COVER THE PAN!!! unless you want a mess to clean up.
Also, just go to the laundry section of a grocery store and grab some arm and hammer super washing soda. Its like 2 bucks for 8oz. No fuss no muss, already carbonate.
COVER THE PAN!!! unless you want a mess to clean up.
Also, just go to the laundry section of a grocery store and grab some arm and hammer super washing soda. Its like 2 bucks for 8oz. No fuss no muss, already carbonate.
Point of information: washing soda is largely sodium carbonate decahydrate. So washing soda contains up to 63% water. Roasting baking soda gives anhydrous product. This may be of relevance in dry techniques or if doing quantitative stuff.
"When crystallised from water in the ordinary way (below 32.0degC) the decahydrate Na2CO3.10H2O (soda crystals, washing soda) is formed in large transparent crystals. This salt is efflorescent, gradually forming the monohydrate when exposed to air; long exposure to air produces some bicarbonate. When heated it melts at 35degC, and on further heating deposits the monohydrate." (From "Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry", F. Sherwood Taylor, 1956.)
Depending on how much you are converting - Swim does about 200g at a time and it takes about 5-10 mins on the stove top -you can tell when its done as it gets really fine and powdery, just remember to stir it to break up the small lumps.
The best method to tell when its done is to weigh it before and then weigh it after, it should weigh around a third less. Cant remember the correct percentage off hand but the stove top is much quicker than the oven.
100g of baking soda should produce 73.8g of sodium carbonate monohydrate or 63g of anhydrous sodium carbonate. But it's a bit late and I did the MW's in my head.
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