So far, I would say no. I did find a recipe for citric acid, though: 10g citric acid for every 200 mL of dH2O. We have a table top Market Forge autoclave that needs water manually added (3.8L each time), so this has been the easiest way to clean it.
Add the mixture to the autoclave and run... a lot of the scale will come right off!
Hope this helps.
The advantages of sulfamic acid is it won't ruin anything you are descaling as opposed to acetic acid, which evaporates what you are descaling. On the other hand citric acid is weaker than the other two.
Advantage of us in sulphamic acid as a descaler is that it doesn't ruin whatever you are descaling.
According to CRC reference data, the pKa of sulfamic acid is 1.05, giving a Ka of 11.2. This is a strong acid.
H2nso3h
Sulfamic acid is a chemical compound that has many uses. It falls somewhere between sulfuric acid and sulfamide. It can decompose into many things including water.
The advantages of sulfamic acid is it won't ruin anything you are descaling as opposed to acetic acid, which evaporates what you are descaling. On the other hand citric acid is weaker than the other two.
Advantage of us in sulphamic acid as a descaler is that it doesn't ruin whatever you are descaling.
Sulfamic acid is used to clean dentures.
Sulfuric Acid
There are a few different elements in the compound of sulfamic acid. They include hydrogen, nitrogen, sulfur and oxygen.
According to CRC reference data, the pKa of sulfamic acid is 1.05, giving a Ka of 11.2. This is a strong acid.
H2nso3h
Sulfamic acid is a chemical compound that has many uses. It falls somewhere between sulfuric acid and sulfamide. It can decompose into many things including water.
Well becasue the sulfamic acid is formed in a giant, roaring volcano in hawai, the sulfamic acid slowly over 10 million years disintigrates the lime scale 1 atom at a time you can tell this by using the simple formula of s=1x10^6-2y(35.6*0.11112)/0.3455471=sulfamic acid. Beacuse the limescale atoms have strong bonds with the nucleus, it is very very hard for the sulfamic acid to break them, so the sulfamic acid gets his acid gang and they break the limescales legs. Overall the best way to remove limescale is to hit your kettle with a sledgehammer, unless you can hire a hitman to blow up your kettle. THE GAME.
No idea. I wouldn't try it.
Carbon dioxide
disadvantage: it has a pungent smell