Soda Lime BP
DEFINITION
Soda Lime is a mixture of sodium hydroxide, or sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide, with
calcium hydroxide.
CHARACTERISTICS
White or grayish white granules, or it may be coloured with an indicator to show when its absorptive
capacity is exhausted. It absorbs about 20% of its weight of carbon
dioxide.
Partially soluble in water; almost completely soluble in 1M acetic acid.
IDENTIFICATION
A. When moistened with hydrochloric acid and introduced on a platinum wire into a flame, imparts a
yellow colour to the flame.
B. A solution in 1M acetic acid yields reaction C characteristic of calcium salts.
C. A suspension in water is strongly alkaline to litmus paper.
TESTS
Hardness of granules
Shake 200 g on a sieve no. 2000 for 3 minutes using a mechanical sieve shaker that reproduces in a
uniform manner the circular and tapping motion given to sieves in
manual use and has a frequency of oscillation of 282 to 288 cycles per minute. Place 50 g of
the retained material in a hardness pan 20 cm in diameter having a
concave brass bottom, 7.9 mm thick at the circumference, 3.2 mm thick at the centre and with an
inside spherical radius of curvature of 109 cm. Add 15 steel balls,
7.9 mm in diameter, and shake on the mechanical sieve shaker for 30 minutes. Remove the steel
balls, transfer the contents of the pan to a sieve no. 2000 and
again shake on the mechanical sieve shaker for 3 minutes. The material retained by the sieve weighs
not less than 37.5 g.
Size of granules
Shake 500 g on a perforated plate of nominal pore size 6.70 mm; not more than 5 g is retained.
Then shake on a sieve no. 4750; not more than 50 g is retained.
Shake the un-retained material on a sieve no. 1400; not more than 20 g passes through. Shake the
un-retained material on a sieve no. 600; not more than 7.5 g passes
through.
Loss on drying
When dried to constant weight at 105°, loses 14.0 to 21.0% of its weight. Use 1 g.
Moisture absorption
Place 10 g in an open glass dish about 50 mm in diameter
and 30 mm high in a desiccator over sulphuric acid (14%) and allow it to remain for 24 hours. The
increase in weight is not more than 7.5%.
Carbon dioxide absorption
The activity is not less than 120 minutes when determined by the following method.
Use a vertically-clamped tube of glass or other suitable transparent material
about 25 cm long and 29 to 31 mm internal diameter with closely fitting rubber bungs at each
end; the bungs are bored to receive polythene or glass tubing of
about 8 mm external diameter, the tubing being flush with the inner ends of the bungs. With
the lower bung in position, place sufficient nylon mesh support on
top of the bung to produce a bed of mesh about 10 cm deep and press a closely fitting disc of
stainless steel gauze of nominal mesh aperture about 500 µm
on top of the nylon mesh so that its surface is at right angles to the axis of the tube.
Introduce 59.8 to 60.2 g of the substance being examined onto the steel
gauze in three portions, tamping lightly after the addition of each portion. Place a second disc of
steel gauze on top, followed by a sufficient quantity of nylon mesh
such that the soda lime is kept consolidated by slight pressure when the second bung has been
inserted. The exit tube is connected to a condenser, consisting of
two 50 ml separating funnels, leading to a drying tube packed with anhydrous calcium chloride and
then to a carbon dioxide analyzer sufficiently sensitive to detect
0.2% v/v of carbon dioxide. A katharometer, calibrated for carbon dioxide and preferably used in
conjunction with a chart recorder, is suitable.
Using the gas analyzer in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions, accurately
determine the carbon dioxide content, p, as a percentage v/v, of a nominal
5% carbon dioxide mixture, the balance gas being oxygen, air or nitrogen as appropriate to the
type of gas analyzer being used. Suitable compressed gas mixtures
are available commercially. Assemble the apparatus described above and pass the gas mixture
downwards into the absorption tube at a rate of 900 cm3 per minute until
such time that the gas analyzer shows the content of carbon dioxide in the effluent gas to have
risen to 0.2% v/v. Steps should be taken to vent the effluent gas if
an oxygen-carbon dioxide mixture is being used. Record the time taken, t, in minutes. The activity
of the soda lime is given, in minutes, by the expression tp/5.
