Will hard anodize on aluminum react with:
Sulphuric acid
Hydrochloric acid
KOH
Thanks.
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Will hard anodize on aluminum react with:
Sulphuric acid
Hydrochloric acid
KOH
Thanks.
Hard anodize aluminium?
You mean aluminium that has been anodized with a thick layer of oxide?
If so, I would have replied yes. Aluminium oxide is an amphoteric oxide, and will hence react with both acid and base.
Thanks.
The answer is not what I hoped for. I am looking for a material to build a reaction tank, and don't want to use stainless steel because of the expense.
Maybe there is some product that will produce a glass lining.
That's not really my field of knowledge about the practicability (sp?) and cost. Maybe you can try some alloys that are corrosion resistant.
We use brass for taps and some pipe joints.
You can try PVC.
I don't the price at all, OK.
I would like to know however what type of reactions you'll be performing in there? Neutralisation?
Glass linings are usually "porcelain".
Porcelain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I've never made porcelain, so I can't tell how hard it is to use.
There are a lot of other materials of construction that are corrosion resistant. These include various versions of Hastelloy (Hastelloy B, C, etc), titanium, and many types of stainless steel. Of course, they're all expensive.
At home, do it yourself, hydrogen production.
I can get plenty of scrap aluminum free and lye shouldn't be very expensive. I have read that this kind of reaction can produce pressures nearing 1,000 psi. Use the pressure to fill tanks with hydrogen and then run a genset.
Not sure about hydrogen pressure required, but an ice engine will run on natural gas at a pressure of 4 ounces psi, so if you had a container containing 800 psi of hydrogen, you could run a 20 hp engine for nearly 24 hours.
If I don't do something, I may be looking at utility bills that I can not pay in the not too distant future.
Sounds too dangerous. I suggest you rethink that idea.
Actually, you don't produce a gas at all
You get a lot of heat and a lot of steam. You form a potassium sulfate salt. You also form water (H+ + OH- = H2O).
Hydrogen gas is more dangerous than propane or gasoline. It's much more explosive.
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-e...le-danger1.htm
Ok galveston, I have a table here:
Heat of combustion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You'll see that hydrogen, though giving off less heat than other fuels per mole of reactant (kJ/mol column), if produces much more heat than the others concerning it's weight (MJ/kg column). So, if you have the same mass of fuel, hydrogen would release more heat, hence more dangerous than any other fuel, excluding the other risks that were included in Perito's link.
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