In my experience, transition metal oxalates are pretty insoluble, including cobalt oxalate. Merck lists cobalt (II) oxalate as "almost insoluble in
oxalic acid". So, I'm not sure how well a direct reaction from the oxide will work, although it does sound like you've coaxed some cobalt ions into
solution.
Merck also lists cobalt (II) oxalate as "decayed on heating with aqueous KOH or Na2CO3 solution", if that helps.
What I might try, especially if the cobalt source is of lower purity, is extract and refine the cobalt as a salt like the sulfate, and then
precipitate cobalt oxalate powder using oxalic acid. You can recrystallize this from hot HCl if you want. Then, maybe try reacting it with sodium
oxalate somehow? Solubility might still be a barrier.
Cobal (III) is a pretty high oxidation state that I often hear in the context of things like elemental fluorine, and it appears to oxidize mineral
acids when dissolved in them. I'd be pretty surprised if it appeared spontaneously in such mild aqueous conditions. |