Soda Lime USP NF
Soda Lime
Soda Lime is a mixture of Calcium Hydroxide and Sodium or Potassium Hydroxide or both.
It may contain an indicator that is inert toward anesthetic gases such as Ether, Cyclopropane, and Nitrous Oxide, and that changes color when the Soda Lime no longer can absorb Carbon Dioxide.
Identification—
A: Place a granule of it on a piece of moistened red litmus paper: the paper turns blue
immediately.
B: A solution in 6 N acetic acid responds to the tests for Calcium 191 . It also imparts a yellow
color to a non-luminous flame that, when viewed through cobalt glass,
may show a violet color.
Loss on drying— Weigh accurately, in a tarred weighing bottle, about 10 g, and dry at 105 for 2
hours: it loses between 12.0% and 19.0% of its weight.
Moisture absorption— Place about 10 g in a tarred, 50-mL weighing bottle, having a diameter
of 50 mm and a height of 30 mm, and weigh. Then place the bottle,
with cover removed, for 24 hours in a closed container in which the atmosphere is maintained at 85%
relative humidity by being in equilibrium with sulfuric acid having
a specific gravity of 1.16. Weigh again: the increase in weight is not more than 7.5%.
Hardness— Screen 200 g on a mechanical sieve shaker having a frequency of oscillation of 285
± 3 cycles per minute, for 3 minutes, to remove granules both
coarser and finer than the labeled particle size. Proceed as directed in the test for Hardness under
Barium Hydroxide Lime, beginning with “Weigh 50 g of the granules.”
The percentage of Soda Lime retained on the screen is not less than 75.0, and represents the
hardness.
Carbon dioxide absorbency— Fill the lower transverse section of a U-shaped drying tube of about
15-mm internal diameter and 15-cm height with loosely packed glass wool.
Place in one arm of the tube about 5 g of anhydrous calcium chloride, and accurately weigh the tube
and the contents. Into the other arm of the tube place 9.5 g to
10.5 g of Barium Hydroxide Lime, and again weigh accurately. Insert stoppers in the open arms of the
U-tube, and connect the side tube of the arm filled with Barium
Hydroxide Lime to a calcium chloride drying tube, which in turn is connected to a suitable source of
supply of carbon dioxide. Pass the carbon dioxide through the
U-tube at a rate of 75 mL per minute for 20 minutes, accurately timed. Disconnect the U-tube, cool
to room temperature, remove the stoppers, and weigh. The increase in
weight is not less than 19.0% of the weight of Soda Lime used for the test.
Particle size— Screen 100 g for 5 minutes as directed, using a mechanical shaker. It passes
completely through a No. 2 standard-mesh sieve, and not more than
2.0% passes through a No. 40 standard-mesh sieve. Not more than 7.0% is retained on the coarse-mesh
sieve, and not more than 15.0% passes through the fine-mesh sieve
designated on the label (as agreed between the buyer and the seller.
Soda Lime Analytical Reagent
CAS Number 8006-28-8
NOTE. Soda lime is a mixture of variable proportions of sodium hydroxide with calcium oxide or
hydroxide. This reagent may or may not include an indicator.
REQUIREMENTS
Carbon dioxide absorption capacity: 19.0%
MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE
Loss on drying at 200C: 7%
Fines: 1%
Certifications :
We manufacture Bulk Drugs / API, Excipients,
Pharmaceuticals (IP/BP/USP/NF/Ph. Eur, JP/ CP), Speciality Chemicals(Pure/AR/ACS), Mineral
Fortifiers, Food Chemical Codex (FCC) and Flavour chemicals. Our manufacturing facility is
cGMP,
GLP, ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO 22000, ISO/IEC 17025, FSSC 22000, FSSAI, Kosher, HALAL,
EXCiPACT, WC,
COPP, WHO-GMP and WC certified. We are also REACH registered for export to European
countries.