4OH) :chloride (NH4Cl) |
| Related compounds | Hydrazine Hydrazoic acid Hydroxylamine Chloramine |
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa) Infobox disclaimer and references |
|
Ammonia is a
compound of
nitrogen and
hydrogen with the
formula NH3. At
standard temperature and pressure ammonia is a
gas. It is
toxic and
corrosive to some materials, and has a characteristic pungent
odor. Ammonia used commercially is called
anhydrous ammonia to distinguish it from
ammonium hydroxide solution, which is
household ammonia.
An ammonia molecule has a
trigonal pyramid shape, as predicted by
VSEPR theory. This shape gives the molecule an overall
dipole moment, and makes it
polar so that ammonia readily dissolves in
water. The nitrogen atom in the molecule has a
lone electron pair, and ammonia acts as a
base. That means that, when in aqueous solution, it can take a
proton from water to produce a
hydroxide anion and an
ammonium cation (NH
4+), which has the shape of a regular
tetrahedron. The degree to which ammonia forms the ammonium ion depends on the
pH of the
solution—at "physiological" pH (~7), about 99% of the ammonia molecules are
protonated.
The main uses of ammonia are in the production of
fertilizers,
explosives and
polymers. It is also an ingredient in certain household glass cleaners. Ammonia is found in small quantities in the atmosphere, being produced from the
putrefaction of
nitrogenous animal and vegetable matter. Ammonia and ammonium salts are also found in small quantities in rainwater, while
ammonium chloride (sal-ammoniac) and
ammonium sulfate are found in volcanic districts; crystals of
ammonium bicarbonate have been found in
Patagonian
guano. Ammonium salts also are found distributed through all fertile soil and in seawater. Substances containing ammonia, or that are similar to it, are called
ammoniacal.
Salts of ammonia have been known from very early times; thus the term
Hammoniacus sal[Ammonia at Encarta. URL last accessed April 27 2006] appears in the writings of
Pliny, although it is not known whether the term is identical with the more modern
sal-ammoniac.
In the form of sal-ammoniac, ammonia was known to the
alchemists as early as the 13th century, being mentioned by
Albertus Magnus.
[Absolouteastronomy.com URL last accessed April 24 2006] It was also used by
dyers in the
Middle Ages in the form of fermented
urine to alter the colour of vegetable dyes. In the 15th century,
Basilius Valentinus showed that ammonia could be obtained by the action of alkalis on sal-ammoniac. At a later period, when sal-ammoniac was obtained by distilling the hoofs and horns of oxen and neutralizing the resulting carbonate with
hydrochloric acid, the name "spirit of hartshorn" was applied to ammonia.
Gaseous ammonia was first isolated by
Joseph Priestley in 1774 and was termed by him
alkaline air; however it was acquired by the alchemist
Basil Valentine.
Eleven years later in 1785,
Claude Louis Berthollet ascertained its composition.
The
Haber process to produce ammonia from the nitrogen contained in the air was developed by
Fritz Haber and
Carl Bosch in 1909 and patented in 1910. It was first used on an industrial scale by the Germans during
World War I,
[BBC.co.uk URL last accessed April 24 2006] following the allied blockade that cut off the supply of nitrates from
Chile. The ammonia was used to produce explosives to sustain their war effort.
Because of its many uses, ammonia is one of the most highly-produced inorganic chemicals. There are dozens of chemical plants worldwide that produce ammonia. The worldwide
ammonia production in 2004 was 109 million
metric tonnes.
[United States Geological Survey publication] the
People's Republic of China produced 28.4% of the worldwide production followed by
India with 8.6%,
Russia with 8.4%, and the
United States with 8.2%.
About 80% or more of the ammonia produced is used for fertilizing agricultural crops.
