Take some resin and add a huge excess of a concentrated solution of the fatty acid to an anion exchange resin and let it stir overnight. Filter off the resin and rinse it with clean solvent a few times. Dissolve your Pt salt in something and stir it with the resin again overnight. Collect the solution and you should have your platinum fatty acid salt. Save the resin too, it can be reused many times.
Sorry, I'm a little confused. I take some resin and add a huge excess of fatty acid solution (in water? in organic solvent? if the latter, does it matter which solvent?). Filter off, rinse with clean solvent (same as before?). At this point my fatty acid is bound to the resin, right? Dissolve platinum salt in something (water?). Stir over night. Collect aqueous solution and my fatty acid salt is in the water? That doesn't make much sense to me, because the fatty acid salt shouldn't be water soluble.
Next question: How fatty of an acid can I use do you think? Hexanoic acid? Stearic acid?
Next question: is there a limit to how far I can scale it up? I'd like a minimum of a few 100 mg - a gram would be better.
EDIT: I didn't read the posts after yours until after I replied. So I see the issue of solubility is already brought up. The goal is to create a fat-soluble platinum source, preferably dissolved at high concentration in a nonpolar solvent like hexane or toluene. I guess something like this:
https://patents.google.com/patent/US5149854 . But man I find patents impossible to read.