White crystalline solid; unstable, decomposes at 45°C; commercial product is a syrupy liquid containing equal parts of Caro’s acid and sulfuric acid; stored at dry ice temperature; very soluble in water.
White crystalline solid; unstable, decomposes at 45°C; commercial product is a syrupy liquid containing equal parts of Caro’s acid and sulfuric acid; stored at dry ice temperature; very soluble in water.
Peroxymonosulfuric acid is used as an oxidizingagent to make glycols, lactones, and esters; formaking dyes; and in bleaching composition.
peroxomonosulphuric acid (Caro's acid) is used in the preparation of dyes and bleaching agents. It also is used as a strong oxidizing reagent to convert ketones to lactones, to convert olefins to glycols and esters, and to analyse pyridine, aniline and many alkaloids.
In preparation of dyes; oxidation of olefins to a-glycols; oxidation of ketones to lactones or esters; treating woolens to prevent felting and shrinking; in bleaching compositions.
peroxomonosulphuric acid may be prepared by several methods depending on what form of the reagent is desired. Most commonly, it is made by treating potassium perfulfate (K2S2O8) with sulfuric acid. The dry form is prepared by slowly stirring 100 g K2S2O8 into 60 mL of concentrated H2SO4, followed by adding 300 g potassium sulfate. A liquid Caro’s acid is obtained by slowly stirring K2S2O8 into three times the mass of H2SO4. The dilute form of the reagent may be obtained by either mixing K2S2O8 to 40% H2SO4 or by treating K2S2O8 with H2SO4 and adding ice to the mixture.
Alternatively, peroxomonosulphuric acid may be prepared from hydrogen peroxide by treatment with either chlorosulfonic acid or with H2SO4 at –40°C. A 90% H2O2 is used in the preparation.
peroxomonosulphuric acid is a strong oxidizing agent and is very unstable. All laboratory preparations must be carried out in an explosion-proof fume hood under temperature- controlled conditions and in the absence of impurities and oxidizable substances.
ChEBI: Peroxysulfuric acid is a sulfur oxoacid. It is a conjugate acid of a peroxysulfate(1-).
peroxomonosulphuric acid is sensitive to heat and shock. Reactions with organic matter, finely divided metals and other readily oxidizable substances can be violent to explosive. It is a strong irritant to skin, eyes and mucous membranes.
Peroxymonosulfuric acid is a strong irritant to theskin, eyes, and mucous membranes (Merck 1989).Toxicity data for this compound are not available.
Peroxymonosulfuric acid is highly unstable, decomposes dangerously on heating, and evolves oxygen at room temperature. It may react violently with organic matter and readily oxidizable compounds. Violent explosions have been reported with acetone, due to the formation of acetone peroxide (Toennis 1937). It may explode when mixed with many primary and secondary alcohols, manganese dioxide, cotton, many metals in finely divided form, and aromatics such as benzene, phenol, and aniline.
Strong irritant. Powerful oxidizer. An explosive. Explosive reaction acetone; alcohols; aromatics (e.g., aniline; benzene; phenol); platinum; manganese dioxide; silver. Incompatible with acetone; catalysts; fibers. When heated to decomposition it emits t