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Disposal of silver nitrate solid

Submitted by sat on 26 July 2015

Answer reviewed 26 February 2023

The silver nitrate waste can be stored in the same kind of container as it is supplied, i.e. a glass reagent bottle. The waste bottle should be stored with other oxidising agents or, alternatively, along with other waste chemicals, but segregated from incompatible chemicals, with secondary containment (i.e., bunded).

A note on evaporating waste nitrate solutions

Nitrate salts have the potential to decompose explosively when subjected to heat or shock, some decomposing to give the toxic brown gas, nitrogen dioxide. Contamination of nitrate salts with organic substances (e.g., alcohols) or combustible materials can also be dangerous. Therefore, we advise against the heating of waste nitrate solutions to hasten evaporation.

Recommended treatment of waste silver nitrate solution

A safer alternative to evaporation of the silver nitrate solution is to precipitate the silver as silver chloride by addition of sodium chloride solution, as follows:

  1. Prepare a saturated solution of sodium chloride. If you know the concentration and volume of the silver nitrate solution, you can calculate the number of moles of silver in solution. Sodium chloride will react in a 1:1 ratio with the silver ions to give silver chloride. Multiply the number of moles of silver nitrate by 58.44, the molecular weight of sodium chloride. Then multiply this number by 1.5, so that you have an excess of sodium chloride in solution; this will facilitate the precipitation of the silver chloride. Weigh out this amount in grams of sodium chloride and dissolve it in a minimum amount of distilled water. If you don’t know how much silver you have in solution, use an excess of a saturated solution of sodium chloride.
  2. Slowly and without stirring, add the sodium chloride solution in portions to the silver nitrate solution. With each addition of sodium chloride solution, formation of a white precipitate of silver chloride should be observable until all of the silver has been consumed. (Slow addition of the sodium chloride allows larger particles of the precipitate to form, which makes it easier to collect the solid by filtration). Continue to add the remainder, or an excess, of the sodium chloride solution, and allow the resulting mixture to settle.
  3. The silver chloride precipitate can be collected by Büchner filtration or by gravity filtration, dried, and stored for collection by a licenced waste disposal contractor.
  4. The filtrate is a solution of sodium nitrate and sodium chloride and can be washed down the sink.

When choosing a waste container, consider the following:

When using old stock chemical containers as waste containers:

Labelling waste bottles

The label of a waste bottle should include

According to the SafeWork Australia Model Code of Practice on Labelling of Workplace Hazardous Chemicals, if possible, the label of a waste bottle should also include:

Storage of Chemical Waste

References

‘Laboratory Chemical Waste Management’ The University of Vermont website https://www.uvm.edu/riskmanagement/laboratory-chemical-waste-management

‘Chemical Waste Operating Procedure’ July 2019. Sustainability website of the University of Queensland. https://sustainability.uq.edu.au/files/745/pro_ChmWste.pdf

‘Model Code of Practice: Labelling of Workplace Hazardous Chemicals’. July 2020. SafeWork Australia website. Labelling hazardous chemicals | Safe Work Australia