Efficiently Recover Nitric Acid and Copper Metal From Copper Nitrate Wastes

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 21. 11. 2020
  • In this video we Efficiently Recover Nitric Acid and Copper Metal From Copper Nitrate Wastes by reacting copper nitrate wastes with sulfuric acid to generate nitric acid and copper sulfate. Then we electrolyze the copper sulfate to recovery copper metal and sulfuric acid.
    Related videos:
    Production of nitric acid by thermal decomposition of copper nitrate: • Make Nitric Acid by Th...
    Purification and concentration of nitric acid: • Nitric Acid Concentrat...
    Donate to NurdRage!
    Through Patreon (preferred): / nurdrage
    Through CZcams Memberships: / @nurdrage
    Through Bitcoin: 1NurdRAge7PNR4ULrbrpcYvc9RC4LDp9pS
    Glassware generously provided by www.alchemylabsupply.com/
    Use the discount code "nurdrage" for a 5% discount.
    Twitter: / nurdrage
    Reddit: / nurdrage
    Instagram: / nurdrageyoutube

Komentáře • 305

  • @NurdRage
    @NurdRage  Před 3 lety +243

    Next video will probably be on chemical resistance of palladium metal.

    • @lazersteve
      @lazersteve Před 3 lety +3

      Sounds intriguing, I'm sure it will be a great video. If I may make a suggestion for the video you should demonstrate the dilute sulfuric acid method and show precipitation using SO2 (via sulfite). The other basic techniques are very well known and great for noobs, but the professional refiners like myself will likely learn very little. I really like your video format: concise, professional, and informative! Keep up the great work. Bravo for paying attention to your subscribers comments and your dedication to science. Steve

    • @iNerdier
      @iNerdier Před 3 lety

      Would be interesting to see a video on recovering silver from silver sulphide, I have a few bottles of used photographic fix I’ve been pondering about using one day.

    • @kmarasin
      @kmarasin Před 3 lety +4

      Trying to civilize the wild west of precious metals refining, eh? About time. Tired of watching DIYers dissolving and precipitating precious metal solutions in an endless loop, trying to squeeze out the last bits of metal, doing everything by rote, eyeball, and guesswork. What you've done here is refreshingly straightforward and waste free (by "waste" I mean usage of vast quantities of metal, acids, bleaches, peroxides, etc. thorough inefficient processing, not necessarily waste the way chemists usually mean.) I want my chemistry porn to be cleaner!

    • @vivek4503
      @vivek4503 Před 3 lety

      GOOD

    • @JaredKaragen
      @JaredKaragen Před 3 lety +1

      @sreetips will thank you when he sees this message. Should give him some ideas I hope. Thanks for the excellent videos. Much appreciated.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke Před 3 lety +68

    Copper Nitrate is such a beautiful shade of blue...

  • @bormisha
    @bormisha Před 3 lety +159

    This is what happens to processes of hobby refiners when the real science comes in! Thanks NurdRage, you are the real professional!

    • @lazersteve
      @lazersteve Před 3 lety +28

      I've been recycling my copper nitrate for years...I first posted on the GRF about recycling copper solution over 10 years ago. If you plan on doing any serious refining, recycling your waste is not only the right thing to do environmentally, but also economically. That being said, NR has a very special way of presenting material that makes it understandable even to the layman. He is a valuable resource for everyone in the refining community. Steve

    • @bormisha
      @bormisha Před 2 lety

      @@lazersteve How do you recycle your sulfuric acid that is contaminated with base metals?

    • @lazersteve
      @lazersteve Před 2 lety

      @@bormisha Depending on which base metals are in there really. The typical recovery protocol for sulfuric acid is to evaporate out the water and other more volatile substances (distillation of volatile acids if pesent ) followed by electrolysis to convert the metal sulfates to metal sponge and sulfuric acid. Filtration can be performed on higher concentrations of sulfuric using polycloth or glass frit filters. Alternative methods include using Ca or Ba nitrates to convert the remaining sulfuric to nitric acid after the majority of the base metals are removed thru crystallization of their sulfates and filtering the white solid sulfate. The nitrates in solution are then distilled out as nitric acid or used in solution after concentration and or crystallization of the nitrates as desired. Once you have crystallization of base metal sulfates or nitrates these should be dried, weighed, and used as new sources of sulfuric acid and nitric acid. Sulfate recycling in the above processes is continuous with losses occurring during filtrations. When recycling nitrates the nitrate souce must be replenished after each cycle as NOx is a volatile gas which is lost during the use of the acid formed. The art of left over solution recycling is not that complicated if you pay attention to what ions you put into solution and keep like ions together in wastes.