Before the start of
World War I most ammonia was obtained by the dry
distillation[Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1918) - Haber process. URL last accessed April 24 2006] of nitrogenous vegetable and animal waste products, including
camel dung where it was
distilled by the reduction of
nitrous acid and
nitrites with
hydrogen; additionally, it was produced by the distillation of
coal;
and also by the decomposition of ammonium salts by
alkaline hydroxides
[BBC.co.uk URL last accessed April 24 2006] or by
quicklime, the salt most generally used being the chloride (
sal-ammoniac) thus:
:2 NH
4Cl + 2 CaO â†' CaCl
2 + Ca(OH)
2 + 2 NH
3Today, the typical modern ammonia-producing plant first converts
natural gas (i.e.
methane) or
liquified petroleum gas (such gases are
propane and
butane) or petroleum
naphtha into gaseous
hydrogen. Starting with a natural gas feedstock, the processes used in producing the hydrogen are:
* The first step in the process is to remove
sulfur compounds from the feedstock because sulfur deactivates the
catalysts used in subsequent steps. Sulfur removal requires catalytic
hydrogenation to convert sulfur compounds in the feedstocks to gaseous
hydrogen sulfide:
:H
2 + RSH â†' RH + H
2S
(g)* The gaseous hydrogen sulfide is then absorbed and removed by passing it through beds of
zinc oxide where it is converted to solid
zinc sulfide:
:H
2S + ZnO â†' ZnS + H
2O
* Catalytic
steam reforming of the sulfur-free feedstock is then used to form hydrogen plus
carbon monoxide:
:CH
4 + H
2O â†' CO + 3 H
2* The next step then uses catalytic
shift conversion to convert the
carbon monoxide to
carbon dioxide and more hydrogen:
:CO + H
2O â†' CO
2 + H
2* The carbon dioxide is then removed either by absorption in aqueous
ethanolamine solutions or by
adsorption in
pressure swing adsorbers (PSA) using proprietary solid adsorption media.
* The final step in producing the hydrogen is to use catalytic methanation to remove any small residual amounts of carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide from the hydrogen:
:CO + 3 H
2 â†' CH
4 + H
2O::CO
2 + 4 H
2 â†' CH
4 + 2 H
2O
* To produce the desired end-product ammonia, the hydrogen is then catalytically reacted with nitrogen (derived from process air) to form anhydrous liquid ammonia. This step is known as the ammonia synthesis loop (also referred to as the
Haber-Bosch process):
:3 H
2 + N
2 â†' 2 NH
3The steam reforming, shift conversion, carbon dioxide removal and methanation steps each operate at absolute pressures of about 25 to 35
bar, and the ammonia synthesis loop operates at absolute pressures ranging from 60 to 180 bar depending upon which proprietary design is used. There are many engineering and construction companies that offer proprietary designs for ammonia synthesis plants.
Haldor Topsoe of
Denmark,
Lurgi AG of
Germany, and
Kellogg, Brown and Root of the United States are among the most experienced companies in that field.
[Kellogg Brown's Ammonia Process URL last accessed April 24 2006]In certain organisms, ammonia is produced from atmospheric N
2 by
enzymes called
nitrogenases. The overall process is called
nitrogen fixation. Although it is unlikely that biomimetic methods will be developed that are competitive with the
Haber process, intense effort has been directed toward understanding the mechanism of biological nitrogen fixation. The scientific interest in this problem is motivated by the unusual structure of the active site of the enzyme, which consists of an Fe
7MoS
9 ensemble.
Ammonia is also a metabolic product of
amino acid deamination. In humans, it is quickly converted to
urea, which is much less toxic. This urea is a major component of the dry weight of
urine.
Ammonia is a colourless
gas with a characteristic pungent smell; it is
lighter than air, its density being 0.589 times that of
air. It is easily liquefied and the
liquid boils at -33.7 °C, and solidifies at -75 °C to a mass of white crystals.
Liquid ammonia possesses strong
ionizing powers (
ε = 22), and
solutions of
salts in liquid ammonia have been much studied. Liquid ammonia has a very high
standard enthalpy change of vaporization (23.35
kJ/mol,
c.f. water 40.65 kJ/mol,
methane 8.19 kJ/mol,
phosphine 14.6 kJ/mol) and can therefore be used in laboratories in non-insulated vessels at room temperature, even though it is well above its boiling point.
