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Wikipedia

Potassium nitrate

Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound with a sharp, salty, bitter taste and the chemical formula KNO
3
. It is an ionic salt of potassium ions K+ and nitrate ions NO3, and is therefore an alkali metal nitrate. It occurs in nature as a mineral, niter (or nitre in the UK).[5] It is a source of nitrogen, and nitrogen was named after niter. Potassium nitrate is one of several nitrogen-containing compounds collectively referred to as saltpeter (or saltpetre in the UK).[5]

Potassium nitrate[1]
Names
IUPAC name
Potassium nitrate
Other names
Saltpeter
Saltpetre
Nitrate of potash
Identifiers
  • 7757-79-1 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL1644029 N
ChemSpider
  • 22843 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.028.926
EC Number
  • 231-818-8
E number E252 (preservatives)
KEGG
  • D02051 Y
  • 24434
RTECS number
  • TT3700000
UNII
  • RU45X2JN0Z Y
UN number 1486
  • DTXSID4029692
  • InChI=1S/K.NO3/c;2-1(3)4/q+1;-1 Y
    Key: FGIUAXJPYTZDNR-UHFFFAOYSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/K.NO3/c;2-1(3)4/q+1;-1
    Key: FGIUAXJPYTZDNR-UHFFFAOYAM
  • [K+].[O-][N+]([O-])=O
Properties
KNO3
Molar mass 101.1032 g/mol
Appearance white solid
Odor odorless
Density 2.109 g/cm3 (16 °C)
Melting point 334 °C (633 °F; 607 K)
Boiling point 400 °C (752 °F; 673 K) (decomposes)
133 g/1000 g water (0 °C)
316 g/1000 g water (20 °C)
383 g/1000 g water (25 °C)
2439 g/1000 g water (100 °C)[2]
Solubility slightly soluble in ethanol
soluble in glycerol, ammonia
Basicity (pKb) 15.3[3]
−33.7·10−6 cm3/mol
1.335, 1.5056, 1.5604
Structure
Orthorhombic, Aragonite
Thermochemistry
95.06 J/mol K
-494.00 kJ/mol
Hazards
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
Oxidant, harmful if swallowed, inhaled, or absorbed on skin. Causes irritation to skin and eye area.
GHS labelling:
H272, H315, H319, H335
P102, P210, P220, P221, P280
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Flash point non-flammable (oxidizer)
Lethal dose or concentration (LD, LC):
1901 mg/kg (oral, rabbit)
3750 mg/kg (oral, rat)[4]
Safety data sheet (SDS) ICSC 0184
Related compounds
Other anions
Potassium nitrite
Other cations
Lithium nitrate
Sodium nitrate
Rubidium nitrate
Caesium nitrate
Related compounds
Potassium sulfate
Potassium chloride
Supplementary data page
Potassium nitrate (data page)
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Major uses of potassium nitrate are in fertilizers, tree stump removal, rocket propellants and fireworks. It is one of the major constituents of gunpowder (black powder).[6] In processed meats, potassium nitrate reacts with hemoglobin and myoglobin generating a red color.[7]

Etymology edit

Potash, or potassium nitrate, because of its early and global use and production, has many names. The chemical potassium was first isolated by the chemist Sir Humphry Davy, from pot ash. This refers to an early method of extracting various potassium salts: by placing in an iron pot, the ash of burnt wood or tree leaves, adding water, heating, and evaporating the solution.[8] As for nitrate, Hebrew and Egyptian words for it had the consonants n-t-r, indicating likely cognation in the Greek nitron, which was Latinised to nitrum or nitrium. Thence Old French had niter and Middle English nitre. By the 15th century, Europeans referred to it as saltpetre,[9] specifically Indian saltpetre (Chilean saltpetre is sodium nitrate) and later as nitrate of potash, as the chemistry of the compound was more fully understood.

The Arabs called it "Chinese snow" (Arabic: ثلج الصين, romanizedthalj al-ṣīn) as well as bārūd (بارود), a term of uncertain origin that later came to mean gunpowder. It was called "Chinese salt" by the Iranians/Persians[10][11][12] or "salt from Chinese salt marshes" (Persian: نمک شوره چينی namak shūra chīnī).[13]: 335 [14]

Historical production edit

From mineral sources edit

In Ancient India,[when?] saltpeter manufacturers formed the Nuniya & Labana caste.[15] Saltpeter finds mention in Kautilya's Arthashastra (compiled 300BC – 300AD), which mentions using its poisonous smoke as a weapon of war,[16] although its use for propulsion did not appear until medieval times.

A purification process for potassium nitrate was outlined in 1270 by the chemist and engineer Hasan al-Rammah of Syria in his book al-Furusiyya wa al-Manasib al-Harbiyya (The Book of Military Horsemanship and Ingenious War Devices). In this book, al-Rammah describes first the purification of barud (crude saltpeter mineral) by boiling it with minimal water and using only the hot solution, then the use of potassium oxide (in the form of wood ashes) to remove calcium and magnesium by precipitation of their carbonates from this solution, leaving a solution of purified potassium nitrate, which could then be dried.[17] This was used for the manufacture of gunpowder and explosive devices. The terminology used by al-Rammah indicated the gunpowder he wrote about originated in China.[18]

At least as far back as 1845, nitratite deposits were exploited in Chile and California.

