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Topic: Purple fumes from yellow lead iodide and potassium nitrate mixture.  (Read 5960 times)

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Offline Fmeub

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The students mixed the following white powders: Pb(NO3)2 and KI in a test tube.Upon shaking the mixture yellow PbI2  and KNO3 formed. The students were supposed to stop the reaction there, but some bright sparks decided to heat the mixture.
Upon heating purple fumes were released and the yellow mixture became interspersed with grey bits, the overall color changed to beige with a slight orange glow.

Could someone please tell me what reaction(s) occurred upon heating this mixture?

Offline nj_bartel

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Re: Purple fumes from yellow lead iodide and potassium nitrate mixture.
« Reply #1 on: February 10, 2009, 01:43:21 PM »
Decomposition product to iodine gas would be my guess for the purple fumes.  The solid might be something like PbO2, PbO mixture.

Offline macman104

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Re: Purple fumes from yellow lead iodide and potassium nitrate mixture.
« Reply #2 on: February 10, 2009, 01:47:33 PM »
That would be my guess as well.

Offline Fleaker

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Re: Purple fumes from yellow lead iodide and potassium nitrate mixture.
« Reply #3 on: February 10, 2009, 02:29:18 PM »
Perhaps look in the CRC for the decomposition temperature of lead iodide.

It will be less than that of PbCl2.

I'm assuming that all of the solution evaporated off and you were left with a mixture of PbI2 and KNO3.
Heating this further would cause some redox reactions to occur, most probable being the formation of lead oxides, KNO2, and NOx.
Neither flask nor beaker.

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