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Chemical test to distinguish between sulphurous acid and sulphuric acid


kemensindia

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Add a couple of ml of the unknown acid that you're testing to a dilute solution of potassium permanganate or dichromate. If it is sulfurous acid, the bright orange/purple colour will change. If it is sulfuric acid, the colour won't change.

Carefully smell the acid. Sulfuric acid hardly has a smell at room temperature, while sulfurous acid (which is just SO2 in water) has an odour resembling burnt matches (when dilute) and stings your nose (when more concentrated)

Sulfurous acid has a bleaching effect on some dyes, while sulfuric acid doesn't.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Last time I used sulpherous acid it was pretty apparent from the smell what it was. That being said you could always measurethe ORP if you have the equipment.

 

The test weimming suggested will also work if you have sample to sacrifice.

 

As a side note that was a fun project. We were trying to take "Red Mud" which is tailing from the bayer process and extract the REEs. Their idea was to use scrubber water from a near by coal plant to do the extraction. It did not work particularly well.

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  • 1 month later...

If using litmus paper is considered a chemical test, 1st test the solutions pH with litmus paper. Boil and re-test. If the solution has become more basic, it is H2SO3.

 

Reaction logic:

 

H2SO3 ---Heat--> SO2 (g) + H2O

 

and the pH approaches that of water.

 

Boiling H2SO4 will not raise its pH.

--------------------------------------------------------

 

Another test, add a large amount of zinc foil.

 

If the Zn dissolves and no fine precipitate, it is ZnSO4 and the acid is H2SO4.

 

If the Zn is only very slowly attacked, and forms a fine precipitate, it is ZnSO3 and the acid is H2SO3.

Edited by ajkoer
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I did not mention the lowering of the pH upon boiling H2SO4 because the question asks what 'chemical tests' to employ, and this requires the use of somewhat imprecise litmus paper. If the H2SO4 is very dilute, upon boiling it may be difficult to discern a lowering of the pH via litmus paper, in my opinion.

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