Raketpeter what voltage do you run your 3.3amp cell?..Does your perc perform well with making colours?...how many times do you have to recrystalize?
Alany mentions his first batch was not as good as his commercial perc(obviously he can purify the product more)..Also what size PT anode are you using and what method of control are you using for current..
I am intrested in what that Black coating is on alany's Pt anode very wierd?.. i have made small test batch's using my Pt Anode mesh and had no black coating..
.I have nearly made all my Lead Dioxide anodes...
My first Graphite anodes were 13 mm( 1.5mm PbO2 coating) diameter 15 cm long but these are made to use a current of about 10 amps each (Surface area approx 49 cm x 200 milliamps)..
I made these small electrodes because from what i have read passing large currents through a big anode tend to over heat the connections..etc..
So i thought make small electrodes and share the current between them, so each electrode only has to take a small current..
From my experiments these GSLD anodes can easily take 10 amps so i scaled up my next batch and Now the ones i will be using are much bigger ..
They are 34mm Diameter( 1mm PbO2) 15 cm long can take 25 amps (128 cm Surface area x 200 milliamps)..
I will post some pictures later .. very rare to see PbO2 anodes on the Net?..i have read lots but no photos ..
The actual coating on the rods is superb.. very smooth no pits or pinholes..much easier than i thought to make them..
The secret in making them is do it properly..I have read lots of people on the Rec.pyro ..were there PbO2 anode peel or dont last long..Also use Graphite not Carbon!! i tried Carbon gouging rods..Rubbish... dont bodge.. get Graphite...
The end result is well worth it...Rock hard Black crystaline PbO2 coating Sounds like ceramic when you tap it..
I am running in each electrode at about 25 amps in a Brine solution to test each one.. for a week or two .this also serves to leech out any chemicals that may have been absorbed by the PbO2 coating ..
The best test for the Anode is when the Chloride concentration gets really low even a Pt electrode dont like low levels of Chloride..
The only problem i have is when adding PbO to lower my Ph of my plating tank .. even though i have added lots of excess PbO and have left it stirring overnight at 60 centigrade.. it never reaches PH 7..?.. baffled me..
Also when PbO is added the colour of the solution is not the same pale blue as it was to start.. this worried me until i added a small amount of Nitric acid.. the colour then changed Back from a greenish blue to a nice pale blue...
To be continued....
Sorry for taking a while to respond - was out of town.
My cell runs at a voltage between [5.25;5.55]V.
The overvoltage for my Pt anode is higher than for PbO2 ditto.
The anode itself is essentially a Pt wire - about 100cm long and 0.4mm in diameter.
Haven't used the product for making colours (yet).
I have done a fair bit of experimentation with (re)crystallization and in short - I think it's a pain:
You must crystallize at minimum 52 deg C in order for nice crystals of anhydrous Perc. to form. Lower temperatures yields the mono- (or di-) hydrate which drains the mother liqour very poorly.
I have used centrifugation to separate the fluid (which is recyc'ed) from the anhydrous crystals. Works well - but VERY labour intensive.
Beware - product is LOST when you boil to concentrate to create the supersaturated solution for crystalization - losses are SIGNIFICANT - try placing a propane flame in the "steam" leaving your boiling vessel and the sodium colouration of the flame will demonstrate my point.
Bottom line - I'm dropping the step of crystallization of the sodium salt.
Btw. veeery nice work on your PbO2 sasman - congrat's!
Peter