    • @bormisha
      @bormisha Před 2 lety

      @@lazersteve Thank you for such an elaborated answer. It sounds very complicated to not bother in most cases, but as a matter of principle it is nice to know that the purification could be done.

    • @lazersteve
      @lazersteve Před 2 lety

      @@bormisha it's no more complicated than any other salt chemistry. Key points to know are solubilities of the various salts, ions present, and which ion combinations precipitate which salt. Temperature plays an important role in these parameters as with any chemical reaction. I usually convert my alkali sulfates to nitrates then use the dissolved nitrate as a solution in my refining work forming nitric acid in situ.

  • @broderfoder9348
    @broderfoder9348 Před 3 lety +61

    To speed up the electrolysis, you can do a time lapse :)

  • @utubefrog09
    @utubefrog09 Před 3 lety +59

    Been watching Nurdrage for 10 years, never seem to get enough of it. still get excited when I see a new video, otherwise I’ll just watch one of the old ones.

    • @ZoonCrypticon
      @ZoonCrypticon Před 3 lety +2

      Been watching him since, I think, 2006, when he destroyed that barbie ken puppet.

  • @custos3249
    @custos3249 Před 3 lety +59

    Lol. A few years after I asked, but better late than never :P Now if I can ever get my recovery lab put together....

  • @ShaMan54321
    @ShaMan54321 Před 3 lety +17

    Copper nitrate has the most beautiful blue color. Copper sulfate also is a pretty color.

    • @T3sl4
      @T3sl4 Před 3 lety +2

      Agreed, copper is easily my favorite element.

    • @shadowtheimpure
      @shadowtheimpure Před 3 lety +1

      @@T3sl4 Only element whose colors I like more is Bismuth, but that is because that beautiful rainbow sheen is combined with the beautiful geometric patterns.

    • @K0ester
      @K0ester Před 3 lety +1

      @@T3sl4 have you seen cobalt or nickle salts and their double saltz

  • @spokehedz
    @spokehedz Před 3 lety +33

    Oh man, there is a whole world of precious metal youtube out there. Sreetips is so interesting to watch him dissolve metals, and then get super high purity metals.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Před 3 lety +3

      @Eric Konschuh He's very selective about how much nitric he uses, so he doesn't end up with much excess in most cases.

    • @vinnycordeiro
      @vinnycordeiro Před 3 lety +3

      @@andybaldman Even so, recovered nitric acid means less money spent buying new. That adds up in the long run.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Před 3 lety +3

      @@vinnycordeiro If you watch sreetips's videos, you'll see the techniques he uses to make sure he has little to no excess. And then he reuses any waste he has in other processes. And any waste he has after that, he treats and discards. It's a pretty efficient system. He's done videos on all of it, you should check them out if you haven't.

    • @vinnycordeiro
      @vinnycordeiro Před 3 lety +6

      @@andybaldman I do watch Mr. Sreetips' videos.
      I do acknowledge that he uses a small dosage of nitric acid to avoid unnecessary usage.
      Even so, he IS expending nitric acid, and what this video proposes is the reverse process: recovering the nitric acid originally used to dissolve the base metals (mostly copper). He just need to remove all the precious metals, mostly will be silver, and then apply this video's method to recover the nitric acid. And because it is diluted, he can just use it to dissolve more silver. It's a virtuous cycle.
      Also: at least in the US, sulfuric acid is cheaper than nitric acid. And because Mr. Sreetips doesn't see the point of recovering copper, as said in some videos and many comments, he can skip the sulfuric acid recovery, just neutralizing it and properly disposing the neutralized acid and the copper sulfate.
      The point being: in his current workflow, Mr. Sreetips is just throwing away nitric acid that could be recycled.
      Also: remember that Mr. Sreetips always says he's just an amateur, refining precious metals is his hobby. Nurdrage have a PhD. in chemistry, it's his job. And the professional acknowledged that he didn't knew something and was willing to share his knowledge. A hobbyist can learn this and use if desired.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Před 3 lety +1

      @@vinnycordeiro Where in his process does he end up with excess nitric?

