albada
Subscriber
Thanks for the interesting info about pH-probes. I ordered a compatible replacement, which lets me procrastinate on hacking a BNC with its potential problems.
You can drive water out of propylene glycol by heating.
Last night, I verified that one can drive water out of propylene glycol by heating it to close to 100C. My idea came from Tom Hoskinson's observation in this thread:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
In it, he states that "If you heat straight propylene glycol to 160F it will give off some water vapor."
This is important to me because sodium metaborate contains some water (as Rudeofus pointed out), and Borax has much more. Plus, some reactions with ascorbic acid produce water. I want as little water in a concentrate as possible to avoid absorbing oxygen and oxidizing developer. So I put 2.5 ml of PG in a beaker, weighed it, and added 1 gram of water. Then I heated it to just under 100C, and weighed it every 5 minutes. Here are the water-weights (ie, initial weight was subtracted):
Min ... Water
0 ...... 1.00
5 ...... 0.76
10 .... 0.32
15 .... 0.16
20 .... -0.08
25 .... -0.16
30 .... -0.23
I could see a wisp of steam rising from the beaker the whole time. The negative numbers mean I lost more than 1 gram, which I attribute to (1) A couple of drops of carry-out on the thermometer-stem, and (2) water in the original PG.
My conclusion: Heating PG drives water out of it.
But a couple of warnings: (1) Keep the temperature below the 99C flash-point of PG. Above that, flammable PG-vapor can run down the outside of the beaker onto the heater and ignite. (2) Staying below 100C also avoids what chemists call a "bump" wherein a sudden bubble of steam blasts hot PG everywhere, including your hands and face. So go ahead and heat your PG-based concentrate to dry it -- but I suggest not going over 90C.
Mark Overton
You can drive water out of propylene glycol by heating.
Last night, I verified that one can drive water out of propylene glycol by heating it to close to 100C. My idea came from Tom Hoskinson's observation in this thread:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
In it, he states that "If you heat straight propylene glycol to 160F it will give off some water vapor."
This is important to me because sodium metaborate contains some water (as Rudeofus pointed out), and Borax has much more. Plus, some reactions with ascorbic acid produce water. I want as little water in a concentrate as possible to avoid absorbing oxygen and oxidizing developer. So I put 2.5 ml of PG in a beaker, weighed it, and added 1 gram of water. Then I heated it to just under 100C, and weighed it every 5 minutes. Here are the water-weights (ie, initial weight was subtracted):
Min ... Water
0 ...... 1.00
5 ...... 0.76
10 .... 0.32
15 .... 0.16
20 .... -0.08
25 .... -0.16
30 .... -0.23
I could see a wisp of steam rising from the beaker the whole time. The negative numbers mean I lost more than 1 gram, which I attribute to (1) A couple of drops of carry-out on the thermometer-stem, and (2) water in the original PG.
My conclusion: Heating PG drives water out of it.
But a couple of warnings: (1) Keep the temperature below the 99C flash-point of PG. Above that, flammable PG-vapor can run down the outside of the beaker onto the heater and ignite. (2) Staying below 100C also avoids what chemists call a "bump" wherein a sudden bubble of steam blasts hot PG everywhere, including your hands and face. So go ahead and heat your PG-based concentrate to dry it -- but I suggest not going over 90C.
Mark Overton