I wasn't sure where to stick this...
I'm attempting to make some ferrofluid, liquid magnet... I believe the general idea is to suspend magnetite in a liquid.
My problem is I have limited supplies and limited time. This is for a demonstration event.
Things I do have:
- Steel wool
- Iron (III) Chloride
- HCl (ACS)
- Citric Acid (ACS)
...and a variety of general stock chemicals in an organic and analytical laboratory.
I've seen several different recipes online and from what I understand the general procedure goes something like this: Using Fe(II) (substitute steel wool in 1M HCl) and Fe(III) in HCl solution to make magnetite. Can precipitate this with neutralization with ammonia solution.
Stick a group such as oleic acid (going to attempt citric) on the Fe (This step prevents the aggregation of the nanoparticles, other surfactant groups may be usable). Put this in a liquid to carry it, such as tetramethylammonumium hydroxide or kerosene.
I have tetrabutylammonium hydroxide...would this work in place of the tetramethylammonium? Or I have petroleum ether, heptane, toluene...Could I make something in place of the kerosene? Or is there some other alternative?
*** I know I'm getting confused here... I either go the route of addition of oelic (or citric? will that even work?) to make it soluble in kerosene (or similar) OR go the route of using the tetramethylammonium hydroxide (will the butyl work?) to make it soluble in water. ***Do I have the general idea here? I really don't know what I'm doing...
I have a week to test this out and get a working demo, so if I need to order something, the sooner I know the better. Thank you for any input.
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For the precipitation of magnetite out of solution, I have this equation:
2FeCl3 + FeCl2 + 8NH3 + 4H2O Fe3O4 + 8NH4ClThis looks like the easy part... I just need to figure out how to get it suspended in liquid....Meaning I need to figure out how to get the nanoparticles to not aggregate.