From caves edit

Major natural sources of potassium nitrate were the deposits crystallizing from cave walls and the accumulations of bat guano in caves.[19] Extraction is accomplished by immersing the guano in water for a day, filtering, and harvesting the crystals in the filtered water. Traditionally, guano was the source used in Laos for the manufacture of gunpowder for Bang Fai rockets.

Nitraries edit

Potassium nitrate was produced in a nitrary or "saltpetre works".[20] The process involved burial of excrements (human or animal) in a field beside the nitraries, watering them and waiting until leaching allowed saltpeter to migrate to the surface by efflorescence. Operators then gathered the resulting powder and transported it to be concentrated by ebullition in the boiler plant.[21][22]

Besides "Montepellusanus", during the thirteenth century (and beyond) the only supply of saltpeter across Christian Europe (according to "De Alchimia" in 3 manuscripts of Michael Scot, 1180–1236) was "found in Spain in Aragon in a certain mountain near the sea".[13]: 89, 311 [23]

In 1561, Elizabeth I, Queen of England and Ireland, who was at war with Philip II of Spain, became unable to import saltpeter (of which the Kingdom of England had no home production), and had to pay "300 pounds gold" to the German captain Gerrard Honrik for the manual "Instructions for making salpeter to growe" (the secret of the "Feuerwerkbuch" -the nitraries-).[24]

Nitre bed edit

A nitre bed is a similar process used to produce nitrate from excrement. Unlike the leaching-based process of the nitrary, however, one mixes the excrements with soil and waits for soil microbes to convert amino-nitrogen into nitrates by nitrification. The nitrates are extracted from soil with water and then purified into saltpeter by adding wood ash. The process was discovered in the early 15th century and was very widely used until the Chilean mineral deposits were found.[25]

The Confederate side of the American Civil War had a significant shortage of saltpeter. As a result, the Nitre and Mining Bureau was set up to encourage local production, including by nitre beds and by providing excrement to government nitraries. On November 13, 1862, the government advertised in the Charleston Daily Courier for 20 or 30 "able bodied Negro men" to work in the new nitre beds at Ashley Ferry, S.C. The nitre beds were large rectangles of rotted manure and straw, moistened weekly with urine, "dung water", and liquid from privies, cesspools and drains, and turned over regularly. The National Archives published payroll records that account for more than 29,000 people compelled to such labor in the state of Virginia. The South was so desperate for saltpeter for gunpowder that one Alabama official reportedly placed a newspaper ad asking that the contents of chamber pots be saved for collection. In South Carolina, in April 1864, the Confederate government forced 31 enslaved people to work at the Ashley Ferry Nitre Works, outside Charleston.[26]

Perhaps the most exhaustive discussion of the niter-bed production is the 1862 LeConte text.[27] He was writing with the express purpose of increasing production in the Confederate States to support their needs during the American Civil War. Since he was calling for the assistance of rural farming communities, the descriptions and instructions are both simple and explicit. He details the "French Method", along with several variations, as well as a "Swiss method". N.B. Many references have been made to a method using only straw and urine, but there is no such method in this work.

French method edit

Turgot and Lavoisier created the Régie des Poudres et Salpêtres a few years before the French Revolution. Niter-beds were prepared by mixing manure with either mortar or wood ashes, common earth and organic materials such as straw to give porosity to a compost pile typically 4 feet (1.2 m) high, 6 feet (1.8 m) wide, and 15 feet (4.6 m) long.[27] The heap was usually under a cover from the rain, kept moist with urine, turned often to accelerate the decomposition, then finally leached with water after approximately one year, to remove the soluble calcium nitrate which was then converted to potassium nitrate by filtering through potash.

Swiss method edit

Joseph LeConte describes a process using only urine and not dung, referring to it as the Swiss method. Urine is collected directly, in a sandpit under a stable. The sand itself is dug out and leached for nitrates which are then converted to potassium nitrate using potash, as above.[28]

From nitric acid edit

From 1903 until the World War I era, potassium nitrate for black powder and fertilizer was produced on an industrial scale from nitric acid produced using the Birkeland–Eyde process, which used an electric arc to oxidize nitrogen from the air. During World War I the newly industrialized Haber process (1913) was combined with the Ostwald process after 1915, allowing Germany to produce nitric acid for the war after being cut off from its supplies of mineral sodium nitrates from Chile (see nitratite).

Modern production edit

Potassium nitrate can be made by combining ammonium nitrate and potassium hydroxide.

 

An alternative way of producing potassium nitrate without a by-product of ammonia is to combine ammonium nitrate, found in instant ice packs,[29] and potassium chloride, easily obtained as a sodium-free salt substitute.

 

Potassium nitrate can also be produced by neutralizing nitric acid with potassium hydroxide. This reaction is highly exothermic.

 

On industrial scale it is prepared by the double displacement reaction between sodium nitrate and potassium chloride.

