Online Encyclopedia

H2CO2 FORMIC ACID

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 669 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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H2CO2 FORMIC

ACID  or H•COOH, the first member of the series of aliphatic monobasic acids of • the general formula C;H2„02 . It is distinguished from the other members of the series by certain characteristic properties; for example, it shows an aldehydic character in reducing
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silver salts to metallic silver, and it does not form an acid chloride or an acid anhydride . Its nitrile (prussic acid) has an acid character, a
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property not possessed by the nitriles of the other members of the series; and, by the abstraction of the elements of
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water from the acid, carbon monoxide is produced, a reaction which finds no parallel in the higher members of the series . Finally, formic acid is, as shown by the determination of its affinity constant, a much stronger acid than the other acids of the series . It occurs naturally in red ants (
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Lat. formica), in stinging nettles, in some
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mineral waters, in animal secretions and in muscle . It may be prepared artificially by the oxidation of methyl
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alcohol and of formaldehyde; by the rapid
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heating of oxalic acid (J . Gay-Lussac,
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Ann. chim. phys., 1831 [2] 46,p . 218), but best by heating oxalic acid with glycerin, at a temperature of roo-110° C . (M . Berthelot, Ann., 1856, 98, p . 139) . In this reaction a glycerol ester is formed as an intermediate product, and undergoes decomposition by the water which is also produced at the same time .

Cal 5(OH)3+H2C20a =

C3H5(OH),•OCHO+
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CO2+H20 C8H1(OH)20•CHO+H20 = C:H°(OH)a+H2CO2 . Many other synthetical processes for the production of the acid or its salts are known . Hydrolysis of hydrocyanic acid by means of hydrochloric acid yields formic acid . Chloroform boiled with alcoholic potash forms potassium formate (-J . Dumas, BerzeliAs Jahresberichte, vol . 15, p . 371), a somewhat similar decomposition being shown by
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chloral and aqueous potash (J. v . Liebig, Ann., 1832, 1, p . 198) . Formates are also produced by the
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action of moist carbon monoxide on soda lime at 190–220° C . (V . Merz and J .

Tibicira, Ber., 188o, 13, p . 23; A . Geuther, Ann., 188o, 202, p . 317), or by the action of moist carbon dioxide on potassium (H .

Kolbe and R . Schmitt, Ann., 1861, 119, p . 251) . H .
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Meissen (Cornptes rend., 1902, 134, p . 261) prepared potassium formate by passing a current of carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide over heated potassium hydride, KH+CO:=KHCO2 and KH+2 C0=KHCO2+C . A concentrated acid may be obtained from the diluted acid either by neutralization with soda, the sodium salt thus obtained being then dried and heated with the
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equivalent quantity of anhydrous oxalic acid (Lorin, Bull.
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soc. chim., 37, p . 104), or the lead or copper salt may be decomposed by dry sulphuretted hydrogen at 13o° C .

L . Maquenne (Bull. sec. chim., 1888, 5o, p . 662) distils the commercial acid, in vacua, with concentrated sulphuric acid below 75° C . Formic acid is a colourless,

sharp-smelling liquid, which crystallizes at o° C., melts at 8.6° C. and beils at 1oo•8° C . Its specific gravity is 1.22 (20°(4°) . It is miscible in all proportions with water, alcohol and ether . When heated with
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zinc dust, the acid decomposes into carbon monoxide and hydrogen: The sodium and potassium salts, when heated to 400° C., give: oxalates and
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carbonates of the
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alkali metals, but the magnesium, calcium and barium salts yield carbonates only . The
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free acid, when heated with concentrated sulphuric acid, is decomposed into water and pure carbon monoxide; when heated with nitric acid, it is oxidized first to oxalic acid and finally to carbon dioxide . The salts of the acid are known as for-mates, and are mostly soluble in water, those of silver and lead being the least soluble . They crystallize well and are readily decomposed . Concentrated sulphuric acid converts them into sulphates, with simultaneous liberation of carbon monoxide . The calcium salt, when heated with the calcium salts of higher homologues, gives
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aldehydes .

The silver and

mercury salts, when heated, yield the metal, with liberation of carbon dioxide and formation of free formic acid; and the ammonium salt, when distilled, gives some formamide, HCONH2 . The
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esters of the acid may be obtained by distilling a mixture of the sodium or potassium salts and the corresponding alcohol with hydrochloric or sulphuric acids . Formamide, HCONH2, is obtained by heating
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ethyl formate with
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ammonia; by heating ammonium formate with urea to 140° C., 2HCO.ONH4+CO(
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NH2)2 =2HCONH2+(NH4)2COs ; by heating ammonium formate in a sealed tube for some hours at 230° C., or by the action of sodium
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amalgam on a solution of potassium cyanate (H . Basarow, Ber., 1871, 4, p . 409) . It is a liquid which boils in vacua at 15o°, but at 192–195° C. under ordinary atmospheric pressure, with partial decomposition into carbon monoxide and ammonia . It dissolves mercuric
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oxide, with the formation of mercuric formamide, (HCONH)2Hg .

End of Article: H2CO2 FORMIC ACID
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