Electrolysis of brine produced white stuff.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around an experiment to produce hydrogen using sodium hydroxide, aluminum, and water through electrolysis. The experimenter observed a hard white substance accumulating around the sellotape on the hydrogen electrode after about 20 minutes. Participants clarified that sodium hydroxide and aluminum can react directly to produce hydrogen without needing electrolysis. There was speculation that the experimenter might be attempting to create sodium hydroxide via electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution, which could also produce chlorine at the positive electrode. It was noted that both hydroxide ions and hydrogen are generated simultaneously in the electrolysis process, indicating that the formation of sodium hydroxide is inherently linked to hydrogen production.
Fezziwig
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As a casual experiment I was seeing whether I could make hydrogen from sodium hydroxide, aluminium and water. Rather than buy sodium hydroxide or go through a load of cleaning products to find it, I thought it would be much more fun to produce it through electrolysis.

I set it up, and the electrolysis was going very well. After about 20 minutes I noticed a small build up of a hard white substance around the sellotape on the hydrogen electrode. Is it sodium hydroxide or is it more likely to be something to do with the sellotape (or indeed somthing else)?

Thanks,
Rowan.
 
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What were you electrolyzing and what are your electrode materials?
 
Fezziwig said:
I was seeing whether I could make hydrogen from sodium hydroxide, aluminium and water. Rather than buy sodium hydroxide or go through a load of cleaning products to find it, I thought it would be much more fun to produce it through electrolysis.

Sodium hydroxide and Al produce hydrogen in a direct reaction, no need for electrolysis.
 
Borek said:
Sodium hydroxide and Al produce hydrogen in a direct reaction, no need for electrolysis.

I think he's trying to make sodium hydroxide by electrolysis. (Of NaCL?)

Electrolyzing a NaCL solution can produce some chlorine at the positive electrode, and if you keep this up for very long you might lose nearly all of the chlorine and get sodium hydroxide. You probably need to refill the solution many times, and should do this with distilled water, or you might get Calcium and- or Magnesiumhydroxide at the negative electrode.
 
Fezziwig said:
I was seeing whether I could make hydrogen

willem2 said:
I think he's trying to make sodium hydroxide

Both OH- and hydrogen are produced in the same reaction. You can't have one without the other.
 
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