Games & Quizzes
Don't forget to Sign In to save your points
This is a modal window.
PERFECT HITS | +NaN | |
HITS | +NaN | |
LONGEST STREAK | +NaN | |
TOTAL | + |
Greetings fellow nerds.. So i needed to make silver powder.. I can use bulk silver coins for my reactions but powder is far easier to measure and reacts much faster due to greater surface area.
Now I could have simply ground down my coins using a file or mechanized grinder and while that would have worked very well i wanted to try an alternative electrochemical approach.
Granted it's rather slow but very interesting, at least to me anyway.
In my first attempt I had a solution of 50mL water with 1g of silver nitrate.
In it I placed a silver coin and a carbon rod.. The silver was connected to the positive terminal of my power supply making it the anode and the carbon rod was connected to the negative terminal making it the cathode.
Turning on the power i dialed up the current until the carbon rod just started to bubble hydrogen gas and then dialed back about 25%.
Now the silver is being electrochemically oxidized at the anode into silver ions.
The dissolution isn't perfectly even though so particles of silver metal actually exfoliate off and fall to the bottom as you can see here.
This is a rather crude way of making silver powder but it works.
Meanwhile, the silver ions that did dissolve migrate over to the cathode where they get reduced back into silver metal.
The interesting thing about this process is that the silver doesn't deposit as a continuous layer of bulk metal, but rather as individual crystals.
You actually saw me exploit this years ago when i filmed electrochemical crystal growth under a microscope.
Now if we use a high current density like we are here then the solution right next to the silver depletes pretty quickly, so the growth is limited by diffusion of the ions.
Since diffusion is random, the crystals constantly nucleate at new sites and this in turn forms numerous weak crystals that easily crumble into a powder.
And that is exactly what we're looking for in making electrolytic powdered silver.
Unfortunately, as you can see, we're running into a rather annoying issue.
The silver is growing toward the anode..
/ˈint(ə)rəstiNG/
arousing curiosity or interest. To persuade to do, become involved with something.
/krēˈādiv/
Having the ability to make something new. person whose job involves creative work.
/ˈpräˌses/
Dealing with official forms in the way required. To prepare by treating something in a certain way.
/ˌəndəˈzī(ə)rəb(ə)l/
Being unwanted or harmful. person considered to be objectionable in some way.