  • @CrimFerret
    @CrimFerret Před 3 lety +11

    This is a great video. Considering that dilute nitric acid is fine for a number of refining processes, it might not even be necessary to concentrate it further. Considering that nitric acid is by far the most expensive chemical used for basic gold refining, getting a fair amount of it back using equipment most would already have (well maybe they'd need to pick up a condenser) is pretty useful.

  • @Alondro77
    @Alondro77 Před 3 lety +6

    This is immensely useful information for those of us getting into precious metal recovery and trying to plan ahead to minimize wastes.

  • @papanyanz
    @papanyanz Před 3 lety +38

    No need for Pt electrode, lead metal will work just fine (only in sulfuric acid media of course) !

    • @papanyanz
      @papanyanz Před 3 lety +8

      I mean lead anode.

    • @T3sl4
      @T3sl4 Před 3 lety +8

      Indeed. Note: put a bag over it, the PbO2 that grows on the electrode tends to swell and slough off from time to time!

    • @ropersonline
      @ropersonline Před 3 lety +11

      I think NurdRage's point was to be as non-toxic and environmentally friendly as possible.

    • @papanyanz
      @papanyanz Před 3 lety +2

      @@ropersonline Lead is not going to be consumed at all, look how lead acid batteries work, electrodes stand for decade in such environment. Only small amount s of lead dioxide is expected to pile off over time and even that is in insoluble form.

    • @tahauniverse
      @tahauniverse Před 3 lety +1

      @@papanyanz yeah but lead sulfate is soluble and lethal if touched or inhaled

  • @FullModernAlchemist
    @FullModernAlchemist Před 3 lety +5

    Dude! I hadn't thought of doing this but it's so elegant of a solution! I just so happen to have some copper nitrate waste and now I know exactly how I am going to process it. Thank you! :)

  • @kennedy67951
    @kennedy67951 Před 3 lety +10

    It's great you sharing your vast knowledge with all that would like to learn. For me. I most likely will never use this knowledge you represent in your video's. But just having the opportunity to see these things in action is great. I never had the opportunity to go to much higher learning institutions, so CZcams was really it for me, and man the things I've seen. My eyes were opened and my mind expanded way beyond what would've been if these platforms didn't exist. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge with me. I do hope you can continue the program.

  • @Deez-Master
    @Deez-Master Před rokem

    you're truly a trailblazer in the CZcams community! It's always a delight when other creators mention the renowned "NurdRage method for x." Your impact and expertise have clearly resonated with so many of us. Keep up the fantastic work, and thank you for inspiring and educating us all!

  • @thawtworx3364
    @thawtworx3364 Před 3 lety +3

    From an amateur precious metals refiner, thank you for the video!

  • @chadricknance1713
    @chadricknance1713 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you I had been just adding iron to my copper nitrate waste and waiting for the copper to settle out loosing my nitric acid. I have several 5 gallon buckets of copper nitrate waste so I know what i am going to be busy over the next few weeks.

  • @terischannel
    @terischannel Před 2 lety

    This is one of the most cost saving video I have seen. I have been trying to find a way to recycle my byproducts in refining since I started. Thank you!

  • @MadScientist267
    @MadScientist267 Před 2 lety

    Just want to say your wisdom has been infinitely helpful... These tips you mention along the way... Beautiful.