 

Properties edit

Potassium nitrate has an orthorhombic crystal structure at room temperature,[30] which transforms to a trigonal system at 128 °C (262 °F). On cooling from 200 °C (392 °F), another trigonal phase forms between 124 °C (255 °F) and 100 °C (212 °F).[31][32]

Sodium nitrate is isomorphous with calcite, the most stable form of calcium carbonate, whereas room-temperature potassium nitrate is isomorphous with aragonite, a slightly less stable polymorph of calcium carbonate. The difference is attributed to the similarity in size between nitrate (NO3) and carbonate (CO2−3) ions and the fact that the potassium ion (K+) is larger than sodium (Na+) and calcium (Ca2+) ions.[33]

In the room-temperature structure of potassium nitrate, each potassium ion is surrounded by 6 nitrate ions. In turn, each nitrate ion is surrounded by 6 potassium ions.[30]

Room temperature crystal structure and coordination geometry of potassium nitrate[30]
Unit cell Potassium coordination Nitrate coordination
     

Potassium nitrate is moderately soluble in water, but its solubility increases with temperature. The aqueous solution is almost neutral, exhibiting pH 6.2 at 14 °C (57 °F) for a 10% solution of commercial powder. It is not very hygroscopic, absorbing about 0.03% water in 80% relative humidity over 50 days. It is insoluble in alcohol and is not poisonous; it can react explosively with reducing agents, but it is not explosive on its own.[2]

Thermal decomposition edit

Between 550–790 °C (1,022–1,454 °F), potassium nitrate reaches a temperature-dependent equilibrium with potassium nitrite:[34]

 

Uses edit

Potassium nitrate has a wide variety of uses, largely as a source of nitrate.

Nitric acid production edit

Historically, nitric acid was produced by combining sulfuric acid with nitrates such as saltpeter. In modern times this is reversed: nitrates are produced from nitric acid produced via the Ostwald process.

Oxidizer edit

A demonstration of the oxidation of a piece of charcoal in molten potassium nitrate

The most famous use of potassium nitrate is probably as the oxidizer in blackpowder. From the most ancient times until the late 1880s, blackpowder provided the explosive power for all the world's firearms. After that time, small arms and large artillery increasingly began to depend on cordite, a smokeless powder. Blackpowder remains in use today in black powder rocket motors, but also in combination with other fuels like sugars in "rocket candy" (a popular amateur rocket propellant). It is also used in fireworks such as smoke bombs.[35] It is also added to cigarettes to maintain an even burn of the tobacco[36] and is used to ensure complete combustion of paper cartridges for cap and ball revolvers.[37] It can also be heated to several hundred degrees to be used for niter bluing, which is less durable than other forms of protective oxidation, but allows for specific and often beautiful coloration of steel parts, such as screws, pins, and other small parts of firearms.

Meat processing edit

Potassium nitrate has been a common ingredient of salted meat since antiquity[38] or the Middle Ages.[39] The widespread adoption of nitrate use is more recent and is linked to the development of large-scale meat processing.[6] The use of potassium nitrate has been mostly discontinued because it gives slow and inconsistent results compared to sodium nitrite preparations such as "Prague powder" or pink "curing salt". Even so, potassium nitrate is still used in some food applications, such as salami, dry-cured ham, charcuterie, and (in some countries) in the brine used to make corned beef (sometimes together with sodium nitrite).[40] When used as a food additive in the European Union,[41] the compound is referred to as E252; it is also approved for use as a food additive in the United States[42] and Australia and New Zealand[43] (where it is listed under its INS number 252).[2]

Possible cancer risk edit

Since October 2015, WHO classifies processed meat as Group 1 carcinogen (based on epidemiological studies, convincingly carcinogenic to humans).[44]

In April 2023 the French Court of Appeals of Limoges confirmed that food-watch NGO Yuka was legally legitimate in describing Potassium Nitrate E249 to E252 as a "cancer risk", and thus rejected an appeal by the French charcuterie industry against the organisation.[45]

Food preparation edit

In West African cuisine, potassium nitrate (saltpetre) is widely used as a thickening agent in soups and stews such as okra soup[46] and isi ewu. It is also used to soften food and reduce cooking time when boiling beans and tough meat. Saltpetre is also an essential ingredient in making special porridges, such as kunun kanwa[47] literally translated from the Hausa language as "saltpetre porridge".

In the Shetland Islands (UK) it is used in the curing of mutton to make reestit mutton, a local delicacy.[48]

Fertilizer edit

Potassium nitrate is used in fertilizers as a source of nitrogen and potassium – two of the macronutrients for plants. When used by itself, it has an NPK rating of 13-0-44.[49][50]

Pharmacology edit

Other uses edit

In folklore and popular culture edit

Potassium nitrate was once thought to induce impotence, and is still rumored to be in institutional food (such as military fare) as an anaphrodisiac; however, there is no scientific evidence for such properties.[65][66]

In Bank Shot, El (Joanna Cassidy) propositions Walter Ballantine (George C. Scott), who tells her that he has been fed saltpeter in prison. "You know why they feed you saltpeter in prison?" Ballantine asks her. She shakes her head no. They kiss. He glances down at his crotch, making a gesture that reveals his body has not responded to her advances, and says, "That's why they feed you saltpeter in prison."

