So, I attached two pieces of metal onto the cathode and anode of a large battery using two small magnets and threw it into a bowl of salt water. Immediately, I could see the reaction taking place. I don't quite understand every detail of it, but it is very interesting!
I left it there for a few hours, until the water turned into this weird, green gunk. I then took the battery out, poured the green gunk and water into a glass jar and heated it on a pan on medium heat for several hours.
All of the water evaporated and I scooped what looked like a grey sludge onto a glass plate and popped it into the microwave for one minute to evaporate the remaining water.
What I am left with is a mustard colored powder. It looks almost exactly like this:
I am not sure what kind of metal was used, but I assume it was either iron or steel. What I think I have made is some kind of iron oxide--exciting!
I am hoping to get some approval on this. Hopefully someone more experienced than I can validate this claim and maybe even tell me what kind of iron oxide this is.
I want to make some thermite for a spectacular youtube experiment, and I think this is a pretty cool way of making iron oxide, if that is what I have done.
Thank you. I am a chemistry major at university and I love chemistry and physics!