  • @stormbreaker_101
    @stormbreaker_101 Před 3 lety +6

    return of the king

  • @hansomdaley3365
    @hansomdaley3365 Před 3 lety +1

    I do precious-metals recovery. And I have learnt so much from your show, I really appreciate what you have done. You are very intelligent man

  • @gold.
    @gold. Před 3 lety +7

    Thanks NurdRage

  • @therandomnessofeverythinga7045

    I’ve learnt so much from you.....Thankyou your content is purely Awesome.

  • @TrueIndie88
    @TrueIndie88 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing this amazing process. I can't believe you were contacted by metal refiners with chemists on staff, thst did not know. That is what defines brilliance. )

  • @EdwardTriesToScience
    @EdwardTriesToScience Před 3 lety +5

    This is efficient and simple I like it

  • @franglish9265
    @franglish9265 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for your wonderful content!

  • @NOFX0890
    @NOFX0890 Před 2 lety

    Excellent.
    Thankyou Nurdrage.

  • @flomojo2u
    @flomojo2u Před 3 lety

    Another great video and very comprehensive!

  • @martwy665
    @martwy665 Před 3 lety +14

    I wish I knew it few kilograms of silver recovery ago :D

  • @Alondro77
    @Alondro77 Před 2 lety +7

    I have heard that bubbling nitrogen dioxide through 3% hydrogen peroxide works very well.
    Also, reducing the copper FIRST with iron yields metallic copper and iron nitrate, which decomposes at a much lower temperature that copper nitrate: only 80C, well below water's boiling point. Your waste afterward is just iron oxide mud, which is totally nontoxic,

    • @bbbruh8809
      @bbbruh8809 Před rokem

      Interesting, btw I wonder if only copper is depositing on iron, does the mud made of iron oxide contain any other metals from ewaste solution?

  • @cmerkyurky
    @cmerkyurky Před 3 lety +1

    Great video! Its cool to think how many people this will actually help

  • @IsettasRock
    @IsettasRock Před 2 lety

    Excellent video, thank you nurd rage. Now I can clean up my wastes and recover usable acid and scrap copper

  • @cyclopentylprime8381
    @cyclopentylprime8381 Před 3 lety

    Bubbling air for agitation. Like capillary tubes for vacuum distillation, but big. What a cool concept!

  • @Joe.Rogan.
    @Joe.Rogan. Před 3 lety +8

    Would be interesting to see what a large scale set up would look like.

  • @shadowtheimpure
    @shadowtheimpure Před 3 lety +3

    "Complicated topic for another time" I eagerly await that video.

  • @aaronburr4697
    @aaronburr4697 Před 2 lety

    A very useful and practical application of chemistry. Love this video as is gives me more routes to make copper sulfate.

  • @ZoonCrypticon
    @ZoonCrypticon Před 3 lety

    As always an excellent video! Thank you very much!

  • @kylecissell958
    @kylecissell958 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome video I’m probably going to use this technique to recycle my nitric acid from my silver refining.

  • @jasonwilliam2125
    @jasonwilliam2125 Před 3 lety +2

    What a legend.
    This channel deserves a million subs.
    I think im going to blitz social media this week and try to make it happen.

  • @saintjimmy2244
    @saintjimmy2244 Před 3 lety +1

    Well, that one was amazing . Wondered about some of this. Keep going. 👌👍👏👏👏👌👍

  • @rdvgraaff
    @rdvgraaff Před rokem

    Yay, for some reason Nurdrage is popping up in my feed again.

  • @Stetsonhatman
    @Stetsonhatman Před 2 lety

    wonderful information - loved the video

  • @ericallen1045
    @ericallen1045 Před 3 lety

    Cool I have a couple gallons sitting on the shelf figuring one day I’ll figure something out to do with it. Thank you!

  • @Alondro77
    @Alondro77 Před 3 lety +3

    If you have a lot of copper oxide powder, it's easy to smelt.
    Just mix in finely powdered carbon in excess and hit it with a reducing flame. Same as reducing lead oxide to metallic lead.
    It works so well, I was even able to get reduction in my first experiment with a steel spoon filled with carbon-copper oxide over a hot candle flame. Ended up with clean, red copper metal powder that polished up when rubbed between two smooth stainless steel surfaces (which is how I test powders to see if they're metal or not. If they take a polish, it's at least partly metallic. If not, it's mostly salts and oxides.)