In One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Randle is asked by the nurses to take his medications, but not knowing what they are, he mentions he does not want anyone to "slip me saltpeter". He then proceeds to imitate the motions of masturbation in reference to its supposed effects as an anaphrodisiac.

In 1776, John Adams asks his wife Abigail to make saltpeter for the Continental Army. She, eventually, is able to do so in exchange for pins for sewing.[67]

In the Star Trek episode "Arena", Captain Kirk injures a gorn using a rudimentary cannon that he constructs using potassium nitrate as a key ingredient of gunpowder.

In 21 Jump Street, Jenko, played by Channing Tatum, gives a rhyming presentation about potassium nitrate for his chemistry class.

In Eating Raoul, Paul hires a dominatrix to impersonate a nurse and trick Raoul into consuming saltpeter in a ploy to reduce his sexual appetite for his wife.

In The Simpsons episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", Mr. Burns is seen pouring saltpeter into his chili entry, titled Old Elihu's Yale-Style Saltpeter Chili.

In the Sharpe novel series by Bernard Cornwell, numerous mentions are made of an advantageous supply of saltpeter from India being a crucial component of British military supremacy in the Napoleonic Wars. In Sharpe's Havoc, the French Captain Argenton laments that France needs to scrape its supply from cesspits.

In the Dr Stone anime and manga series, the struggle for control over a natural saltpeter source from guano features prominently in the plot.

In the farming lore from the Corn Belt of the 1800s, drought-killed corn[68] in manured fields could accumulate saltpeter to the extent that upon opening the stalk for examination it would "fall as a fine powder upon the table".[69]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Record of Potassium nitrate in the GESTIS Substance Database of the Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, accessed on 2007-03-09.
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  10. ^ Peter Watson (2006). Ideas: A History of Thought and Invention, from Fire to Freud. HarperCollins. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-06-093564-1. from the original on 2015-10-17.
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  59. ^ Stan Roark (February 27, 2008). . Alabama Cooperative Extension System. Archived from the original on March 23, 2012.
  60. ^ David E. Turcotte; Frances E. Lockwood (May 8, 2001). "Aqueous corrosion inhibitor Note. This patent cites potassium nitrate as a minor constituent in a complex mix. Since rust is an oxidation product, this statement requires justification". United States Patent. 6,228,283. from the original on January 27, 2018.
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Bibliography edit

  • Barnum, Dennis W. (December 2003). "Some History of Nitrates". Journal of Chemical Education. 80 (12): 1393. Bibcode:2003JChEd..80.1393B. doi:10.1021/ed080p1393.
  • David Cressy. Saltpeter: The Mother of Gunpowder (Oxford University Press, 2013) 237 pp online review by Robert Tiegs
  • Alan Williams. "The production of saltpeter in the Middle Ages", Ambix, 22 (1975), pp. 125–33. Maney Publishing, ISSN 0002-6980.

External links edit

  • "Saltpetre" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XXI (9th ed.). 1886. p. 235.
  • International Chemical Safety Card 018402216

