A few weeks ago I was working with that same type of solder. I managed to create spongy lead and tin(II) chloride, both of reasonable(I think)
purity. First this solder was melted and cast into electrodes. I then electrolysed a saturated solution of sodium chloride using these electrodes.
The electrolysis was continued till the electrodes had both decomposed completly(I switched the polarity once one electrode had dissolved). The tin
was in solution as tin(II) chloride, tin hydroxide had also precipitated, and any lead present was instantly plated out due to it being a more
powerfull oxidizing agent, thus a higher reduction potential. It was necessary to scrape the lead that was plated out off the electrode many times.
The mix was a dirty grey. I added some HCl(till litmus indicated the mix was slightly acidic) and the mix cleared up.
From here the mix was filtered, the filter kept the spongy lead. I am unsure of the purity of this lead however. To the filtrate was then added
baking soda to precipitate tin(II) carbonate. The tin(II) carbonate was washed, dried and dissolved in a slight excess of HCl.
The solution was allowed to evaporate and a nice crystalline solid was obtained, tin(II) chloride.
The first time I did this experiment my tin(II) chloride was pure white. The second and third time I did this experiment my tin(II) chloride was piss
yellow while in solution. I am still working on how to remove this as it is from an unknown contamination source.
[Edited on 11-7-2004 by rogue chemist] |