  • @aminassadi5104
    @aminassadi5104 Před 2 lety

    Thanks. It was really useful for me

  • @science_and_anonymous
    @science_and_anonymous Před 3 lety +4

    Made my day to see

  • @chanceisom
    @chanceisom Před 2 lety

    You my man, really are a genius!

  • @steve66oh
    @steve66oh Před 7 měsíci +1

    Excellent video.. thank you!
    I'm working on a project to turn about 18kg of mixed scrap of unknown alloy bronzes, into a 25 to 30cm diameter bell of 80Cu/20Sn bell bronze. I doubt that any Ag/Au/PGM are present, but I want to remove any Mn, Si, Zn, or Pb present, and I'd like to separate out the tin, recover it, and supplement it with additional tin in the final melt.
    It looks like a dilute nitric acid (a lot of it..) will dissolve the bronze - all the possible components except for the tin, which will either settle out as a tin sludge or precipitate as an insoluble tin salt, either way, I think I can extract the tin in the first step by filtering it out.
    Then, I can use this video method to recover the nitric and leave all the metals as sulfates in solution.. if something (maybe lead sulfate?) precipitates, a filter catches that.
    With "copper etc.." sulfate, I hope to reduce all the metal salts to finely divided metal particles, but I'm not sure which reagent to use.. maybe iron(II) sulfate.
    Then, hopefully, either hydrochloric or sulfuric acid will put the contaminant metals in solution without taking too much of the copper powder, so I can capture purified (if not quite "pure") copper in a filter.
    The next step (maybe this is optional..) seems to be putting the copper filtrate into solution as copper sulfate (process TBD..) and electrowinning out the copper. Then, wash/dry/weigh the copper, add 1 unit tin for each 4 units copper by weight, melt, pour, cast and mechanically finish the bell.
    Does it seem like I'm on the right track, or have I made an obvious mistake somewhere?
    And, dear Internet.. yes, I know.. "just buy a bell".. sell the metal I have as scrap for $2.50/lb - $75, then pay $10+/lb ($300) for new metal to alloy & cast myself.. or pay closer to $450 for an 8.5" bell. Making it myself saves me a little money, but gives much greater satisfaction.

  • @Sylvain_lx
    @Sylvain_lx Před 3 lety

    Big thank NurdRage ;)

  • @AsmodeusMictian
    @AsmodeusMictian Před 3 lety

    Thanks as always for an amazing video!

  • @rickstav9024
    @rickstav9024 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @smudgepost
    @smudgepost Před 2 lety

    Great video, been looking to solve this exact problem!

  • @houmamkitet9555
    @houmamkitet9555 Před 3 lety +3

    That was hella awesome
    Would love to see you recover the base metals as well
    (Seriously not sure why im so enamoured by metal based chemistry when i am a molecular biologist)

    • @allenhonaker4107
      @allenhonaker4107 Před 2 lety

      The good thing is expanding your interest is other fields can suggest unconventional approaches to unsolved questions in your own field

  • @kevinauld4367
    @kevinauld4367 Před 3 lety

    That's very helpful thank you .

  • @leozendo3500
    @leozendo3500 Před 3 lety

    glad he is back

  • @kevinauld4367
    @kevinauld4367 Před 3 lety +2

    I salvage gold, silver, & other metals from elect. And refine them I have seen a prosses using stainless to collect the copper but have not tried it yet frequntly gold and silver are plated on copper even in jullry and flat were I'm still learning and you are one of my resources for how I do thing's I am self towt largely and like chemistry .
    Never thought to mention it . just starting to strip gold plating using elict.still looking for ways to refine and recover other metals .

  • @sulfatodecobre650
    @sulfatodecobre650 Před 3 lety

    Looks great !

  • @CzarownicaMarta
    @CzarownicaMarta Před 3 lety +18

    Yes yes, I'm going to sleep in a moment. Just one Nurd video... Or better five.

