I can see two potential problems.
1. If the lead dioxide layer has even so much as one tiny pinhole, the electrolyte will access the substrate and destroy it.
This is why substrates are preferred that are resistant to the corrosive effect of the electrolyte. (eg Graphite, ceramic, titatanium, platinum, etc.)
2. Even if the lead dioxide coating is perfect, contact between the lead dioxide and copper will oxidize the copper, forming a non-conductive
interface between them. This is why a layer of silver is often used in between copper and lead dioxide coatings (silver oxide being conductive). Maybe
buy one of those bottles of silver-based conductive ink? They are sold for manually painting/reparing tracks on circuit boards.
Copper - lead dioxide contact supposedly does not work well, because the lead dioxide can oxidise |