That's a long page, so you can optionally jump to the "Thunderstorm it" part, but a bit of context is always neat :)
Context
Say I'm cooking an egg in vinegar. The egg shell is made of calcium carbonate:
$$\ce{CaCO3 + CH3COOH -> H2O + CO2 + Ca(CH3COO)2}$$
After eating the egg, is left in the cookware: a bit of calcium acetate, lots of water, acetic acid and other unidentified stuff.
It'd be neat to isolate that calcium acetate, as it could be of use sometime. I've seen that we can grow cool looking crystals out of it, maybe I could try that! Anyway chemistry is cool, so let's do it :)
But there will also be loads of water (egg cooking). I could store it all, but that wouldn't be very practical...
Getting rid of the water
I see three ways to get rid of that water.
Boil until water evaporates
Energy-hungry process. I'm a kind of environmental-crazy dude, so that's not an option.
Filtering
While boring, that could be an efficient option, if at all possible. It seems calcium acetate is soluble in water. Is there a way to filter it out without expensive equipment, or even at all?
Electrolysis
Energy-hungry as well, but I have a spare solar panel that produces 6 or 12V and anything between 0 and 4W, so that energy comes for free (albeit quite slowly in Belgium).
Thunderstorm it!
No matter how feasible are the other options, I'm here to experiment, so I'd love to do some electrolysis :) I got time anyway!
Constraints
I have very little knowledge of chemistry (but eager to learn!), and no equipment at all, except for household items. Also, this experiment would take place in living space (probably in my room), so it should be safe to do (e.g. do not produce chlorine gas or other nasty products). And if it's not smelly, it's even better :)
How I would do it
I'll need:
- container: a drinking glass should suffice
- anode
- cathode
- some electrolyte in the water
- electricity: the solar panel will provide what's needed
- time: we all have a pool of that in our life
I still need the anode, cathode and electrolyte. And also, I'd love to understand the process that takes place.
In my younger age, I used copper wire as both anode and cathode, table salt as electrolyte, and it would produce tiny bubbles on one end of the wire, and go green on the other end (do I remember properly?).
In this experiment though, the context is a little different:
- I need to "dissolve" a lot of water, so just a copper wire won't be enough
- It seems that using NaCl as electrolyte produces chlorine gas instead of oxygen, that's pretty bad
Choosing the electrolyte
Since I cooked the egg in vinegar, I'll probably have some acetic acid left in the water. Would that be a good enough electrolyte? Alternatively, I have baking soda readily available, but that would produce other salts when reacting with the remaining acetic acid...
Choosing the anode and cathode
I'm lost here. First and foremost, I remember my copper wire going green when doing electrolysis. Does that mean I'll "consume" my anode/cathode while doing the electrolysis? That sounds pretty expensive. Also, I'll have to separate calcium acetate from copper oxyde afterwards...
Questions
- is the above reflection correct at all?
- what's the best choice for electrolyte and anode/cathode materials
- what's the exact reaction taking place?
- any other way to isolate that calcium acetate?