potassium, nitrate, saltpeter, redirects, here, other, uses, saltpeter, disambiguation, chemical, compound, with, sharp, salty, bitter, taste, chemical, formula, kno3, ionic, salt, potassium, ions, nitrate, ions, therefore, alkali, metal, nitrate, occurs, natu. Saltpeter redirects here For other uses see Saltpeter disambiguation Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound with a sharp salty bitter taste and the chemical formula KNO3 It is an ionic salt of potassium ions K and nitrate ions NO3 and is therefore an alkali metal nitrate It occurs in nature as a mineral niter or nitre in the UK 5 It is a source of nitrogen and nitrogen was named after niter Potassium nitrate is one of several nitrogen containing compounds collectively referred to as saltpeter or saltpetre in the UK 5 Potassium nitrate 1 NamesIUPAC name Potassium nitrateOther names SaltpeterSaltpetreNitrate of potashIdentifiersCAS Number 7757 79 1 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageChEMBL ChEMBL1644029 NChemSpider 22843 YECHA InfoCard 100 028 926EC Number 231 818 8E number E252 preservatives KEGG D02051 YPubChem CID 24434RTECS number TT3700000UNII RU45X2JN0Z YUN number 1486CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID4029692InChI InChI 1S K NO3 c 2 1 3 4 q 1 1 YKey FGIUAXJPYTZDNR UHFFFAOYSA N YInChI 1 K NO3 c 2 1 3 4 q 1 1Key FGIUAXJPYTZDNR UHFFFAOYAMSMILES K O N O OPropertiesChemical formula KNO3Molar mass 101 1032 g molAppearance white solidOdor odorlessDensity 2 109 g cm3 16 C Melting point 334 C 633 F 607 K Boiling point 400 C 752 F 673 K decomposes Solubility in water 133 g 1000 g water 0 C 316 g 1000 g water 20 C 383 g 1000 g water 25 C 2439 g 1000 g water 100 C 2 Solubility slightly soluble in ethanol soluble in glycerol ammoniaBasicity pKb 15 3 3 Magnetic susceptibility x 33 7 10 6 cm3 molRefractive index nD 1 335 1 5056 1 5604StructureCrystal structure Orthorhombic AragoniteThermochemistryHeat capacity C 95 06 J mol KStd enthalpy offormation DfH 298 494 00 kJ molHazardsOccupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards Oxidant harmful if swallowed inhaled or absorbed on skin Causes irritation to skin and eye area GHS labelling PictogramsHazard statements H272 H315 H319 H335Precautionary statements P102 P210 P220 P221 P280NFPA 704 fire diamond 100OXFlash point non flammable oxidizer Lethal dose or concentration LD LC LD50 median dose 1901 mg kg oral rabbit 3750 mg kg oral rat 4 Safety data sheet SDS ICSC 0184Related compoundsOther anions Potassium nitriteOther cations Lithium nitrateSodium nitrateRubidium nitrateCaesium nitrateRelated compounds Potassium sulfatePotassium chlorideSupplementary data pagePotassium nitrate data page Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Major uses of potassium nitrate are in fertilizers tree stump removal rocket propellants and fireworks It is one of the major constituents of gunpowder black powder 6 In processed meats potassium nitrate reacts with hemoglobin and myoglobin generating a red color 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Historical production 2 1 From mineral sources 2 2 From caves 2 3 Nitraries 2 4 Nitre bed 2 4 1 French method 2 4 2 Swiss method 2 5 From nitric acid 3 Modern production 4 Properties 4 1 Thermal decomposition 5 Uses 5 1 Nitric acid production 5 2 Oxidizer 5 3 Meat processing 5 3 1 Possible cancer risk 5 4 Food preparation 5 5 Fertilizer 5 6 Pharmacology 5 7 Other uses 6 In folklore and popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology editPotash or potassium nitrate because of its early and global use and production has many names The chemical potassium was first isolated by the chemist Sir Humphry Davy from pot ash This refers to an early method of extracting various potassium salts by placing in an iron pot the ash of burnt wood or tree leaves adding water heating and evaporating the solution 8 As for nitrate Hebrew and Egyptian words for it had the consonants n t r indicating likely cognation in the Greek nitron which was Latinised to nitrum or nitrium Thence Old French had niter and Middle English nitre By the 15th century Europeans referred to it as saltpetre 9 specifically Indian saltpetre Chilean saltpetre is sodium nitrate and later as nitrate of potash as the chemistry of the compound was more fully understood The Arabs called it Chinese snow Arabic ثلج الصين romanized thalj al ṣin as well as barud بارود a term of uncertain origin that later came to mean gunpowder It was called Chinese salt by the Iranians Persians 10 11 12 or salt from Chinese salt marshes Persian نمک شوره چينی namak shura chini 13 335 14 Historical production editSee also Nitre Availability From mineral sources edit In Ancient India when saltpeter manufacturers formed the Nuniya amp Labana caste 15 Saltpeter finds mention in Kautilya s Arthashastra compiled 300BC 300AD which mentions using its poisonous smoke as a weapon of war 16 although its use for propulsion did not appear until medieval times A purification process for potassium nitrate was outlined in 1270 by the chemist and engineer Hasan al Rammah of Syria in his book al Furusiyya wa al Manasib al Harbiyya The Book of Military Horsemanship and Ingenious War Devices In this book al Rammah describes first the purification of barud crude saltpeter mineral by boiling it with minimal water and using only the hot solution then the use of potassium oxide in the form of wood ashes to remove calcium and magnesium by precipitation of their carbonates from this solution leaving a solution of purified potassium nitrate which could then be dried 17 This was used for the manufacture of gunpowder and explosive devices The terminology used by al Rammah indicated the gunpowder he wrote about originated in China 18 At least as far back as 1845 nitratite deposits were exploited in Chile and California From caves edit Major natural sources of potassium nitrate were the deposits crystallizing from cave walls and the accumulations of bat guano in caves 19 Extraction is accomplished by immersing the guano in water for a day filtering and harvesting the crystals in the filtered water Traditionally guano was the source used in Laos for the manufacture of