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Author: Subject: Making PbO2 plates for chlorate production - from Pb lead-acid battery plates
RogueRose
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[*] posted on 11-10-2017 at 12:52
Making PbO2 plates for chlorate production - from Pb lead-acid battery plates


Anyone who has taken apart a lead acid battery knows that the PbO2 plates ("red lead")are usually in pretty bad shape compared to the Pb plates as the are often very brittle and have pieces falling off of them. I found recently that putting the good silver Pb plates (usually in good shape) in some bleach turns them into nice red plates in good condition. I used 12.5% bleach but would suspect that using lower concentrate would work as well. I'm not sure if there is a better oxidizer for this as I tried adding some H2O2 to the bleach and it instantly fizzes and when put on the red plates it seems to erode the red coating.

From the How-to's I've read on chlorate cells, it says that if Pb plates are used, they will eventually oxidize to PbO2 but it can take some time and the chlorate will be contaminated in the meantime.

The thing with the bleach is that it doesn't seem to penetrate the plate very far but I'm not sure that matters a whole lot for this process and may even be better with a thin coating as it is much less brittle.

Can anyone shed any light on this?
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Elemental Phosphorus
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[*] posted on 12-10-2017 at 15:13


Lead dioxide is black or dark brown, and can be formed on lead by putting the lead in dilute sulfuric acid, as the anode, and applying ~1.5 volts. I believe red lead is actually Pb3O4.
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RogueRose
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[*] posted on 12-10-2017 at 15:31


Quote: Originally posted by Elemental Phosphorus  
Lead dioxide is black or dark brown, and can be formed on lead by putting the lead in dilute sulfuric acid, as the anode, and applying ~1.5 volts. I believe red lead is actually Pb3O4.


I believe you are correct. I'm still wondeirng what was made from the bleach. It starts off as rust color (and the bleach stays clear) but then the metal turns the dark brown/black and the bleach starts to get contaminated.

I may try the electrolysis to see if there is a difference in color.
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Elemental Phosphorus
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[*] posted on 12-10-2017 at 17:34


Well, if the metal turns dark brown to black, that could be lead dioxide, no? I wouldn't be too surprised if hypochlorite could oxidize red lead oxide to lead dioxide, it is an extremely strong oxidizer. You could scrape some of the black substance and test it by heating it very strongly and seeing if it decomposes to red or yellow iron oxide.
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RogueRose
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[*] posted on 12-10-2017 at 19:53


Quote: Originally posted by Elemental Phosphorus  
Well, if the metal turns dark brown to black, that could be lead dioxide, no? I wouldn't be too surprised if hypochlorite could oxidize red lead oxide to lead dioxide, it is an extremely strong oxidizer. You could scrape some of the black substance and test it by heating it very strongly and seeing if it decomposes to red or yellow iron oxide.


Thanks, I'll try heating it and see if it decomp's
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RogueRose
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[*] posted on 13-10-2017 at 03:15


So I got some pics of the plates after they were in the bleach for about 24 hours, though they turned red/brownish immediately. I'll try a broken plate and see if the bleach has penetrated completely or if this is more of a surface coating.

edit:: I checked the remaining bleach with a new plate and there was no reaction and it had no smell (bleach smell) either, so it looks like it is penetrating the plates or it wouldn't have used up that much NaOCl as there was about 8 oz of 12.5%.
While the electrolysis while in H2SO4 isn't that difficult (though I'm not fond of setting up electrolysis), this is a pretty easy way to do it if PbO2 needs to be made without too much hassle.

I also had some lead collected from the broken plates (the PbO2 plates that are a mix of red, brown and black - I think it depends upon the charge of the battery when it is taken apart). The last pic of the lead paste is the lead from these plates that I placed in bleach. It looks more black when viewed by eye but the flash really reflects the red spectrum of the oxide.



lead_plate_1.jpg - 254kB lead_plate_2.jpg - 167kB lead_plate_3.jpg - 186kB red_lead.jpg - 233kB

[Edited on 13-10-2017 by RogueRose]
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