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NAXJA# 2091
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Jonathan said:I think you must be distracted by something else, because I'm sure you know that there is no difference between sodium carb and sodium bicarb: in solution they will interchange depending on the pH.
It is the pH that is different, as well as the ions. You can get Na(+), CO3(-2), and HCO3(-1). With sodium carbonate you get predominately (2)Na(+), and CO3(-2) in solution at a pH of 10 or higher. With Sodium Bicarbonate you get Na(+) and HCO3(-) at a lower pH (I forget the pH, 6.8 maybe).
Jonathan said:Bicarb will make a more basic solution than carbonate.
No it's the other way around.
Jonathan said:But a carbonate solution of any kind will very readily produce CO2 directly, without any electrolysis. There's a natural balance between dissolved CO2 in solution and CO3-, and it will interconvert. One of the ways to accelerate this, for example to deplete the carbonate by creating CO2, is to change the pH (I think raising it is usually the best way to do this).
Yes, and no. H2CO3 in Coke soft drinks is all H2CO3, carbonic acid. It is supersaturated, and unstable as a result. That is why it foams. The foam is CO2 gas, leaving water behind. CO2 + H2O = H2CO3.
H2CO3 will react with a base like NaOH to give NaHCO3, and eventually with enough NaOH added you get Na2CO3. NaHCO3 will react with an acid or a base and give of some CO2 gas.
Jonathan said:But if people are really serious about trying this, why on earth bother with electrolysis units? Wouldn't the tests be far easier to conduct with compressed gas tanks? You can monitor the consumption, the flow, vary the H2/O2 ratio (or not use O2 at all)...
By using electrolysis you're just making everything that much more complicated to get reliable data, as well as proving ammunition for naysayers.
As an aside, if you really must use electrolysis, drop the voltage down, since it only takes a tiny amount (<2V, IIRC, but I can calculate it if anyone really wants to know), and the higher the voltage the more unwanted side reactions you'll make possible.
I think the attraction is not having to buy Hydrogen and not having to carry the high pressure flammable gas. Correct, and one of the devices linked below (the Smack version) has multiple plates in series that drops the per plate voltage closer to 2 volts per cell.
Irainman, can you measure the pH of the water at various times for me?
Keep in mind, because of the carbonate content, and exposure to the air over time (CO2 in the air), the carbonate content can change, and so can the pH. The pH will also change with temperature. I am primarily interested in seeing if the pH is going up from say 6.x to 9.x, which should be easy for you to do, if you can access the lab meter at work, or buy some fresh pH paper.