  • @bardfinn
    @bardfinn Před 3 lety +4

    "Do what you oughta - add Acid to Watah" -- thank you Julius Sumner Miller

    • @stupaod
      @stupaod Před 3 lety

      Julius Caesar Salad

  • @JReklis
    @JReklis Před 3 lety

    excellent

  • @keysersmoze
    @keysersmoze Před 3 lety +1

    Bravo!

  • @manah12
    @manah12 Před 3 lety

    Great job and video

  • @laboratoryofliptakov8157

    Great process. A like closed electrochemical circuit.

  • @Enjoymentboy
    @Enjoymentboy Před 3 lety

    I've been re-watching the whole "make/recover nitric acid" series and one I would love to see would be making nitric acid using urea. Not sure if it is even possible but if so I think it would be rather interesting.

  • @franglish9265
    @franglish9265 Před 3 lety

    Another interesting biochemical process, is the industrial use of archaea and pyrite to harvest metals, via the sulfuric acid they produce, it could even be used during recycling of pcbs and e-waste.
    However, the size of the reaction vessels used, are often quite large, as it is only useful for processing large amounts, ie tons of ore or electronic wastes.

  • @richardlangstaff6358
    @richardlangstaff6358 Před 3 lety +1

    reminds me of nitric acid synthesis with potassium nitrate and sulfuric acid (minus the electrowinning)

  • @meanboycoins6250
    @meanboycoins6250 Před 3 lety

    You have the best videos

  • @PiezPiedPy
    @PiezPiedPy Před měsícem

    Iron is also used by refiners to precipitate the copper out of the copper nitrate, the iron nitrate is then disposed as a waste product.

  • @drmarine1771
    @drmarine1771 Před 3 lety +1

    Your the best.

  • @miketoreno4969
    @miketoreno4969 Před 3 lety

    Thanks.

  • @professorxgaming2070
    @professorxgaming2070 Před 3 lety

    Awesome

  • @riippumatonlinja
    @riippumatonlinja Před 3 lety +1

    I hope you some day may be do whole series of all impurities cleaning process from any liquid form. Meaning most used preferred, so example there is little to no use remove astatine or radioactive elements cause there is almost none of them in commercial products, but all solids that may be in solution like most of the metals, post transaction metals and non metals solids. Its interesting to think process that you can take all of these in good use just knowing how to.

  • @geologyjohnson7700
    @geologyjohnson7700 Před rokem

    Interesting that it gets a spongy texture once the Cu concentration drops. I see a similar texture in metal sulphides in the rocks I study and was advising wondering if it was due to a drop in metal saturation in the mineralising fluids towards the end of deposition.

  • @silvertrucker9401
    @silvertrucker9401 Před 3 lety +1

    I would like to see you repeat the thermal decomposition video and this video with actual refining waste. I would even send you a jug of it just to see how this would work with waste products and any contamination they may contain.

  • @boelwerkr
    @boelwerkr Před 3 lety +3

    The platinum electrode can be replaced with carbon rots. They will be eaten away very very slowly by the oxygen, but it will not harm the reaction. And they are cheaper than platinum electrodes.

    • @kaisersose5549
      @kaisersose5549 Před 3 lety

      In nitric acid solution/metal nitrate recovery, you can use lead instead of platinum.
      Like the carbon rods, the lead does degrade with use, however, it's oxides are easily entrapped to prevent contamination of the copper.

    • @mikeguitar9769
      @mikeguitar9769 Před 3 lety +1

      By the way, sulfate ions tend to intercalate a graphite anode and exfoliate it into few-layer-graphene

  • @napalmholocaust9093
    @napalmholocaust9093 Před 3 lety

    The copper oxide recovery also applies to sludge I get in my acidified copper sulfate electroforming tank. I put ingots in felt bags and after 4 five runs they are half full of goo. I have about 20 pounds of it. The tank is a low acid recipe.

  • @chriscarley9951
    @chriscarley9951 Před rokem

    How all is well, waiting for your video to ring in.

  • @butters111
    @butters111 Před 3 lety

    Man, for real though. I have been watching your videos for years and even though CZcams has changed throughout the years your videos have continued to be amazingly informative and really top notch quality. Thank for everything man, always.

