I now have a few MMO anodes on a titanium substrate. I tried one of these in a small bromate cell.
Experimental conditions:
50 grams of KBr dissolved in lukewarm water, topped up to appr. 100 ml.
200 mg or so of K2Cr2O7 dissolved in hot water and added to the solution of KBr.
Total volume is around 100 ml.
I transferred this to a sealed bottle (Schott Duran, with the cap modified such that the anode, cathode and a litte PVC tube for gas release can be
pressed through the cap). No mists and sprays were coming out of the bottle during electrolysis.
I ran the cell for 2 hours at a power supply of 5 volts, which delivered 3.5 amperes.
Cell became quite hot, I could just stand the touching of the bottle. It must have been somewhere between 60 and 70 C in the cell.
Anode size: 80 mm x 20 mm DeNora mesh welded on a 1 cm wide titanium strap (free anode area is appr. 60 mm x 20 mm).
Cathode: 80 mm x 20 mm titanium strip.
After 2 hours, I already had a nice layer of white KBrO3 in the cell, but to my shock, there also were thick green flocculent pieces of material
floating around in the liquid, and also dark spots in the layer of KBrO3
The titanium strap of the MMO anode is severely corroded, especially at the place where the MMO mesh is welded to the titanium strap. I immediately
switched off the cell and inspected the anode. The titanium strap was covered by some greyish/green goop, which simply could be wiped off with a
finger. The MMO mesh itself still is in perfect condition.
So, for making KBrO3, stick to graphite, or if you can afford it, use platinum. The MMO coating is capable of handling bromide/bromine/bromate, but
the titanium substrate isn't. There might be other MMO anodes around with other substrate metal.
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I used this same MMO anode already for making small quantities of chlorate and it worked perfectly in the same cell with 30 grams of KCl dissolved in
luke warm water and topped up to 100 ml and some K2Cr2O7 added. Current was between 3 and 3.5 ampere, just as in the bromate cell.
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