gunpowder for Bang Fai rockets Nitraries edit See also Saltpetre works Potassium nitrate was produced in a nitrary or saltpetre works 20 The process involved burial of excrements human or animal in a field beside the nitraries watering them and waiting until leaching allowed saltpeter to migrate to the surface by efflorescence Operators then gathered the resulting powder and transported it to be concentrated by ebullition in the boiler plant 21 22 Besides Montepellusanus during the thirteenth century and beyond the only supply of saltpeter across Christian Europe according to De Alchimia in 3 manuscripts of Michael Scot 1180 1236 was found in Spain in Aragon in a certain mountain near the sea 13 89 311 23 In 1561 Elizabeth I Queen of England and Ireland who was at war with Philip II of Spain became unable to import saltpeter of which the Kingdom of England had no home production and had to pay 300 pounds gold to the German captain Gerrard Honrik for the manual Instructions for making salpeter to growe the secret of the Feuerwerkbuch the nitraries 24 Nitre bed edit A nitre bed is a similar process used to produce nitrate from excrement Unlike the leaching based process of the nitrary however one mixes the excrements with soil and waits for soil microbes to convert amino nitrogen into nitrates by nitrification The nitrates are extracted from soil with water and then purified into saltpeter by adding wood ash The process was discovered in the early 15th century and was very widely used until the Chilean mineral deposits were found 25 The Confederate side of the American Civil War had a significant shortage of saltpeter As a result the Nitre and Mining Bureau was set up to encourage local production including by nitre beds and by providing excrement to government nitraries On November 13 1862 the government advertised in the Charleston Daily Courier for 20 or 30 able bodied Negro men to work in the new nitre beds at Ashley Ferry S C The nitre beds were large rectangles of rotted manure and straw moistened weekly with urine dung water and liquid from privies cesspools and drains and turned over regularly The National Archives published payroll records that account for more than 29 000 people compelled to such labor in the state of Virginia The South was so desperate for saltpeter for gunpowder that one Alabama official reportedly placed a newspaper ad asking that the contents of chamber pots be saved for collection In South Carolina in April 1864 the Confederate government forced 31 enslaved people to work at the Ashley Ferry Nitre Works outside Charleston 26 Perhaps the most exhaustive discussion of the niter bed production is the 1862 LeConte text 27 He was writing with the express purpose of increasing production in the Confederate States to support their needs during the American Civil War Since he was calling for the assistance of rural farming communities the descriptions and instructions are both simple and explicit He details the French Method along with several variations as well as a Swiss method N B Many references have been made to a method using only straw and urine but there is no such method in this work French method edit Turgot and Lavoisier created the Regie des Poudres et Salpetres a few years before the French Revolution Niter beds were prepared by mixing manure with either mortar or wood ashes common earth and organic materials such as straw to give porosity to a compost pile typically 4 feet 1 2 m high 6 feet 1 8 m wide and 15 feet 4 6 m long 27 The heap was usually under a cover from the rain kept moist with urine turned often to accelerate the decomposition then finally leached with water after approximately one year to remove the soluble calcium nitrate which was then converted to potassium nitrate by filtering through potash Swiss method edit Joseph LeConte describes a process using only urine and not dung referring to it as the Swiss method Urine is collected directly in a sandpit under a stable The sand itself is dug out and leached for nitrates which are then converted to potassium nitrate using potash as above 28 From nitric acid edit From 1903 until the World War I era potassium nitrate for black powder and fertilizer was produced on an industrial scale from nitric acid produced using the Birkeland Eyde process which used an electric arc to oxidize nitrogen from the air During World War I the newly industrialized Haber process 1913 was combined with the Ostwald process after 1915 allowing Germany to produce nitric acid for the war after being cut off from its supplies of mineral sodium nitrates from Chile see nitratite Modern production editPotassium nitrate can be made by combining ammonium nitrate and potassium hydroxide NH 4 NO 3 KOH NH 3 KNO 3 H 2 O displaystyle ce NH4NO3 KOH gt NH3 KNO3 H2O nbsp An alternative way of producing potassium nitrate without a by product of ammonia is to combine ammonium nitrate found in instant ice packs 29 and potassium chloride easily obtained as a sodium free salt substitute NH 4 NO 3 KCl NH 4 Cl KNO 3 displaystyle ce NH4NO3 KCl gt NH4Cl KNO3 nbsp Potassium nitrate can also be produced by neutralizing nitric acid with potassium hydroxide This reaction is highly exothermic KOH HNO 3 KNO 3 H 2 O displaystyle ce KOH HNO3 gt KNO3 H2O nbsp On industrial scale it is prepared by the double displacement reaction between sodium nitrate and potassium chloride NaNO 3 KCl NaCl KNO 3 displaystyle ce NaNO3 KCl gt NaCl KNO3 nbsp Properties editPotassium nitrate has an orthorhombic crystal structure at room temperature 30 which transforms to a trigonal system at 128 C 262 F On cooling from 200 C 392 F another trigonal phase forms between 124 C 255 F and 100 C 212 F 31 32 Sodium nitrate is isomorphous with calcite the most stable form of calcium carbonate whereas room temperature potassium nitrate is isomorphous with aragonite a slightly less stable polymorph of calcium carbonate The difference is attributed to the similarity in size between nitrate NO 3 and carbonate CO2 3 ions and the fact that the potassium ion K is larger than sodium Na and calcium Ca2 ions 33 In the room temperature structure of potassium nitrate each potassium ion is