It is
miscible with water. All the ammonia contained in an aqueous solution of the gas may be expelled by boiling. The
aqueous solution of ammonia is
basic. The maximum concentration of ammonia in water (a
saturated solution) has a
density of 0.880 g
cm-3 and is often known as '.880 Ammonia'. Ammonia does not sustain
combustion, and it does not burn readily unless mixed with
oxygen, when it burns with a pale yellowish-green flame. At high temperature and in the presence of a suitable catalyst, ammonia is decomposed into its constituent elements.
Chlorine catches fire when passed into ammonia, forming
nitrogen and
hydrochloric acid; unless the ammonia is present in excess, the highly explosive
nitrogen trichloride (NCl
3) is also formed.
The ammonia molecule readily undergoes
nitrogen inversion at room temperature - that is, the nitrogen atom passes through the
plane of symmetry of the three hydrogen atoms; a useful analogy is an
umbrella turning itself inside out in a strong wind. The energy barrier to this inversion is 24.7 kJ/mol in ammonia, and the
resonance frequency is 23.79
GHz, corresponding to
microwave radiation of a
wavelength of 1.260 cm. The absorption at this frequency was the first
microwave spectrum to be observed
[C. E. Cleeton & N. H. Williams, 1934 - Online version; archive. URL last accessed May 8, 2006].
Formation of salts
One of the most characteristic properties of ammonia is its power of combining directly with
acids to form
salts; thus with
hydrochloric acid it forms
ammonium chloride (sal-ammoniac); with
nitric acid,
ammonium nitrate, etc. However perfectly dry ammonia will not combine with perfectly dry
hydrogen chloride, a gas, moisture being necessary to bring about the reaction.
[Baker, H. B. (1894). J. Chem. Soc. 65: 612.]::NH
3 +
HCl â†'
NH4ClThe salts produced by the action of ammonia on acids are known as the
ammonium salts and all contain the
ammonium ion (NH
4+).
Acidity
Although ammonia is well-known as a base, it can also act as an extremely weak
acid. It is a protic substance, and is capable of dissociation into the
amide (NH
2−) ion, for example when solid
lithium nitride is added to liquid ammonia, forming a
lithium amide solution:
:Li
3N
(s)+ 2 NH
3 (l) â†' 3 Li
+(am) + 3 NH
2−(am)This is a
Brønsted-Lowry acid-base reaction in which ammonia is acting as an acid.
Formation of other compounds
Ammonia can act as a
nucleophile in
substitution reactions.
Amines can be formed by the reaction of ammonia with
alkyl halides, although the resulting –NH
2 group is also nucleophilic and secondary and tertiary amines are often formed as by-products. Using an excess of ammonia helps minimise multiple substitution, and neutralises the
hydrogen halide formed.
Methylamine is prepared commercially by the reaction of ammonia with
chloromethane, and the reaction of ammonia with 2-bromopropanoic acid has been used to prepare
racemic alanine in 70% yield.
Ethanolamine is prepared by a ring-opening reaction with
ethylene oxide: the reaction is sometimes allowed to go further to produce
diethanolamine and
triethanolamine.
Amides can be prepared by the reaction of ammonia with a number of
carboxylic acid derivatives.
Acyl chlorides are the most reactive, but the ammonia must be present in at least a two-fold excess to neutralise the
hydrogen chloride formed.
Esters and
anhydrides also react with ammonia to form amides. Ammonium salts of carboxylic acids can be
dehydrated to amides so long as there are no thermally sensitive groups present: temperatures of 150–200 °C are required.
The
hydrogen in ammonia is capable of replacement by
metals, thus
magnesium burns in the gas with the formation of
magnesium nitride Mg
3N
2, and when the gas is passed over heated
sodium or
potassium, sodamide, NaNH
2, and potassamide, KNH
2, are formed. Where necessary in
substitutive nomenclature,
IUPAC recommendations prefer the name
azane to ammonia: hence
chloramine would be named
chloroazane in substitutive nomenclature, not
chloroammonia.
