Project Question: Will calcium nitrate decompose if I boil a calcium nitrate solution (calcium nitrate in water) ? Also, if an eggshell is subjected to 900 degrees Celsius, is it possible to have a product which has black stuff on it? ( I assume that the product must be mostly white, because CaCO3 must decompose into CaO (which is white) and CO2) Thank you very much.
Good day! I would like to ask the following questions that need immediate answers, if that's fine with you. I am still stuck with my preliminary work, and I haven't finished it yet.
Will calcium nitrate decompose/melt if it is subjected to heat or boiled? Rather, how can I extract solid calcium nitrate from a calcium nitrate solution (calcium nitrate in water) without destroying calcium nitrate itself?
What should be the color of an eggshell once it has been subjected to very high temperatures, eg 900 degrees Celsius? Should the color of the product be pure white (because CaCO3 --> CaO + CO2, and I need CaO which is white) ? Or is it okay to have some black parts in the product?
Calcium nitrate forms a hydrate that melts below the boiling point of water. It also forms an anhydrous form with a relatively high melting point. If heated much above the anhydrous melting point it will decompose. Certain metals salts will catalyze the decomposition at temperatures near the melting point.
As far as the eggshells are concerned, pure Calcium oxide should be white. Black contamination could be carbon, which might be inert for your purposes, but I can’t guarantee that.
Project Question: Will calcium nitrate decompose if I boil a calcium nitrate solution (calcium nitrate in water) ? Also, if an eggshell is subjected to 900 degrees Celsius, is it possible to have a product which has black stuff on it? ( I assume that the product must be mostly white, because CaCO3 must decompose into CaO (which is white) and CO2) Thank you very much.