surrounded by 6 nitrate ions In turn each nitrate ion is surrounded by 6 potassium ions 30 Room temperature crystal structure and coordination geometry of potassium nitrate 30 Unit cell Potassium coordination Nitrate coordination nbsp nbsp nbsp Potassium nitrate is moderately soluble in water but its solubility increases with temperature The aqueous solution is almost neutral exhibiting pH 6 2 at 14 C 57 F for a 10 solution of commercial powder It is not very hygroscopic absorbing about 0 03 water in 80 relative humidity over 50 days It is insoluble in alcohol and is not poisonous it can react explosively with reducing agents but it is not explosive on its own 2 Thermal decomposition edit Between 550 790 C 1 022 1 454 F potassium nitrate reaches a temperature dependent equilibrium with potassium nitrite 34 2 KNO 3 2 KNO 2 O 2 displaystyle ce 2 KNO3 lt gt 2 KNO2 O2 nbsp Uses editPotassium nitrate has a wide variety of uses largely as a source of nitrate Nitric acid production edit Historically nitric acid was produced by combining sulfuric acid with nitrates such as saltpeter In modern times this is reversed nitrates are produced from nitric acid produced via the Ostwald process Oxidizer edit source source source source source source source source A demonstration of the oxidation of a piece of charcoal in molten potassium nitrateThe most famous use of potassium nitrate is probably as the oxidizer in blackpowder From the most ancient times until the late 1880s blackpowder provided the explosive power for all the world s firearms After that time small arms and large artillery increasingly began to depend on cordite a smokeless powder Blackpowder remains in use today in black powder rocket motors but also in combination with other fuels like sugars in rocket candy a popular amateur rocket propellant It is also used in fireworks such as smoke bombs 35 It is also added to cigarettes to maintain an even burn of the tobacco 36 and is used to ensure complete combustion of paper cartridges for cap and ball revolvers 37 It can also be heated to several hundred degrees to be used for niter bluing which is less durable than other forms of protective oxidation but allows for specific and often beautiful coloration of steel parts such as screws pins and other small parts of firearms Meat processing edit Potassium nitrate has been a common ingredient of salted meat since antiquity 38 or the Middle Ages 39 The widespread adoption of nitrate use is more recent and is linked to the development of large scale meat processing 6 The use of potassium nitrate has been mostly discontinued because it gives slow and inconsistent results compared to sodium nitrite preparations such as Prague powder or pink curing salt Even so potassium nitrate is still used in some food applications such as salami dry cured ham charcuterie and in some countries in the brine used to make corned beef sometimes together with sodium nitrite 40 When used as a food additive in the European Union 41 the compound is referred to as E252 it is also approved for use as a food additive in the United States 42 and Australia and New Zealand 43 where it is listed under its INS number 252 2 Possible cancer risk edit Since October 2015 WHO classifies processed meat as Group 1 carcinogen based on epidemiological studies convincingly carcinogenic to humans 44 In April 2023 the French Court of Appeals of Limoges confirmed that food watch NGO Yuka was legally legitimate in describing Potassium Nitrate E249 to E252 as a cancer risk and thus rejected an appeal by the French charcuterie industry against the organisation 45 Food preparation edit In West African cuisine potassium nitrate saltpetre is widely used as a thickening agent in soups and stews such as okra soup 46 and isi ewu It is also used to soften food and reduce cooking time when boiling beans and tough meat Saltpetre is also an essential ingredient in making special porridges such as kunun kanwa 47 literally translated from the Hausa language as saltpetre porridge In the Shetland Islands UK it is used in the curing of mutton to make reestit mutton a local delicacy 48 Fertilizer edit Potassium nitrate is used in fertilizers as a source of nitrogen and potassium two of the macronutrients for plants When used by itself it has an NPK rating of 13 0 44 49 50 Pharmacology edit Used in some toothpastes for sensitive teeth 51 Recently the use of potassium nitrate in toothpastes for treating sensitive teeth has increased 52 53 Used historically to treat asthma 54 Used in some toothpastes to relieve asthma symptoms 55 Used in Thailand as main ingredient in kidney tablets to relieve the symptoms of cystitis pyelitis and urethritis 56 Combats high blood pressure and was once used as a hypotensive 57 Other uses edit Electrolyte in a salt bridge Active ingredient of condensed aerosol fire suppression systems When burned with the free radicals of a fire s flame it produces potassium carbonate 58 Works as an aluminium cleaner Component usually about 98 of some tree stump removal products It accelerates the natural decomposition of the stump by supplying nitrogen for the fungi attacking the wood of the stump 59 In heat treatment of metals as a medium temperature molten salt bath usually in combination with sodium nitrite A similar bath is used to produce a durable blue black finish typically seen on firearms Its oxidizing quality water solubility and low cost make it an ideal short term rust inhibitor 60 To induce flowering of mango trees in the Philippines 61 62 Thermal storage medium in power generation systems Sodium and potassium nitrate salts are stored in a molten state with the solar energy collected by the heliostats at the Gemasolar Thermosolar Plant Ternary salts with the addition of calcium nitrate or lithium nitrate have been found to improve the heat storage capacity in the molten salts 63 As a source of potassium ions for exchange with sodium ions in chemically strengthened glass As an oxidizer in model rocket fuel called Rocket candy As a constituent in homemade smoke bombs 64 In folklore and popular culture editPotassium nitrate was once thought to induce impotence and is still rumored to be in