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Ammonia fountain

This demonstration experiment can be used to illustrate the very high solubility in water of ammonia. Ammonia solution is seen to be alkaline and various indicator colour changes can be demonstrated. A flask, fitted with a glass jet, is filled with dry ammonia. Injecting water into the flask dissolves the ammonia and causes a fountain via the jet.

To view a video clip of this demonstration experiment, click here.

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Lesson organisation

The demonstration itself takes only a few minutes but needs careful advance preparation. With co-operative classes some of the preparation can be woven into the lesson so that the demonstration becomes the focal point.

Apparatus and chemicals

Eye protection

Access to a fume cupboard

For the fountain demonstration itself:

Flask, 500 cm3 or 1 dm3 which is completely dry (see note 1)
Rubber stopper, plain, to fit the flask
Two-holed rubber stopper to fit the flask fitted with a glass jet (see note 2)
Plastic syringe (10 cm3)
Trough or large beaker which can hold more water than the flask
Stand, clamp and boss along with a heavy weight or bench clamp to avoid apparatus toppling over
White board or sheet of card to act as a background to improve visibility
Acid-alkali indicator (e.g. Universal Indicator)

For preparing the dry ammonia:

Access to a fume cupboard
Stand, clamp and boss
Boiling-tube fitted with a one-holed rubber stopper holding a drying tube.
One-holed rubber stopper to fit the drying tube, fitted with a short length of glass delivery tube
Length of rubber delivery tube
Bunsen burner
Heat resistant mat
Ammonium chloride (Harmful), 5 g
Calcium hydroxide (Irritant), 5 g
Small lumps of calcium oxide (Irritant) as drying agent - sufficient for the drying tube (see note 4)

Technical notes

Ammonium chloride (Harmful) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 9A
Calcium hydroxide (Irritant) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 18
Calcium oxide (Irritant) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 18
Ammonia gas (Toxic, Dangerous for the environment) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 5.

1 Use a round-bottom borosilicate flask or a thick-walled Buchner flask for this demonstration (other flasks may implode). Check carefully that the flask has no small cracks. Ensure that the flask is clean and scrupulously dry. The best way to achieve this is to put it in a glassware drying cabinet (or alternative) for an hour or so before it is required. Take it out and stopper it (with a dry stopper!) just before it is filled with ammonia. Even slight dampness will result in failure of the demonstration.

2 Take the two-holed stopper that fits the flask and insert the glass tube, which has been drawn out into a jet, through one of the holes. The glass tube must fit tightly into the rubber stopper – take great care. Insert a cork borer slightly larger than the diameter of the tube through the hole. Insert the tube, and reverse the cork borer. A 1 cm3 graduated pipette could be used as the glass jet. The tip of the jet should be positioned so that it is in the centre of the flask when the stopper is in place. About 20 cm of tube should protrude out of the flask. See second diagram.

3 Select a syringe which will fit tightly into the second hole of the two-holed stopper.

4 The drying agent, calcium oxide (corrosive) should be freshly prepared.

5 If this demonstration is to be repeated in future, it is worth making up a set of apparatus to keep for this specific purpose.

Procedure

Preparing dry ammonia and filling the flask

HEALTH & SAFETY: Wear eye-protection and work in a fume cupboard. Ammonia is Toxic and Dangerous for the environment.

This stage could form part of the demonstration.

a Set up the boiling-tube and drying-tube as shown in the diagram.

Ammonia fountain I

b Ensure that the flask is completely dry and clamp it in an inverted position.
Arrange a delivery tube for upward delivery of the ammonia into the flask (ammonia is less dense than air).

c Half-fill the drying tube with lumps of calcium oxide and half-fill the boiling tube with a solid mixture of calcium hydroxide and ammonium chloride. Care - the two solids begin to react immediately on mixing, and ammonia gas is evolved.

d Gently warm the contents of the boiling tube for a few minutes with a small, blue, Bunsen flame.

e Allow ammonia gas to pass through the drying tube into the upturned flask. The water vapour in the ammonia gas is removed by the calcium oxide.

f Check that the flask is full of ammonia by holding barely damp Universal Indicator (or red Litmus) paper near the open neck of the flask and look for an alkaline indication. If in doubt, continue filling the flask for a little longer.

g Stopper the flask with the plain, dry stopper.

It is very important that no water comes into contact with the ammonia until all preparations are complete.

h Fill the trough (or large beaker) with enough water to fill the fountain flask and add enough indicator to give an easily visible colour - this will be much more than is normally used for a titration. If preferred, add a little dilute acid so that the indicator starts in its acid colour.

