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plante1999
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MnO2 on graphite rod for electrolisis of chlorate/bromate
How can I make an hard coat of MnO2 on a porous graphite/carbon rod for electrolisisi of chlorate/bromate ( a coat that wont make residu in the
electrolite)?
Thanks!
I never asked for this.
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White Yeti
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This subject has been pounded to death on this forum. If you did a little research, electrolysing a solution of manganese sulphate and sulfuric acid
with the carbon electrode as anode and copper electrode as cathode, a hard deposit of manganese dioxide will form on the carbon anode.
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plante1999
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I already have try it but the coat flake of when electrolising in a chloride sol.
I have read that a TiO2 doppant make the coat harder (make with a solube Ti III salt) , wath do you think?
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999]
I never asked for this.
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White Yeti
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Manganese dioxide is a terrible substance to use lead dioxide is much better.
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blogfast25
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Plante:
Search for it on Nurdrage's UToob channel. He has a good video on coating some metal with MnO2 (but not graphite). Could be a starting point for ya.
Yeah, and lead dioxide is sooo fantastic!
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by blogfast25]
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plante1999
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I dont want to mess with lead product ( even if I have alot of PbO2 (more than 4 pound).
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plante1999
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Does someone know were I cn get cheaply mangnese sulfate?
I have used all the self-made one.
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999]
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999]
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Mixell
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Its sometimes sold as a fertilizer on ebay, very cheaply too.
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blogfast25
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Sure you're not thinking of magnesium sulphate (Epsom Salt, or English Salt in some languages - a commong garden chemical), and not manganese
sulphate? As a fertiliser MnSO4 would really have to be used very, very sparingly, IMHO...
Plante: your best and quickest bet is probably potter's MnCO3. Sometimes on eBay...
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by blogfast25]
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plante1999
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Is the electrodeposited coat of MnO2 is suposed to e hard enough for electrolisis?
I have made some test and the coat seem to flake of , does the conssentration of Mn II can be responcible for this?
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999]
I never asked for this.
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sternman318
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Quote: Originally posted by plante1999 | Does someone know were I cn get cheaply mangnese sulfate?
I have used all the self-made one.
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999]
[Edited on 19-8-2011 by plante1999] |
http://alphachemicals.com/manganese_sulfate
Very cheap, have lots of other useful stuff aswell. I have bought a fair amount of chemicals from them, they are a great source.
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blogfast25
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Very cheap indeed, sternman.
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plante1999
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Does anyone have the quantity of H2SO4 and MnSO4 I should have in my solution for plating MnO2?
Thanks!!!
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White Yeti
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See NurdRage's video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjKYiu8eKa8
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plante1999
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I have seen it but he use thermal decomposition of Mn(NO3)2 , witch is very hard to make here ecausenitrate are very rare.
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White Yeti
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If you were patient enough to watch the whole video, you would have seen the part where he shows you how to electrodeposit manganese dioxide onto an
electrode surface.
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dann2
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Xenoid tried putting MnO2 onto gouging rods with little success.
See:
http://sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=8592&p...
Posts around 20 June 2007
The raging nurd uses Ti, it works great. No need for Cobalt Oxide IMO.
http://www.oxidizing.110mb.com/chlorate/mno2.html
RAOTFP
Dann2
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plante1999
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So plating of MnO2 on carbon rod does not work. If I take carbon/graphite powder and I mix it with Styrene than press it in a 5/16 inch inside
diameter tube with a 2000 lb press and I lets it cure for some day , should it make a suitable carbon/graphite anode?
Or mixing carbon/graphite powder with 20% furfuryl alcohol press it and fire it at 1000 C for 5 houre many time to make glassy carbon bonded graphite
anode?
[Edited on 24-8-2011 by plante1999]
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White Yeti
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Quote: Originally posted by plante1999 | So plating of MnO2 on carbon rod does not work. If I take carbon/graphite powder and I mix it with Styrene than press it in a 5/16 inch inside
diameter tube with a 2000 lb press and I lets it cure for some day , should it make a suitable carbon/graphite anode?
Or mixing carbon/graphite powder with 20% furfuryl alcohol press it and fire it at 1000 C for 5 houre many time to make glassy carbon bonded graphite
anode?
[Edited on 24-8-2011 by plante1999] |
*facepalm*
Is titanium and HCl that difficult to obtain?! Why bother with a flaky carbon substrate when you can use chemically inert titanium? Even galvanized
steel will work better as a substrate than carbon. Who cares if the substrate is resistant to chlorine, you will end up coating the substrate with a
chemically resistant coating anyway. My advice, use high carbon steel as a substrate. Why high carbon you ask? For structural integrity I say. You
know how to galvanize steel, so galvanize the high carbon steel. Coat the substrate, not with manganese dioxide, but with lead dioxide, a very thick
coat. You will then be the proud owner of a cheap, structurally sound, chemically resistant, perchlorate capable anode for producing chlorates and
perchlorates.
Yeti
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cyanureeves
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i dont know plante but if you keep up with your intresting ideas you are going to come up with something that will probably need a patent. i was
using carbon rods and just for the heck of it i tried a titanium annode and now i got about 5 times the bubbles. the bad thing is i didnt boil the
potassium chloride to separate the hypochlorite and am not producing salt,or maybe its because i'm using tap water. must titanium metal be used as a
substrate for the manganese sulfate?that manganese sulfate sure is cheap but battery crud is dirt cheap and the oxalic acid used is also cool to have.
i cant believe the "titanium kid"has every titanium compound known to man ,except titanium. i bet someone could mail you a 2 by 4 inch piece with a
single liberty postage stamp.
[Edited on 24-8-2011 by cyanureeves]
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plante1999
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Quote: Originally posted by cyanureeves | I cant believe the "titanium kid"has every titanium compound known to man ,except titanium.
[Edited on 24-8-2011 by cyanureeves] |
Very funny,(I dont have every titanium compound know to man but I have many of them) I have titanium as small piece but no titanium rod.
Titanium cannot be used as a substrate for bromate production , for titanium bromate is the hell ( in fact it is why I want bromate)
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White Yeti
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A lead dioxide coating is not that much more harmful to your health than a manganese dioxide. If you think about it, you're only depositing less than
500mg of lead dioxide, if not less. The real dangers arise when handling water soluble lead salts. Since lead dioxide is insoluble in water, it only
causes acute lead poisoning when inhaled. When a lead dioxide anode is made properly, and if the necessary health precautions are taken, it shouldn't
be a health hazard.
One thing that sould be taken into consideration is that the leftover water soluble lead salts should be disposed of properly. The best way to dispose
of them would be to bubble hydrogen sulfide through to obtain lead sulfide, which is one of the safest lead compounds to handle. Hydrogen sulfide
itself is toxic, so proper safety equipment should be worn and safety measures should be employed.
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plante1999
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The probleme isn't lead poisoning but the salt itself , I dont have more than vinegar for acetic acid and no nitrate so.....
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White Yeti
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...so use a powerful oxidizer like hydrogen peroxide or hypochlorous acid (obtained by mixing sodium hypochlorite and vinegar). That should give the
lead the umpf it needs to dissolve in a weak acid like acetic acid. The resulting salt will be lead acetate, a notoriously poisonous salt, so I hope
you have all the required safety equipment...
[Edited on 8-26-2011 by White Yeti]
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Glucose Oxidase
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MnSO4 is also a laxative sometimes sold in pharmacies try to get it from there.
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