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Author: Subject: Graphite Substrate Lead Dioxide anode
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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 07:57
Graphite Substrate Lead Dioxide anode


Hi All,

I found the cost of Pt anode for perchlorate cells so high and I am searching for other solutions. I like to share my findings since it might help others.

I think lead dioxide anodes are very good solutions but their cost on internet is still high.

I found three methods to make lead dioxide anode:
1- Burn lead with propane torch to have lead dioxide : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXgzEXjdoWw
I am not sure if this would work or not !
3- electroplating Titanium substrate with lead dioxide on it.
2- electroplating graphite substrate with lead dioxide using electrolysis : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7bpoXKak-4

The second method is called Graphite Substrate Lead Dioxide anode "GSLD". It is discussed in details in the attached PDF. The setup looks like this :

Capture.PNG - 64kB

The second video above has implemented the same setup and achieved a very nice anode.

some pictures for professional setup and anodes for motivation :

tank1.jpg - 11kB
anode1.jpg - 9kB

tank2.jpg - 9kB
anode2.jpg - 5kB

I think this process doesn't cost much compared to buying the anode from amazon or ebay. I also like the idea of controlling the thickness of the PbO2 layer. I found anodes on internet with 1 millimeters PbO2 layer but it was over $60.

I wonder if I can use magnetic stirrer to circulate the electrolyte instead of rotating the anode. This would make the setup even more simpler.
whats your idea?


More references :
http://www.apcforum.net/forums/blog/swede/index.php?showentr...
http://www.oocities.org/capecanaveral/campus/5361/chlorate/l...


Attachment: HowToMakeSodiumPerchlorate.pdf (211kB)
This file has been downloaded 3740 times


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Detonationology
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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 08:41


The idea of having the electrode attached to stirrer it quite innovative; however, I can see it being a real pain to maintain. Especially with chlorates and perchlorates, corrosion can be a big problem. It would only take a few days for the motor in the overhead stirrer to burn or short out.
Quote: Originally posted by ecos  

1- Burn lead with propane torch to have lead dioxide. I am not sure if this would work or not!

I think this would be very optimistic for this to work effectively unless the Pb is atomized or combusted with an oxidizer.




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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 10:35


Quote: Originally posted by Detonationology  
The idea of having the electrode attached to stirrer it quite innovative; however, I can see it being a real pain to maintain. Especially with chlorates and perchlorates, corrosion can be a big problem. It would only take a few days for the motor in the overhead stirrer to burn or short out.
Quote: Originally posted by ecos  

1- Burn lead with propane torch to have lead dioxide. I am not sure if this would work or not!

I think this would be very optimistic for this to work effectively unless the Pb is atomized or combusted with an oxidizer.


This process is for plating the graphite anode with PbO2. This process takes hours.
I am not alking about spinning the anode in chlorate cell :).

Fan motor will not burn if you left it run for days :)
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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 11:22


Quote: Originally posted by ecos  
Quote: Originally posted by Detonationology  
The idea of having the electrode attached to stirrer it quite innovative; however, I can see it being a real pain to maintain. Especially with chlorates and perchlorates, corrosion can be a big problem. It would only take a few days for the motor in the overhead stirrer to burn or short out.
Quote: Originally posted by ecos  

1- Burn lead with propane torch to have lead dioxide. I am not sure if this would work or not!

I think this would be very optimistic for this to work effectively unless the Pb is atomized or combusted with an oxidizer.


This process is for plating the graphite anode with PbO2. This process takes hours.
I am not alking about spinning the anode in chlorate cell :).

Fan motor will not burn if you left it run for days :)

Your info is lucid, I just confused myself with another thread I had open. Sorry for my prior input. Wouldn't copper also precipitate onto the graphite rod?

[Edited on 11-5-2015 by Detonationology]




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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 11:58


Quote: Originally posted by Detonationology  
The idea of having the electrode attached to stirrer it quite innovative..

It's a fairly well tried and trusted technique to minimise pinholing caused by stubborn bubbles adhering to the anode . . .

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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 12:11


I drew that crappy picture of your setup in the 90's of the previous century. Never expected to see it show up again 15+ years later! Most of the rest of that pdf is from other sources though.

Copper does plates out, but on the cathode, not on the anode. In fact, the very function of the copper is to prevent lead from being plated out. The copper preferentially plates out and forms a thin, well-adherent layer on the cathode. If you don't add the copper, a spungy voluminous mess of lead will plate out on the cathode. This contaminates the cell and causes short circuits.