    • @NurdRage
      @NurdRage  Před 3 lety +1

      why thank you! I appreciate that!

  • @sweetchilli6993
    @sweetchilli6993 Před 3 lety

    i totally

  • @spacenomad5484
    @spacenomad5484 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello, fellow nerd. Great video.

  • @masternater6721
    @masternater6721 Před 2 měsíci

    great video, and fantastic insight to recycling re-usable materials. is there a forum to ask questions and solve issues with this experiment?

  • @EddieTheH
    @EddieTheH Před 9 měsíci

    That rough surface gives me catalytic ideas.

  • @sulfatodecobre650
    @sulfatodecobre650 Před 3 lety

    great !

  • @pneptun
    @pneptun Před 3 lety +1

    WHAT - some people actually DO the things suggested in these videos? i just watch them cause i like chemistry - but purely theoretically, would never think of doing it as a real-life hobby :-D

  • @ThePeterDislikeShow
    @ThePeterDislikeShow Před 3 lety

    Can you do some videos on fluorine reacting with various highly stable metals?

  • @Window_Hero
    @Window_Hero Před 3 lety +1

    Could you produce the copper and nitric acid directly if you used a cation exchange membrane to prevent the nitric acid from reacting with the produced copper metal?

  • @shauncobb6
    @shauncobb6 Před 6 měsíci

    hi strange question but i see you have the same filter as me and i was wondering how you go about cleaning it since no filter paper is used
    churs love your work

  • @abdullahnoor1173
    @abdullahnoor1173 Před 3 lety

    Hi NurdRage .cool video.how can I separate the copper zinc and tin from brass? I want learn more about this process?
    Thanks
    Noor

  • @willmccoy76904
    @willmccoy76904 Před 3 lety +2

    Could you use mixed metal oxide instead of a platinum electrode?

  • @StevenSchoolAlchemy
    @StevenSchoolAlchemy Před 3 lety

    Good morning.

  • @turtleteam54
    @turtleteam54 Před 3 lety

    Hello from France NurdRage. Really nice your video and chemistry lesson, like all times ! Can you tell us if it is possible to do the same job ( making sulfuric acdid ) with others sulfates like Iron sulfate or potassium sulfate, any sulfates maybe? Thanks NurdRage.

  • @zachreyhelmberger894
    @zachreyhelmberger894 Před 2 lety

    I have been binge watching sreetips doing metal refining and I always wince at all the toxic gas it produces during inquartation and was wondering if it is possible to easily capture that gas to make pure nitric acid. When you dissolve the reddish NO2 gas into water, is that nitric acid??

  • @xiaoyuhong8445
    @xiaoyuhong8445 Před 3 lety

    it seems that some base metal could be precipitated by adding oxalicacid and form its non-soluble oxalate (like iron)

  • @Robbe902
    @Robbe902 Před 3 lety

    This blue'ness @ 1:50. ☺️ Awesome. 😍

  • @JeffreyCC
    @JeffreyCC Před rokem

    Could you maybe make a video about making PbO2 electrodes? These items seem to be scarce but sought after.

  • @emmepombar3328
    @emmepombar3328 Před 3 lety +2

    I used a MMO anode for this. It worked, but I think the anode slowly degraded. It's still nice and black, but who knows...

  • @tcar
    @tcar Před 2 lety

    The copper electrolysis with copper sulfate could be use for copper plating, replacing the platinum electrode for some copper and the actual copper for the thing to be plated?

  • @StevenSchoolAlchemy
    @StevenSchoolAlchemy Před 3 lety

    Cool beans

  • @Genesis_Unlimited
    @Genesis_Unlimited Před 2 lety

    Do you have any recommendations on brands/supply outlets/things to look for when purchasing a platinized electrode? I’m looking for something that can handle potassium hydroxide & electrolysis (for Hydrogen Torch applications).

  • @unlockeduk
    @unlockeduk Před 2 lety

    lead annode works good too in my exp

  • @buddyclatone9632
    @buddyclatone9632 Před 3 lety

    lead makes a good anode also