Ammonium carbonate

Ammonium carbonate
Identifiers
CAS number 506-87-6 Y
ChemSpider 10048 Y
UNII PDP691CN28 Y
Jmol-3D images Image 1
Properties
Molecular formula (NH4)2CO3
Molar mass 96.09 g/mol
Appearance White powder
Density 1.50 g/cm3
Melting point

58 °C, 331 K, 136 °F

Boiling point

Decomposes

Solubility in water Soluble, decomposes in hot water
Hazards
MSDS External MSDS
Main hazards Irritant
Related compounds
Other anions Ammonium bicarbonate
Other cations Sodium carbonate
Potassium carbonate
 Y (verify) (what is: Y/N?)
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)
Infobox references

Ammonium carbonate (formerly known as sal volatile or salt of hartshorn) is a commercial salt with the chemical formula (NH4)2CO3. It is used when crushed as a smelling salt. It can be crushed when needed in order to revive someone who has fainted. It is also known as baker's ammonia and was a predecessor to the more modern leavening agents baking soda and baking powder.

Contents

Production

Ammonium carbonate was historically obtained by the dry distillation of nitrogenous organic matter such as hair, horn, decomposed primate urine, etc. Currently, it is produced by heating a mixture of ammonium chloride, or ammonium sulfate and chalk, to redness in iron retorts, the vapors being condensed in leaden receivers.

The crude resulting product of either of these processes is Ammonium Polycarbonate: a white fibrous mass with a strong ammonium odor composed of a mixture of ammonium carbonate and ammonium bicarbonate. Ammonium carbonate is soluble in alcohol, while the bicarbonate is not. Dissolving the polycarbonate in alcohol, filtering, and evaporating the alcohol leaves just the ammonium carbonate.

The polycarbonate→carbonate and polycarbonate→bicarbonate reactions are "pushed" either way by exposure to ammonia or air, respectively. Ammonia gas passed into a strong aqueous solution of the polycarbonate displaces the hydrogen ion with an ammonium ion, converting it into ammonium carbonate. Exposure of the polycarbonate to moist air does the reverse: it displaces the ammonium ion with a hydrogen ion, converting it to ammonium bicarbonate.

Uses

As well as in smelling salts, ammonium carbonate is still used as a leavening agent in particular recipes, particularly those from northern Europe and Scandinavia. It can sometimes be substituted with baking powder, but the finished product will never be as airy and light as the original recipe. Icelandic loftkökur (air biscuits) for instance cannot be made with anything other than ammonium carbonate.

Its use as a leavening agent, with associated controversy, goes back centuries:

In the third kind of bread, a vesicular appearance is given to it by the addition to the dough of some ammoniacal salt, (usually the sub-carbonate,) which becomes wholly converted into a gaseous substance during the process of baking, causing the dough to swell out into little air vessels, which finally bursting, allow the gas to escape, and leave the bread exceedingly porous. Mr. Accum, in his Treatise on Culinary Poisons, has stigmatized this process as "fraudulent," but, in our opinion, most unjustly. The bakers would never adopt it but from necessity: when good yeast cannot be procured, it forms an admirable and perfectly harmless substitute; costing the baker more, it diminishes his profit, while the consumer is benefited by the bread retaining the solid matter, which by the process of fermentation is dissipated in the form of alcohol and carbonic acid gas.
—Luke Hebert, The Engineer’s and Mechanic’s Encyclopedia, 1849, vol.1, p.239, article "Bread"

Buckley's cough syrup from Canada today uses ammonium carbonate as an active ingredient intended to help relieve symptoms of bronchitis.

It is also used as an emetic.

Ammonium carbonate is also found in smokeless tobacco products, such as Skoal.

See also