sanking said:
My original formula for Pyrocat-HD called for adding 100 grams of potassium carbonate to 100 ml of water to mix Stock Solution B. That produced a total amount of Stock B of about 135 ml, which amounted to a 75% potassium carbonate solution.
The original Formulary dry kits made a mistake and called for mixing 100 grams of potassium carbonate in water to make 100 ml of Stock B solution. This would be a 100% solution of Stock B.
I've always wondered about the % values you've mentioned with these solutions, so I finally got around to looking it up.
According to both my CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 32nd Ed., and Lange's Handbook of Chemistry, 8th Ed., they are both in agreement in
their descriptions of % solutions of Potassium Carbonate.
Sandy, what you have been calling a 75% solution of K2CO3, the CRC and Lange's both call a 50% solution. If you think about how you have taken 100g of K2CO3 and then added 100 ml of water, which weighs pretty close to 100g, can be thought of as taking 1 part and then adding another part to it, giving a total of 2 parts. So that solution, which has 1 part of solid in it, would be a 50% solution, not 75%.
As you described, with your 100 g of K2CO3 and 100 ml of water, you ended up with "about 135 ml" of solution. If we take the 100 grams K2CO3 and divide it by our 135 ml solution volume, you will get a concentration of 0.74 g/ml. The CRC says that a 770g/L solution, which is nearly equivalent to our 0.74 g/ml (which equals 740 g/L) solution, is a 50% solution. This pretty much confirms the calcs in the previous paragraph.
I'm sure that's where you're getting confused, but the nomenclature for percent solutions is not equivalent to g/L solutions.
So your original instructions of 100 g K2CO3 dissolved into 100 ml water is actually a 50% solution (1 part + 1 part), and not a 75% solution - even though it has a concentration of about 0.75g/ml.