Ammonium carbonate

Ammonium carbonate is a salt with the chemical formula (NH4)2CO3. Since it readily degrades to gaseous ammonia and carbon dioxide upon heating, it is used as a leavening agent and also as smelling salt. It is also known as baker's ammonia and was a predecessor to the more modern leavening agents baking soda and baking powder. It is a component of what was formerly known as sal volatile and salt of hartshorn[1], and produces a pungent smell when baked.

Ammonium carbonate
Names
IUPAC name
Ammonium carbonate
Other names
  • baker's ammonia
  • sal volatile
  • salt of hartshorn
  • E503
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard 100.007.326
EC Number
  • 233-786-0
E number E503(i) (acidity regulators, ...)
UNII
UN number 3077
Properties
(NH4)2CO3
Molar mass 96.09 g/mol
Appearance White powder
Density 1.50 g/cm3
Melting point 58 °C (136 °F; 331 K)
Boiling point Decomposes
25g/100ml(20°C),decomposes in hot water
-42.50·10−6 cm3/mol
Hazards
Main hazards Irritant
Safety data sheet External MSDS
GHS pictograms
GHS Signal word Warning
GHS hazard statements
H302, H319
Related compounds
Other anions
Ammonium bicarbonate
Ammonium carbamate
Other cations
Sodium carbonate
Potassium carbonate
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Infobox references

Production

Ammonium carbonate is produced by combining carbon dioxide and aqueous ammonia. About 80,000 tons/year were produced as of 1997.[1]

Decomposition

Ammonium carbonate slowly decomposes at standard temperature and pressure through two pathways. Thus any initially pure sample of ammonium carbonate will soon become a mixture including various byproducts.

Ammonium carbonate can spontaneously decompose into ammonium bicarbonate and ammonia:

(NH4)2CO3 → NH4HCO3 + NH3

Which further decompose to carbon dioxide, water and another molecule of ammonia:

NH4HCO3 → H2O + CO2 + NH3

Uses

Leavening agent

Ammonium carbonate may be used as a leavening agent in traditional recipes, particularly those from northern Europe and Scandinavia (e.g. Speculoos, Tunnbröd or Lebkuchen). It was the precursor to today's more commonly used baking powder.

Originally made from ground deer horn and called hartshorn, today it is called baker's ammonia. It is prepared by the sublimation of a mixture of ammonium sulfate and calcium carbonate and occurs as a white powder or a hard, white or translucent mass.[2] It acts as a heat activated leavening agent and breaks down into carbon dioxide (leavening), ammonia (which needs to dissipate) and water. It is sometimes combined with sodium bicarbonate to mimic as a double acting baking powder and to help mask any ammonia smell not baked out.

It also serves as an acidity regulator and has the E number E503. It can be replaced with baking powder, but this may affect both the taste and texture of the finished product. Baker's ammonia should be used to create thin dry baked goods like crackers and cookies. This allows the strong ammonia smell to bake out. It should not be used to make moist baked items like cake since ammonia is hydrophilic and will leave a strong bitter taste.

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.[3]

Other uses

Ammonium carbonate is the main component of smelling salts, although the commercial scale of their production is small. 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. It is also found in smokeless tobacco products, such as Skoal, and it is used in aqueous solution as a photographic lens cleaning agent, such as Eastman Kodak's "Kodak Lens Cleaner."

gollark: Hold on.
gollark: We have to make turtles at this dedicated facility. Turtles CAN'T automatically configure machines.
gollark: Unfortunately, that isn't practical.
gollark: I was thinking that, but turtles are quite æ to work with.
gollark: I MADE a bunch, but they are in storage.

See also

References

  1. Karl-Heinz Zapp (2012). "Ammonium Compounds". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a02_243.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. "CFR - Code of Federal Regulations Title 21". www.accessdata.fda.gov. Retrieved 2018-02-07.
  3. "Bread". The Engineer's and Mechanic's Encyclopedia. 1. Luke Hebert. 1849. p. 239.
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