Hydroxylammonium sulfate


Hydroxylammonium sulfate is the inorganic compound with the formula 2SO4. A colorless solid, it is the sulfate salt of hydroxylamine. It is primarily used as an easily handled form of hydroxylamine, which is a volatile liquid.

Production

Hydroxylammonium sulfate is prepared industrially by protonation of hydroxylamine. The latter is produced by the hydrogenation of nitric oxide using a platinum catalyst:
Another route to is the Raschig process: aqueous ammonium nitrite is reduced by [Bisulfite|] and [Sulfur dioxide|] at 0 °C to yield a hydroxylamido-N,''N''-disulfonate anion:
This ammonium hydroxylamine disulfonate anion is then hydrolyzed to give hydroxylammonium sulfate:

Applications

Almost all hydroxylamine and its salts are used to make precursors to nylons via cyclohexanone oxime. Many aldehydes and ketones undergo the same conversion to oximes. carboxylic acids and their derivatives convert to hydroxamic acids. Isocyanates to N-hydroxyureas. Nitriles react to give amidoximes. Hydroxylammonium sulfate is also used to generate hydroxylamine-O-sulfonic acid from oleum or from chlorosulfuric acid.
Hydroxylammonium sulfate is used in the production of anti-skinning agents, pharmaceuticals, rubber, textiles, plastics and detergents. It is a radical scavenger that terminates radical polymerization reactions and serves as an antioxidant in natural rubber. 2SO4 is a starting material for some insecticides, herbicides and growth regulators. It is used in photography as a stabiliser for colour developers and as an additive in photographic emulsions in colour film.

Structure

[Image:Hydroxylammonium-sulfate-unit-cell-3D-balls.png|thumb|left]
Hydroxylammonium sulfate exists as tetrahedral cations and sulfate anions.

Safety

Hydroxylamine, which occurs widely in nature, has low toxicity. The compound is stable below 120 °C.