Where Can I Find Affordable Chemicals for Etching Steel?

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Concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl) and nitric acid (HNO3) are difficult to obtain due to legal restrictions, as they are classified as hazardous materials. Most commercial suppliers require buyers to be affiliated with educational institutions or industries. Hardware stores are unlikely to carry these strong acids in concentrated form due to safety concerns. Liquid asphaltum can be found at art supply stores, and it can be dried and ground into a powder for use. The discussion highlights alternatives for etching steel, suggesting that Aqua Regia, a mixture of HCl and HNO3, is not the only option. Ferric chloride is mentioned as a safer and more accessible etching solution, available at art supply stores. Other methods using ferric chloride with citric acid or copper sulfate with sodium chloride are also proposed as effective and safer alternatives for etching. The thread emphasizes the importance of exploring modern etching solutions that may be less hazardous than traditional methods.
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I'm looking to get the following: concentrated hydrochloric and nitric acid and powdered asphaltum. The book I'm getting this from suggests hardware stores or pool chemical dealers, but its dated back to the 1970's, so I'm not sure of the current availability outside of a commercial chemical dealer. Also, if chemical houses are the only place to get them, do they sell to the common man?
 
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Conc. HCl and conc. HNO3 are restricted chemicals with most commercial suppliers. You must be affiliated with a school, university or industry that requires such chemicals. Haven't ever tried a hardware store for chemicals, so no clue about that.

You can get liquid asphaltum from most any art supply store. No luck finding asphaltum on websites of standard Chemical Supply houses. If liquid asphaltum is allowed to dry, it will harden into a solid layer, which can be scraped and ground to a powder. I'm sure you have better things to do with your time ! :biggrin:
 
I doubt any hardware store would sell concentrated HCl or nitric acid. Those are really strong acids and far too dangerous to sell in concentrated form to just anyone. Do we dare ask what home use you had in mind for these things? :eek:
 
H2SO4 and HNO3

Legally I think it's quite difficult to obtain these 2 mineral acids esp. in the concentrated form. You can try your luck by asking to private or public (chemical) laboratory nearby or high school/university laboratory.

H2SO4 at approx. 25% (d= approx 1.2g/mL) strength is readily obtainable as an acid soln. for your lead cell car battery.
Traditionally, long long time ago, HNO3 is synthesized by distilling conc. H2SO4 with Potassium nitrate (salpeter)...KNO3 + H2SO4 -> HNO3 + KHSO4
But this is an very archaic method and too troublesome to do unless you have other way of getting HNO3
 
Moonbear said:
I doubt any hardware store would sell concentrated HCl or nitric acid. Those are really strong acids and far too dangerous to sell in concentrated form to just anyone. Do we dare ask what home use you had in mind for these things? :eek:

The acids, when mixed at 4:1 HCl:HNO3, form a mixture called Aqua Regia which is used to etch steel. The asphalt is mixed with beeswax and when coated onto the steel provides the resist to the acid into which you carve the design you want the acid to "bite" into the steel. As I said the source for this is rather old and perhaps there are better, safer solutions for etching steel than this rather caustic mix. I'll search around for alternatives or if anyone here does such work, clue me in.
 
Well, depending on the amount you need and your available equipment, you could just synthesize it ...
 
DocToxyn said:
The acids, when mixed at 4:1 HCl:HNO3, form a mixture called Aqua Regia which is used to etch steel. The asphalt is mixed with beeswax and when coated onto the steel provides the resist to the acid into which you carve the design you want the acid to "bite" into the steel. As I said the source for this is rather old and perhaps there are better, safer solutions for etching steel than this rather caustic mix. I'll search around for alternatives or if anyone here does such work, clue me in.

Don't they have commercially available etching solutions now? I don't know if they are for steel or just glass. I know I've seen them for glass etching in craft stores. You might want to try an art store.

Not sure if this is the sort of thing you're looking for...
http://www.permanentmarking.com/etch-electrolyte.php
 
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A common etchant for most types of stainless (I know it works for 304 and 316) is ferric chloride - which I'm quite sure is sold in a decent art supply store. If you have an appropriate light source, I would suggest you use a mask and commercial photoresist as an etch stop, else you could try most enamel basd resists. In fact, regular paint, might work. The advantage of using a photoresist is that you can design the mask on your computer and print it onto a transparent (OHP) sheet...but this requires the correct lamp and reflector.

Don't art supply stores sell etch and resist kits ? I would imagine they do. I'm sure you wouldn't have to look too far for one.

Surely you do not require aqua regia to etch steel. HCl alone will do (though at a slower etch rate - which might to good or bad for you). A lower etch rate gives you better control but takes more time.
 
Gokul43201 said:
A common etchant for most types of stainless (I know it works for 304 and 316) is ferric chloride - which I'm quite sure is sold in a decent art supply store.
I found a method using ferric chloride/citric acid or copper sulfate/sodium chloride for etching steel. These should be more readily available and considerably safer :biggrin: . Thanks.
 
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