The demonstration

a Half-fill the syringe with water, dry the nozzle and carefully fit it into the second hole of the two-holed stopper (see diagram). Ammonia fountain 2

b Remove the plain stopper from the inverted gas-filled flask and quickly fit the stopper which holds the jet and syringe. Be careful not to prematurely inject water from the syringe.

c Clamp (or get an assistant to hold) the flask over the trough or beaker of water so that the protruding glass tube is well below the water level. If clamping, bear in mind that the flask will be heavy when filled with water so take care that it will not overbalance.

d Use the syringe to squirt a few cm3 of water into the flask and gently swirl to dissolve some of the ammonia gas.

e As the gas dissolves, a partial vacuum forms inside the flask and the external air pressure will force water up the tube and through the jet - forming a fountain (see first diagram). The ammonia gas dissolves in the water emerging from the jet and the indicator changes colour.

f The fountain continues for some minutes, depending on the size of the flask and the width of the jet. When the fountain finishes, a bubble of gas remains. This is air and its volume gives an indication of how well the flask was originally filled.

Additional notes on procedure

When doing the demonstration, ensure that the flask is securely clamped and that the flask and clamp stand assembly cannot topple over when the flask fills with liquid.

If you acidify the water in the trough, use only a few drops of acid. If you use too much, the fountain will show the alkali colour of the indicator at first and then change to the acid colour when all the ammonia has been neutralised. (Alternatively you might consider letting this happen and making a point of it.)

Teaching notes

This is the equation for the preparation of ammonia:

NH4Cl(s) + Ca(OH)2(s) → NH3(g) + CaCl2(s) + H2O(g)

Why is ammonia solution alkaline?

Ammonia dissolves freely in water (1 cm3 of water dissolves at least 800 cm3 of ammonia under normal laboratory conditions). It also reacts reversibly with it.

NH3(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq)

It is the presence of OH- ions which make the solution alkaline.

Why use calcium oxide for drying ammonia?

Ammonia will react with most other common drying agents such as concentrated sulfuric acid and calcium chloride.

Health and Safety checked, November 2006

Updated 12 Feb 2009

Average rating: 4 out of 5

Your reviews

It is much easier to generate ammonia using a simple apparatus where conc ammonia solution is run on to sodium hydroxide pellets. This produces a copious supply of dry ammonia gas!

Submitted by: Frank Harriss on 17 April 2008

Cool

Submitted by: Wilbur on 7 August 2007

This demo is so cool!

Submitted by: Evan on 21 January 2008

We had about 4 tries, and still haven't got it to work - and we don't know what is going wrong!
Help, if you can............

Submitted by: Johan Alexandra Grimshaw on 18 December 2008

Helped me a lot with my chemistry homework! Cheers, but can you include some real life pictures of the fountain next time.

Submitted by: Rohan on 26 June 2008

You should put the fountain experiment containing sulphur dioxide on - I can't get it anywhere else.

Submitted by: gillian on 11 November 2008

I think this is best site especially for undergraduates and project students. Thanks

Submitted by: Samaila Audu Jovial on 10 November 2008

Great demonstration! I had to tweak it a little due to the materials we had in the lab but it worked wonderfully!

Submitted by: Kristina Moore on 17 November 2008

it was well detailed and has a good health and safety method

Submitted by: mr Gabreil on 17 November 2008

I think it should be specified that this particular diagram is meant for the fountain experiment.

Submitted by: Yinksy on 14 January 2009

Cool.....Thnx for such a beautiful demonstration.

Submitted by: Arijit on 27 January 2009

Needs more laboratory feeling.

Submitted by: animesh on 24 April 2009

I love the experiment, it is very demonstrative.

Submitted by: Adejumo Samuel on 28 May 2009

Very nice approach. Easy of doing too. Thanks

Submitted by: Dr Abhishek Mule on 24 September 2009

I would try using litmus solution rather than universal indicator. The change in colour is more
pronounced.

Submitted by: Geoffrey Henden Hill BSc (Hons) on 1 November 2009

It worked for the very first time...thanx for the ideas and briefings.

Submitted by: sagar on 24 November 2009

Short cut: hold round-bottomed flask under hottap for 1 minute. Add 3ml conc.ammonia to flask.Insert bung and waterjet into flask.Invert over litre beaker of water.
IT WORKS!

Submitted by: arnie neale on 24 February 2010

I love physics and chemistry very much!

Submitted by: wisdom obodo on 1 March 2010

i have done this demonstration for senior high school classes for some years - works beautifully.
However, to generate the ammonia I just hold the flask over conc. ammonia. I heat the conc. ammonia (in a fume cupboard of course) and catch the fumes!!!!! Not sure how that fits into Health & Safety these days but makes a great fountain. Doesn't seem to matter that the ammonia is not dry.

Submitted by: Dawn Laurence on 1 March 2010

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