The original paper I got the method from also included a method to replenish the copper and lead in the plating electrolyte by circulating it through a system where it first passes through a tank with a mixture of PbO and CuCO3, then through a pH adjustment stage and then back in the cell. I'll see if I can find a dig up a copy of the paper and post it.

It is not really necessary though if you have enough plating solution and are not plating a very thick layer. The concentration of lead will only drop very little.

The anodes I got were more shiny than the one in that video. I recall they looked like they were made from obsidian.

[Edited on 5-11-2015 by phlogiston]




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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 12:26


"The most important use of lead dioxide is as the cathode of lead acid batteries."
Is the cathode actually plated with lead oxide, or is it a product formed by the reaction of the battery?




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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 15:18


Quote: Originally posted by phlogiston  
I drew that crappy picture of your setup in the 90's of the previous century. Never expected to see it show up again 15+ years later! Most of the rest of that pdf is from other sources though.

Copper does plates out, but on the cathode, not on the anode. In fact, the very function of the copper is to prevent lead from being plated out. The copper preferentially plates out and forms a thin, well-adherent layer on the cathode. If you don't add the copper, a spungy voluminous mess of lead will plate out on the cathode. This contaminates the cell and causes short circuits.

The original paper I got the method from also included a method to replenish the copper and lead in the plating electrolyte by circulating it through a system where it first passes through a tank with a mixture of PbO and CuCO3, then through a pH adjustment stage and then back in the cell. I'll see if I can find a dig up a copy of the paper and post it.

It is not really necessary though if you have enough plating solution and are not plating a very thick layer. The concentration of lead will only drop very little.

The anodes I got were more shiny than the one in that video. I recall they looked like they were made from obsidian.

[Edited on 5-11-2015 by phlogiston]


It is very interesting to know that you draw that picture :).
I think this topic is very important due to the high cost of lead or platinum anode

An 10cm x 10cm anode covered with 1mm PbO2 costs $103 : Link

I was amazed when I know about GSLD. I can get carbon rods from batteries and electroplate them. It would be cheaper and I can make thicker layer. It was very nice to find a video for the whole process.

Didn't you think to circulate the electrolyte using magnetic stirrer ? this would make the setup more simpler.
I think this would avoid the forming of bubbles as well. I am not sure.

I am looking forward for your answer and pictures


[Edited on 5-11-2015 by ecos]
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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 16:02


This is great. I wish I had known about GSLD earlier!
This makes a homemade electrochemical cell so much more viable.

I wonder if the electrode will resist concentrated sulfuric acid?

Also, how many amps are you putting through a percolate cell?
Instead of hours at 2A maybe one can get the chemistry done in minutes using some 100Amps.
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[*] posted on 5-11-2015 at 17:00


I highly recommend reading a couple of the stickies at the top of the Techno-chemistry section. This thread is what brought me to SM.

https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=50...

I just wish all the links in it still pointed to something.

[Edited on 6-11-2015 by hyfalcon]
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[*] posted on 6-11-2015 at 05:48


Quote: Originally posted by Aurium  
This is great. I wish I had known about GSLD earlier!
This makes a homemade electrochemical cell so much more viable.

I wonder if the electrode will resist concentrated sulfuric acid?

Also, how many amps are you putting through a percolate cell?
Instead of hours at 2A maybe one can get the chemistry done in minutes using some 100Amps.


Depending on quantity, you put 100 amps through your electrolyte and it will boil. You don't want more than 200-400mA per square centimeter dependent upon electrode material. Any more than that causes undue erosion of your anode.
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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 02:11


I am thinking to make PbO2 anode using lead dioxide spongy in battery.
I will collect it and then melt it to form a solid electrode then use it for electrolysis.

Even if i have Pb within my PbO2 this won't harm since it would be oxidized from air while melting.

I think this process is toxic. but it should give me high thickness PbO2 electrode.

would this work ? I think it is basic idea

[Edited on 24-12-2015 by ecos]

19.15.jpg - 138kB
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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 06:39


No. PbO<sub>2</sub> decomposes when heated



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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 08:06


Quote: Originally posted by Detonationology  
"The most important use of lead dioxide is as the cathode of lead acid batteries."
Is the cathode actually plated with lead oxide, or is it a product formed by the reaction of the battery?


The first commercial lead-acid battery, by Gaston Planté, consisted of two sheets of pure lead immersed in the acid electrolyte.

The breakthrough that made lead-acid batteries practical for widespread use was Camille Faure's development of the lead dioxide paste electrode. This consisted of a lead grid lattice, into which a lead oxide paste was pressed, forming a plate.

Here is a page discussing paste electrode manufacture today:
https://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/battery_manufacturing/plate...