institutional food such as military fare as an anaphrodisiac however there is no scientific evidence for such properties 65 66 In Bank Shot El Joanna Cassidy propositions Walter Ballantine George C Scott who tells her that he has been fed saltpeter in prison You know why they feed you saltpeter in prison Ballantine asks her She shakes her head no They kiss He glances down at his crotch making a gesture that reveals his body has not responded to her advances and says That s why they feed you saltpeter in prison In One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Randle is asked by the nurses to take his medications but not knowing what they are he mentions he does not want anyone to slip me saltpeter He then proceeds to imitate the motions of masturbation in reference to its supposed effects as an anaphrodisiac In 1776 John Adams asks his wife Abigail to make saltpeter for the Continental Army She eventually is able to do so in exchange for pins for sewing 67 In the Star Trek episode Arena Captain Kirk injures a gorn using a rudimentary cannon that he constructs using potassium nitrate as a key ingredient of gunpowder In 21 Jump Street Jenko played by Channing Tatum gives a rhyming presentation about potassium nitrate for his chemistry class In Eating Raoul Paul hires a dominatrix to impersonate a nurse and trick Raoul into consuming saltpeter in a ploy to reduce his sexual appetite for his wife In The Simpsons episode El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer The Mysterious Voyage of Homer Mr Burns is seen pouring saltpeter into his chili entry titled Old Elihu s Yale Style Saltpeter Chili In the Sharpe novel series by Bernard Cornwell numerous mentions are made of an advantageous supply of saltpeter from India being a crucial component of British military supremacy in the Napoleonic Wars In Sharpe s Havoc the French Captain Argenton laments that France needs to scrape its supply from cesspits In the Dr Stone anime and manga series the struggle for control over a natural saltpeter source from guano features prominently in the plot In the farming lore from the Corn Belt of the 1800s drought killed corn 68 in manured fields could accumulate saltpeter to the extent that upon opening the stalk for examination it would fall as a fine powder upon the table 69 See also editHistory of gunpowder Humberstone and Santa Laura Saltpeter Works Niter a mineral form of potassium nitrate Nitratine Nitrocellulose Potassium perchlorateReferences edit Record of Potassium nitrate in the GESTIS Substance Database of the Institute for Occupational Safety and Health accessed on 2007 03 09 a b c B J Kosanke B Sturman K Kosanke et al 2004 2 Pyrotechnic Chemistry Journal of Pyrotechnics pp 5 6 ISBN 978 1 889526 15 7 Archived from the original on 2016 05 05 Kolthoff Treatise on Analytical Chemistry New York Interscience Encyclopedia Inc 1959 Ema M Kanoh S 1983 Studies on the pharmacological bases of fetal toxicity of drugs III Fetal toxicity of potassium nitrate in 2 generations of rats Nihon Yakurigaku Zasshi Folia Pharmacologica Japonica 81 6 469 480 ISSN 0015 5691 PMID 6618340 a b Shorter Oxford English dictionary 6th ed United Kingdom Oxford University Press 2007 p 3804 ISBN 9780199206872 a b Lauer Klaus 1991 The history of nitrite in human nutrition A contribution from German cookery books Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 44 3 261 264 doi 10 1016 0895 4356 91 90037 a ISSN 0895 4356 PMID 1999685 Haldane J 1901 The Red Colour of Salted Meat The Journal of Hygiene 1 1 115 122 doi 10 1017 S0022172400000097 ISSN 0022 1724 PMC 2235964 PMID 20474105 Soanes Catherine Stevenson Angus eds 2003 1999 Oxford Dictionary of English second ed Oxford University Press p 1377 ISBN 0 19 8613474 Spencer Dan 2013 Saltpeter The Mother of Gunpowder Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 256 ISBN 9780199695751 Peter Watson 2006 Ideas A History of Thought and Invention from Fire to Freud HarperCollins p 304 ISBN 978 0 06 093564 1 Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 Cathal J Nolan 2006 The age of wars of religion 1000 1650 an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization Vol 1 of Greenwood encyclopedias of modern world wars Greenwood Publishing Group p 365 ISBN 978 0 313 33733 8 Archived from the original on 2014 01 01 Retrieved 2011 11 28 In either case there is linguistic evidence of Chinese origins of the technology in Damascus Arabs called the saltpeter used in making gunpowder Chinese snow while in Iran it was called Chinese salt Oliver Frederick Gillilan Hogg 1963 English artillery 1326 1716 being the history of artillery in this country prior to the formation of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Royal Artillery Institution p 42 The Chinese were certainly acquainted with saltpetre the essential ingredient of gunpowder They called it Chinese Snow and employed it early in the Christian era in the manufacture of fireworks and rockets a b James Riddick Partington 1999 A history of Greek fire and gunpowder JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5954 0 Needham Joseph Yu Ping Yu 1980 Needham Joseph ed Science and Civilisation in China Volume 5 Chemistry and Chemical Technology Part 4 Spagyrical Discovery and Invention Apparatus Theories and Gifts Vol 5 Contributors Joseph Needham Lu Gwei Djen Nathan Sivin illustrated reprint ed Cambridge University Press p 194 ISBN 978 0521085731 Retrieved 2014 11 21 Sen Sudipta 2019 Ganges The Many Pasts of an Indian River New Haven Yale University Press p 318 ISBN 978 0 300 11916 9 Roy Kaushik 2014 Military Transition in Early Modern Asia 1400 1750 London Bloomsbury Academic p 19 ISBN 978 1 7809 3765 6 Ahmad Y 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33 Maney Publishing ISSN 0002 6980 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Potassium nitrate Saltpetre Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XXI 9th ed 1886 p 235 International Chemical Safety Card 018402216 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Potassium nitrate amp oldid 1200082477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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