Packaging and storage
Preserve in tight, light-resistant containers, and store at controlled room temperature.
Labeling
Label it to indicate that it is intended for use in compounding topical and periodontal dosage forms only.
Identification
Dissolve 0.5 g in a mixture of 50 mL of water and 3 mL of hydrochloric acid: this solution meets the requirements for the
Ferric Salts test under
Iron 191.
Limit of insoluble matter
Transfer 10 g in a covered beaker, and dissolve in a mixture of 100 mL of water and 5 mL of sulfuric acid. Heat to boiling, and warm on a steam bath for 1 hour. Filter the hot solution through a tared sintered-glass crucible of fine porosity. Wash the beaker and the filter with hot water, dry the crucible at 105
, cool in a desiccator, and weigh: not more than 2 mg of insoluble matter is found (0.02%).
Limit of chloride
Dissolve 1 g by warming with a mixture of 10 mL of water and 1 mL of nitric acid, add 4 mL of additional nitric acid, and dilute with water to 50 mL. To 25 mL of this solution add 1 mL of phosphoric acid and 1 mL of
silver nitrate TS. Any turbidity does not exceed that produced in a control containing 0.01 mg of chloride ion (Cl), 1 mL of nitric acid, 1 mL of phosphoric acid, and 1 mL of
silver nitrate TS (0.002%).
Limit of ferrous iron
Dissolve 4 g by warming with 50 mL of dilute sulfuric acid (1 in 10), cool, and titrate with 0.1 N potassium permanganate: not more than 0.16 mL is required to produce a permanent pink color (0.02% as Fe++).
Limit of copper and zinc
[NOTEIf the reagents used in the tests for
Copper and
Zinc contain excessive amounts of copper and zinc, then they should first be purified by extracting with
Dithizone Extraction Solution (see
Lead 251).
]
Copper
Dissolve 1.2 g in 100 mL of water. To 10 mL of this test solution add 50 mL of a solution containing 5 g of ammonium tartrate and 5 mL of ammonium hydroxide. Add 10 mL of
Standard Dithizone Solution (see
Lead 251), shake for 2 minutes, draw off the dithizone layer, and compare the pink color with that in a control containing 6 µg of copper ion (Cu) and treated exactly as the 10-mL portion of test solution. If the color in the test solution is less than that in the control, then less than 0.005% of Cu and of Zn is found and the test for
Zinc is not necessary. If the color in the test solution is more than that in the control, add 15 mL of dilute hydrochloric acid (1 in 250), and shake for 2 minutes. Draw off the dithizone solution, and shake with a second 15 mL of dilute hydrochloric acid (1 in 250) for 2 minutes.
[NOTEDraw off the dithizone, combine the two acid extracts, and reserve for the test for
Zinc.
] Any pink color in the dithizone solution is not darker than that in the control solution treated exactly as the test solution (0.005%).
Zinc
To the combined acid extracts saved from the test for
Copper, add sufficient 0.5 M sodium acetate to bring the pH to between 5.0 and 5.5, and then add 1 mL of 0.1 N sodium thiosulfate. Add 10 mL of
Standard Dithizone Solution (see
Lead 251), shake for 2 minutes, and allow the layers to separate. Draw off the dithizone layer, and discard the water layer. Any pink color in the dithizone layer is not greater than that in a control prepared by adding 0.006 mg of zinc ion (Zn) to the combined acid extracts from the control used in the test for
Copper (0.005%).
Limit of nitrate
Dissolve 10 g in 100 mL of dilute sulfuric acid (1 in 100), heat to boiling, and pour, slowly, into a mixture of 140 mL of water and 50 mL of ammonium hydroxide. Pass through a folded filter while still hot, wash the filter with hot water until the volume of filtrate is 300 mL, mix, and cool. To 15 mL of the diluted filtrate add 1 mL of sodium chloride solution (1 in 200), 0.10 mL of indigo carmine TS, and 15 mL of sulfuric acid. The blue color is not completely discharged at the end of 5 minutes (0.01%).
Substances not precipitated by ammonia
Evaporate to dryness 30 mL of the diluted filtrate obtained in the test for Limit of nitrate, and ignite gently: the weight of residue does not exceed 1 mg (0.1%).
Assay
Transfer about 700 mg of Ferric Sulfate, accurately weighed, to a glass-stoppered conical flask. Add a mixture of 50 mL of water and 3 mL of hydrochloric acid, and swirl to dissolve. Add 3 g of potassium iodide, insert the stopper into the flask, and allow to stand in the dark for 30 minutes. Then add 100 mL of water, and titrate the liberated iodine with 0.1 N sodium thiosulfate VS, adding starch TS as the endpoint is approached. Each mL of 0.1 N sodium thiosulfate is equivalent to 19.994 mg of ferric sulfate [Fe2(SO4)3].