Ammonia as a ligand
Ammonia can act as a
ligand in
transition metal complexes. It is a pure σ-donor, in the middle of the
spectrochemical series, and shows intermediate
hard-soft behaviour. For historical reasons, ammonia is named
ammine in the nomenclature of
coordination compounds. Some notable ammine complexes include:
*
Tetraaminecopper(II), [Cu(NH
3)
4]
2+, a characteristic dark blue complex formed by adding ammonia to solution of copper(II) salts.
*
Diamminesilver(I), [Ag(NH
3)
2]
+, the active species in
Tollens' reagent. Formation of this complex can also help to distinguish between precipitates of the different silver halides:
AgCl is soluble in dilute (2M) ammonia solution,
AgBr is only soluble in concentrated ammonia solution while
AgI is insoluble in aqueous solution of ammonia.
Ammine complexes of
chromium(III) were known in the late 19th century, and formed the basis of
Alfred Werner's theory of coordination compounds. Werner noted that only two isomers (
fac- and
mer-) of the complex [CrCl
3(NH
3)
3] could be formed, and concluded that the ligands must be arranged around the metal ion at the
vertices of an
octahedron. This has since been confirmed by
X-ray crystallography.
An ammine ligand bound to a metal ion is markedly more
acidic than a free ammonia molecule, although deprotonation in aqueous solution is still rare. One example is the
Calomel reaction, where the resulting amidomercury(II) compound is highly insoluble.::Hg
2Cl
2 + 2 NH
3 â†' Hg + HgCl(NH
2) + NH
4+ + Cl
−The most important single use of ammonia is in the production of
nitric acid. A mixture of one part ammonia to nine parts air is passed over a
platinum gauze
catalyst at 850 °C, whereupon the ammonia is oxidized to
nitric oxide.
:4 NH
3 + 5 O
2 â†' 4 NO + 6 H
2O
The catalyst is essential, as the normal oxidation (or combustion) of ammonia gives
dinitrogen and water: the production of nitric oxide is an example of
kinetic control. As the gas mixture cools to 200–250 °C, the nitric oxide is in turn oxidized by the excess of
oxygen present in the mixture, to give
nitrogen dioxide. This is reacted with water to give nitric acid for use in the production of
fertilizers and
explosives.
In addition to serving as a fertilizer ingredient, ammonia can also be used directly as a fertilizer by forming a solution with irrigation water, without additional chemical processing. This later use allows the continuous growing of nitrogen dependent crops such as
maize (corn) without
crop rotation but this type of use leads to poor
soil health.
Ammonia has thermodynamic properties that make it very well suited as a
refrigerant, since it liquefies readily under pressure, and was used in virtually all refrigeration units prior to the advent of
haloalkanes such as
Freon. However, ammonia is a toxic irritant and its corrosiveness to any
copper alloys increases the risk that an undesirable leak may develop and cause a noxious hazard. Its use in small refrigeration units has been largely replaced by haloalkanes, which are not toxic irritants and are practically not
flammable. Ammonia continues to be used as a
refrigerant in large industrial processes such as bulk icemaking and industrial food processing. Ammonia is also useful as a component in
absorption-type refrigerators, which do not use compression and expansion cycles but can exploit heat differences. Since the implication of haloalkane being major contributors to
ozone depletion, ammonia is again seeing increasing use as a refrigerant.
It is also sometimes added to drinking water along with
chlorine to form
chloramine, a
disinfectant. Unlike chlorine on its own, chloramine does not combine with organic (carbon containing) materials to form
carcinogenic
halomethanes such as
chloroform.
During the 1960s,
Tobacco companies such as
Brown & Williamson and
Philip Morris began using ammonia in
cigarettes. The addition of ammonia serves to enhance the delivery of
nicotine into the blood stream. As a result the reinforcement effect of the nicotine was enhanced, increasing its addictive ability without actually increasing the portion of nicotine.
