Is there any way to recycle chrome?
Let's say I have a lot of chrome car parts that I don't care about. Is it possible to place these in a tank and us them as anodes (or cathodes) whatever polarity is required. And strip the chrome from those parts electrically and transfer it over to the parts I want to re-chrome?
I'm not exactly inexperienced with electroplating. Years ago I used to work at a job where I was silver-plating. I don't recall the chemicals we used. But I do recall that we could strip the silver back off the parts by reversing the current.
We were silver plating electrical parts for a manufacturer of electric stoves. The silver plated parts were used as electrical connectors.
In any case I vividly recall that on occasion the silver plating process went wrong and the parts came out silver plated, but looked horrible cosmetically. I was told that they would still work well for the intended purpose, but they couldn't sell ugly looking parts to the consumer. So we had to strip the silver back off, and re-plate them. I found that quite interesting because after striping the silver back off, the original steel parts looked exactly as they did before plating them. Also the silver anodes got bigger again (i.e. the silver really did return to the source anodes)
So I'm wondering if something similar can be done with chrome?
Can I take an unwanted chrome car bumper (for example), electrically strip the chrome from it, and then re-plate that same chrome back onto another bumper? And what kind of chemical baths would I need to do that?
It just seems to me that there must be some way to get around the toxicity of the bath solution during this process.
If the chrome itself is the toxin, then if it goes from one metal part over to another, why should the bath solution become toxic? The chrome itself should be on the metal parts, not in the bath water? Except for the brief time during the actual transfer process.