Building A Multi-Purpose Electrochemistry Device

We don’t get enough electrochemistry hacks on these pages, so here’s [Markus Bindhammer] of YouTube/Marb’s lab fame to give us a fix with their hand-built general-purpose electrochemistry device.

The basic structure is made from plyboard cut to size on a table saw and glued’n’screwed together. The top and front are constructed from an aluminium sheet bent to shape with a hand-bender. A laser-printed front panel finishes the aesthetic nicely, contrasting with the shiny aluminium. The electrode holders are part of off-the-shelf chemistry components, with the electrical contacts hand-made from components usually used for constructing stair handrails. Inside, a 500 RPM 12 V DC geared motor is mounted, driving a couple of small magnets. A PWM motor speed controller provides power. This allows a magnetic stirrer to be added for relevant applications. Power for the electrochemical cell is courtesy of a Zk-5KX buck-boost power supply with a range of 0 – 36 V at up to 5 A  with both CV and CC modes. A third electrode holder is also provided as a reference electrode for voltammetry applications. A simple and effective build, we reckon!

Over the years, we’ve seen a few electrochemical hacks, like this DIY electroplating pen, a DIY electrochemical machining rig, and finally, a little something about 3D printing metal electrochemically.

12 thoughts on “Building A Multi-Purpose Electrochemistry Device

      1. Exact ones I’ve been using for years on vacuum distillation setups – the ones that sit at a fixed length/angle their whole life are fine, while the ones that need to be adjusted for each setup fail to lock properly. I blame the zamak vs steel thread surfaces and premature wear.

        Could be a difference in manufacture lots and/or use cases. To each their own I suppose.

  1. To anyone who might do this – that style of three-finger clamp SUCKS – they’ll only stay put once, poor design and materials – go for the old-school pinched-rod and spend a couple bucks to guarantee you’re getting steel vs pot metal.

      1. So… thats actually being worked on as well! Four Thieves also has https://synth.fourthievesvinegar.org/ which is ChemHacktica. That’s primarily for organic synthesis of existing pharmeceuticals… BUT they also include legality, cost, and where to buy chemical reagents.

        There’s also a virtual research assistant “Vinni”, that you can ask chemistry based questions and processes.

        From what I’ve looked at this ecosystem, seems like it would be a great jumping-off-point to work together and make a comprehensive chemistry system that can automate and walk you through the non-automatable parts!

  2. Now to take my rather rusty high school chemistry skills, build this wonderful device, and start making my own 85% H2O2 rocket fuel…. and take out a loan to buy enough high end catalyst material to use it.

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