[Alix M. Freedman, "'Impact Booster': Tobacco Firm Shows How Ammonia Spurs Delivery of Nicotine", The Wall Street Journal, Dec. 28, 1995.]Ammonia is an important source of nitrogen for living systems. Although atmospheric nitrogen abounds, few living creatures are capable of utilizing this nitrogen. Nitrogen is required for the synthesis of amino acids, which are the building blocks of
protein. Some plants rely on ammonia and other nitrogenous wastes incorporated into the soil by decaying matter. Others, such as nitrogen-fixing
legumes, benefit from
symbiotic relationships with
rhizobia which create ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen.
[M.B. Adjei, K.H. Quesenberry and C.G. Chamblis. Nitrogen Fixation and Inoculation of Forage Legumes University of Florida IFAS Extension June 2002.]Ammonia also plays a role in both normal and abnormal animal
physiology. Ammonia is created through normal amino acid metabolism and is toxic in high concentrations. The
liver converts ammonia to
urea through a series of reactions known as the
urea cycle. Liver dysfunction, such as that seen in
cirrhosis, may lead to elevated amounts of ammonia in the blood (
hyperammonemia). Likewise, defects in the enzymes responsible for the urea cycle, such as
ornithine transcarbamylase, lead to hyperammonemia. Hyperammonemia contributes to the confusion and
coma of
hepatic encephalopathy as well as the neurologic disease common in people with urea cycle defects and
organic acidurias.
[Zschocke, Johannes, and Georg Hoffman. Vademecum Metabolism. Friedrichsdorf, Germany: Milupa GmbH, 2004.]Ammonia is important for normal animal acid/base balance. After formation of ammonium from
glutamine,
α-ketoglutarate may be degraded to produce two molecules of
bicarbonate which are then available as buffers for dietary acids. Ammonium is excreted in the urine resulting in net acid loss. Ammonia may itself diffuse across the renal tubules, combine with a hydrogen ion, and thus allow for further acid excretion.
[Rose, Burton, and Helmut Rennke. Renal Pathophysiology. Baltimore, Maryland: Williams & Wilkins, 1994.]See also: Inorganic nonaqueous solventLiquid ammonia is the best-known and most widely studied non-aqueous ionizing solvent. Its most conspicuous property is its ability to dissolve alkali metals to form highly coloured, electrically conducting solutions containing
solvated electrons. Apart from these remarkable solutions, much of the chemistry in liquid ammonia can be classified by analogy with related reactions in aqueous solutions. Comparison of the physical properties of NH
3 with those of water shows that NH
3 has the lower melting point, boiling point, density,
viscosity,
dielectric constant and
electrical conductivity; this is due at least in part to the weaker H bonding in NH
3 and the fact that such bonding cannot form cross-linked networks since each NH
3 molecule has only 1 lone-pair of electrons compared with 2 for each H
2O molecule. The ionic self-
dissociation constant of liquid NH
3 at −50 °C is approx. 10
-33 mol
2·l
-2.
Solubility of salts
Liquid ammonia is an ionizing solvent, although less so than water, and dissolves a range of ionic compounds including many
nitrates,
nitrites,
cyanides and
thiocyanates. Most
ammonium salts are soluble, and these salts act as
acids in liquid ammonia solutions. The solubility of
halide salts increases from
fluoride to
iodide. A saturated solution of
ammonium nitrate contains 0.83 mol solute per mole of ammonia, and has a
vapour pressure of less than 1 bar even at 25 °C.
Solutions of metals
See also: Solvated electron, metallic solutionLiquid ammonia will dissolve the
alkali metals and other
electropositive metals such as
calcium,
strontium,
barium,
europium and
ytterbium. At low concentrations (<0.06 mol/L), deep blue solutions are formed: these contain metal cations and
solvated electrons, free electrons which are surrounded by a cage of ammonia molecules.
These solutions are very useful as strong reducing agents. At higher concentrations, the solutions are metallic in appearance and in electrical conductivity. At low temperatures, the two types of solution can coexist as
immiscible phases.
