Potassium thiocyanate is the chemical compound with the molecular formula KSCN. It is an important salt of the thiocyanateanion, one of the pseudohalides. The compound has a low melting point relative to most other inorganic salts.
Uses
Chemical synthesis
Aqueous KSCN reacts almost quantitatively with Pb(NO3)2 to give Pb(SCN)2, which has been used to convert acyl chlorides to isothiocyanates.[2]
KSCN is also the starting product for the synthesis of carbonyl sulfide.
Special effects
Dilute aqueous KSCN is occasionally used for moderately realistic blood effects in film and theatre. It can be painted onto a surface or kept as a colorless solution. When in contact with ferric chloride solution (or other solutions containing Fe3+), the product of the reaction is a solution with a blood red colour, due to the formation of the thiocyanatoironcomplex ion. Thus this chemical is often used to create the effect of 'stigmata'. Because both solutions are colorless, they can be placed separately on each hand. When the hands are brought into contact, the solutions react and the effect looks remarkably like stigmata.[citation needed]
Laboratory
The reaction with Fe3+ mentioned above is used as a test for Fe3+ ions in the laboratory.
Law enforcement
Approximate cocaine purity can be determined using 1 mL 2% cupric sulphate pentahydrate in dilute HCl, 1 mL 2% potassium thiocyanate and 2 mL of chloroform. The shade of brown shown by the chloroform is proportional to the cocaine content. This test is not cross sensitive to heroin, methamphetamine, benzocaine, procaine and a number of other drugs but other chemicals could cause false positives.[5]
^Travnikoff B (1 April 1983). "Semiquantitative screening test for cocaine". Analytical Chemistry. 55 (4): 795–796. doi:10.1021/ac00255a048. ISSN0003-2700.