Junk_Enginerd
Hazard to Others
Posts: 251
Registered: 26-5-2019
Location: Sweden
Member Is Offline
|
|
Fastest way to make Iron (III) chloride without peroxide?
I want to make some magnetite, for ferrofluid and for transformer cores. As some may know, this requires iron (II)- and iron (III) chloride in a
specific ratio for best results.
The iron (II) chloride is easy enough to make. The iron (III) chloride is less so... Hydrogen peroxide is really difficult to acquire for me, so that
one is out. I know (II) chloride will eventually oxidise to (III) chloride with air exposure, but leaving a container like that open to air tends to
murder anything steel nearby, plus I'm not sure how I would tell when it has oxidised completely. If I can't be sure it's fully oxidised, it'll be
impossible to get a good ratio of the chlorides for good quality magnetite formation.
What other options are there? I've got good equipment for electrochemical processes. Is that a good route?
|
|
unionised
International Hazard
Posts: 5126
Registered: 1-11-2003
Location: UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Nitric acid would be traditional if you were doing analytical chemistry, but watch out for the NOx fumes.
Electrochemical oxidation should work fine.
In principle, there should be a distinct drop in current when the Fe(II) is used up.
Bleach and HCl would also work.
|
|
Junk_Enginerd
Hazard to Others
Posts: 251
Registered: 26-5-2019
Location: Sweden
Member Is Offline
|
|
Great, thanks! It'd also be great if you could flesh that out a little. I've got slightly too little knowledge to connect the dots myself.
How would the nitric acid approach work? Wouldn't I just set myself up for nitrates instead?
How would I best electrochemically oxidize it? If I have an iron anode and an iron cathode, I assume I would just be moving metal from anode to
cathode and not doing much to the solution... With a platinum anode, that should take care of the oxidizing, right? But how do I stop the iron ions
from just plating out on the cathode?
And bleach seems obvious now that you mention it. But I'd rather avoid adding a bunch of sodium or calcium to the mix since I'm not too confident in
my ability to remove them...
|
|
clearly_not_atara
International Hazard
Posts: 2787
Registered: 3-11-2013
Member Is Offline
Mood: Big
|
|
If you just start with iron (III) oxide and dissolve it in HCl, the product should be FeCl3. So you should be able to precipitate Fe2O3 from your
hypochlorite solution (if it doesn't spontaneously deposit) and then dissolve that in some clean HCl. Maybe wash it to remove sodium.
|
|
DraconicAcid
International Hazard
Posts: 4332
Registered: 1-2-2013
Location: The tiniest college campus ever....
Member Is Online
Mood: Semi-victorious.
|
|
Iron(II) oxidizes easily to iron(III) in basic conditions, because iron(III) hydroxide is far less soluble than iron(II) hydroxide. Add enough
ammonia to an iron(II) chloride solution to precipitate they hydroxide, let it sit exposed to air, then redissolve in hydrochloric acid. If you want
to minimize the amount of ammonium ions present, boil off excess ammonia before acidifying.
Please remember: "Filtrate" is not a verb.
Write up your lab reports the way your instructor wants them, not the way your ex-instructor wants them.
|
|
hodges
National Hazard
Posts: 525
Registered: 17-12-2003
Location: Midwest
Member Is Offline
|
|
You could always use an aquarium bubbler to bubble air through the FeCl2 to convert to FeCl3. Might not be as fast as using H2O2, but I'm guessing
will not take real long.
|
|
Texium
|
Thread Moved 14-9-2023 at 11:54 |