Redox properties of liquid ammonia
See also: Redox.| | E° (V, ammonia)! E° (V, water) |
|---|
| Li+ + e− Li | −2.24 | −3.04 |
| K+ + e− K | −1.98 | −2.93 |
| Na+ + e− Na | −1.85 | −2.71 |
| Zn2+ + 2e− Zn | −0.53 | −0.76 |
| NH4+ + e− ½ H2 + NH3 | 0.00 | – |
| Cu2+ + 2e− Cu | +0.43 | +0.34 |
| Ag+ + e− Ag | +0.83 | +0.80 |
|
The range of thermodynamic stability of liquid ammonia solutions is very narrow, as the potential for oxidation to
dinitrogen,
E° (N
2 + 6NH
4+ + 6e
− 8NH
3), is only +0.04 V. In practice, both oxidation to dinitrogen and reduction to
dihydrogen are slow. This is particularly true of reducing solutions: the solutions of the alkali metals mentioned above are stable for several days, slowly decomposing to the
metal amide and dihydrogen. Most studies involving liquid ammonia solutions are done in reducing conditions: although oxidation of liquid ammonia is usually slow, there is still a risk of explosion, particularly if transition metal ions are present as possible catalysts.
Ammonia and ammonium salts can be readily detected, in very minute traces, by the addition of
Nessler's solution, which gives a distinct yellow coloration in the presence of the least trace of ammonia or ammonium salts.
Sulfur sticks are burnt to detect small leaks in industrial ammonia refrigeration systems. Larger quantities can be detected by warming the salts with a caustic alkali or with
quicklime, when the characteristic smell of ammonia will be at once apparent. The amount of ammonia in ammonium salts can be estimated quantitatively by distillation of the salts with
sodium or
potassium hydroxide, the ammonia evolved being absorbed in a known volume of standard
sulfuric acid and the excess of acid then determined
volumetrically; or the ammonia may be absorbed in
hydrochloric acid and the
ammonium chloride so formed precipitated as
ammonium hexachloroplatinate, (NH
4)
2PtCl
6.
Interstellar space
Ammonia was first detected in interstellar space in
1968, based on
microwave emissions from the direction of the
galactic core.
[ A.C. Cheung, D.M. Rank, C.H. Townes, D.D. Thornton, and W.J. Welch, 1968, "Detection of NH3 molecules in the interstellar medium by their microwave emission," Phys. Rev. Lett. 21, 1701.] This was the first
polyatomic molecule to be so detected.The sensitivity of the molecule to a broad range of excitations and the ease with which it can be observed in a number of regions has made ammonia one of the most important molecules for studies of
molecular clouds.
[P. T. P. Ho and C.H. Townes, 1983,"Interstellar ammonia, Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys., vol. 21, pp. 239-70.] The relative intensity of the ammonia lines can be used to measure the temperature of the emitting medium.
The following isotopic species of ammonia have been detected::NH
3,
15NH
3, NH
2D, NHD
2, and ND
3The detection of triply-
deuterated ammonia was considered a surprise as deuterium is relatively scarce. It is thought that the low-temperature conditions allow this molecule to survive and accumulate.
[T. J. Millar, "Deuterium Fractionation in Interstellar Clouds", Space Science Reviews, Vol. 106, Issue 1, pp 73-86.] The ammonia molecule has also been detected in the atmospheres of the
gas giant planets, including
Jupiter, along with other gases like
methane,
hydrogen, and
helium. The interior of Saturn may include frozen crystals of ammonia.
[Edited by Kirk Munsell. Image page credit Lunar and Planetary Institute. NASA. "NASA's Solar Exploration: Multimedia: Gallery: Gas Giant Interiors". URL accessed April 26, 2006.]Toxicity and storage information
|
Hydrochloric acid sample releasing HCl fumes which are reacting with ammonia fumes to produce a white smoke of ammonium chloride. |
The toxicity of ammonia solutions does not usually cause problems for humans and other mammals, as a specific mechanism exists to prevent its build-up in the bloodstream. Ammonia is converted to
carbamoyl phosphate by the enzyme
carbamoyl phosphate synthase, and then enters the
urea cycle to be either incorporated into
amino acids or excreted in the urine. However
fish and
amphibians lack this mechanism, as they can usually eliminate ammonia from their bodies by direct excretion. Ammonia even at dilute concentrations is highly toxic to aquatic animals, and for this reason it is
classified as
dangerous for the environment. Ammonium compounds should never be allowed to come in contact with bases (unless an intended and contained reaction), as dangerous quantities of ammonia gas could be released.