So the answer is both can be used, but the paste method makes superior batteries.
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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 08:41


Then we have PbO2 paste inside car battery.
The key point now is to transfer this paste to a rigid electrode !
phlogiston state that , PbO2 will decompose while heating !
do I need to make electroplating or there is a better technique ?
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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 11:00


Quote: Originally posted by ecos  
Then we have PbO2 paste inside car battery.
The key point now is to transfer this paste to a rigid electrode !
phlogiston state that , PbO2 will decompose while heating !
do I need to make electroplating or there is a better technique ?

You could also make a porous clay pot (gardening flower pot) to hold the paste and inserted inside the Pb or metallic net rolled in cylinder...




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[*] posted on 24-12-2015 at 15:55


do you mean something like that :
ldslda.jpg - 24kB

comment from the website :

Quote:

with anodes lasting from hours to months. Pieces of Lead Dioxide were put into a porous plastic bag/wrap. A Graphite rod was placed on top of the contents of the bag/wrap and the contents + part of the Graphite rod was plated. The bag/wrap used in the picture was mesh material used in the garden to keep down weeds.


as you can read, it will not last for long time and not reliable.
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 09:34


Quote: Originally posted by ecos  
do you mean something like that :


comment from the website :

Quote:

with anodes lasting from hours to months. Pieces of Lead Dioxide were put into a porous plastic bag/wrap. A Graphite rod was placed on top of the contents of the bag/wrap and the contents + part of the Graphite rod was plated. The bag/wrap used in the picture was mesh material used in the garden to keep down weeds.


as you can read, it will not last for long time and not reliable.

No not like that...a bag will not last long vs a backed clay gardening pot...
I was thinking to something like this:


lead dioxide cell.jpg - 122kB




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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 17:00


I think your idea is based on the very tiny holes in the pot will not allow the PbO2 to be consumed in solution , am i right?

I think the problem here will be the current will be very small due to the small surface area of PbO2. do you agree?
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 17:24


That is indeed a bit the idea...unsoluble PbO2 paste will remain inside the pot while ions will flow through the porous clay.

The surface will be the inner surface of the clay pot...thus more than your PbO2 plated electrode.
True that the diffusion of the ions through clay may be slightly more limiting than free diffusion in open media...




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[*] posted on 1-1-2016 at 06:15


Ok , It make sense now.

for the lead grid/wire , can it be substituted with metals like SS , Al, Cu ?
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[*] posted on 1-1-2016 at 06:57


Quote: Originally posted by ecos  
Ok , It make sense now.

for the lead grid/wire , can it be substituted with metals like SS , Al, Cu ?


The lead grid I had in mind would be rolled in cylinder, the diagram I posted is a kind of open cut of the system.

The idea is that the PbO2 paste is in contact with Pb so you get the couple PbO2/Pb in the case some side reaction occurs.

The paste will hold intimate with the grid and if it peals off, it simply remains where it is because it can't fall away --> remains in place...this will circumvent by a simple mechanical way the pealing off effect of Pb/PbO2 electrodes...

In principle this system will remain serviceable for long...as long as the PbO2 remains in the pot --> depends on how log the clay pot will resist electrochemical cell run conditions and how long it will remain integer vs hot saline solution. Some glazed clay do form micro cracks in saline/acidic/basic media...here the pot has to be glazedless...because glazed pot will be much less porous to ions...

The use of Al especially (or Cu) is forbidden in the conductive saline media...they would sacrificially corrode first.
Cu may eventually be used out of the mix (inside the Pb wire and over in the air)

Stainless Steel, if it is what you mean by SS, may be tested, but usually it doesn't like chloride, hypochlorite in acidic or basic media...so maybe just like the Copper --> out of the mix (inside the Pb wire and over in the air) but this may be costly vs Copper pipe and electrical wire...






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[*] posted on 6-1-2016 at 18:04


Quote: Originally posted by ecos  

I am looking forward for your answer and pictures


I found one of my first anodes made with this method. The coating was a bit thin, but it looks quite shiny and free of pinholes. Never tested this particular one in an actual cell, but later ones held up quite nicely and produced sufficient perchlorate for my needs (which were quite modest, just enough for a few small-scale pyrotechnics experiments).

GSLD 1 copy.jpg - 117kB




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[*] posted on 8-1-2016 at 01:53


@Phlogiston, Very interesting ! what is the dimension of this anode?

I wish I can make one.

I would like to know the current density you used for your anode.
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[*] posted on 8-1-2016 at 03:46


The graphite substrate is 8mm diameter and 60mm long.

The current density for plating the PbO2 onto the anode or the current density in the perchlorate cell?




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