DIY VIDEO :
http://youtu.be/SnndW_seKRMThis
video shows what you get when you put copper in a sealed bottle with
heavily slated water. Over time a Puffy white power like substance will
collect at the bottom. From what I can tell it is Copper I Chloride, and
it passes the few simple tests.
Evaporating yielded a white
power, the white powder did not dissolve in water, nor react to extreme
heat, so it passed my "primitive alchemist methodology" aka my "goto DIY
tests".. Air, Water Fire hehe.. next... Earth.. no.. no earth, no clue
what that would be lol.. perhaps high pressures or impact?... next
Electricity :D
I also do an electrolysis experiment with it. My
hope for this experiment was that the copper(I) chloride would react and
turn into copper(II)chloride, which does dissolve in water. I was
further hoping the dissolved copper would migrate to the contact and
electroplate it. This does not seem to have happened :( But the
experiment does show some promise in a slightly revised approach :)
I
did however manage to "grow copper oxide", moreover I grew an
interesting "puffy structure" of copper oxide. At the extremities, where
it was growing, it was red, but this quickly(in most places) faded to
black.
It appears that the growth process was 2 staged,
first the copper(I)chloride turned into copper(I)oxide, Then the copper(I)oxide further oxidized into copper(II)oxide.
Now,
I can't tell yet, but perhaps the "puffy dark mass" is connected enough
to the copper wire that the mass itself could serve as an anode or
cathode. Copper(II)oxide has been used as a cathode in batteries, so
maybe there is hope.
Maybe there is a way to take my "water tech"
with it corroding anodes and cathodes, and flush it with DIY
copper(I)chloride mixture, and a "worn out system" can "regenerate its
metal contacts" :) I'm sure there are plenty of ways to do this, I'm
just looking for the simplest DIY method, keep in mind that the end goal
is a DIY Water Computer.
Perhaps with a denser concentration of
chopper(I)chloride, and with several intricate anodes/cathodes, maybe
the copper oxide can be "grown into shape" and be dense enough to be
"solid after dehydration".. hmm... electrical oxide sculpture growth ? :)