Household use
Solutions of ammonia (5–10% by weight) are used as household cleaners, particularly for glass. These solutions are irritating to the eyes and
mucous membranes (respiratory and digestive tracts), and to a lesser extent the skin. They should
never be mixed with
chlorine-containing products or strong oxidants, for example household
bleach, as a variety of toxic and
carcinogenic compounds are formed (
e.g.,
chloramine,
hydrazine, and chlorine gas).
Laboratory use of ammonia solutions
The hazards of ammonia solutions depend on the concentration: "dilute" ammonia solutions are usually 5–10% by weight (<5.62 mol/L); "concentrated" solutions are usually prepared at >25% by weight. A 25% (by weight) solution has a density of 0.907 g/cm
3, and a solution which has a lower density will be more concentrated. The
European Union classification of ammonia solutions is given in the table.
Concentration by weight | Molarity | Classification | R-Phrases |
|---|
| 5–10% | 2.87–5.62 mol/L | Irritant (Xi) | |
| 10–25% | 5.62–13.29 mol/L | Corrosive (C) | |
| >25% | >13.29 mol/L | Corrosive (C) Dangerous for the environment (N) | , |
|
S-Phrases: , , , , .The ammonia vapour from concentrated ammonia solutions is severely irritating to the eyes and the respiratory tract, and these solutions should only be handled in a fume hood. Saturated ("0.880") solutions can develop a significant pressure inside a closed bottle in warm weather, and the bottle should be opened with care: this is not usually a problem for 25% ("0.900") solutions.
Ammonia solutions should not be mixed with
halogens, as toxic and/or explosive products are formed. Prolonged contact of ammonia solutions with
silver,
mercury or
iodide salts can also lead to explosive products: such mixtures are often formed in
qualitative chemical analysis, and should be acidified and diluted before disposal once the test is completed.
Laboratory use of anhydrous ammonia (gas or liquid)
Anhydrous ammonia is classified as
toxic (
T) and
dangerous for the environment (
N). The gas is flammable (
autoignition temperature: 651 °C) and can form explosive mixtures with air (16–25%). The
permissible exposure limit (PEL) in the United States is 50
ppm (35 mg/m
3), while the
IDLH concentration is estimated at 300 ppm. Repeated exposure to ammonia lowers the sensitivity to the smell of the gas: normally the odour is detectable at concentrations of less than 0.5 ppm, but desensitized individuals may not detect it even at concentrations of 100 ppm. Anhydrous ammonia corrodes
copper- and
zinc-containing
alloys, and so
brass fittings should not be used for handling the gas. Liquid ammonia can also attack rubber and certain plastics.
Ammonia reacts violently with the halogens, and causes the explosive
polymerization of
ethylene oxide. It also forms explosive compounds with compounds of
gold,
silver,
mercury,
germanium or
tellurium, and with
stibine. Violent reactions have also been reported with
acetaldehyde,
hypochlorite solutions,
potassium ferricyanide and
peroxides.
*
Ammonia (data page)*
Ammonia production*
Chlorination*
Water purification
*
*
*
Science aid: Ammonia The Haber process
*
Ammonia: The Next Step*
International Chemical Safety Card 0414 (anhydrous ammonia)
*
International Chemical Safety Card 0215 (aqueous solutions)
*
National Pollutant Inventory - Ammonia*
NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards*
*
Emergency Response to Ammonia Fertilizer Releases (Spills) for the Minnesota Department of Agriculture
*
Computational Chemistry Wiki