Yahoo Groups archive

Homebrew PCBs

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 23:05 UTC

Message

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: Regenerating CuCl

2005-09-06 by Adam Seychell

Stefan Trethan wrote:
> On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 05:46:55 +0200, Adam Seychell  
> <a_seychell@...> wrote:
> 
> 
>>Dull green is ok, only when it becomes brown is the problem. If you
>>dilute a bit of it and it turns bright green then its pretty much
>>regenerated. But, this doesn't necessarily mean it'll etch ok.
>>I here a lot of people on this group that cannot get air re-generated
>>cupric chloride to work, simply because they run their solutions too
>>damn week. I have done a side by side comparison with fresh full
>>strength ferric chloride (sp.gr 1.47), under exact same conditions and
>>the cupric chloride (without any H2O2, ever) is only fractionally slower
>>(7.5 minutes for FeCl and 9 minutes for CuCl for bubble etching, 35um
>>thick copper at 15\ufffdC).
>>Adam
> 
> 
> 
> i agree, you need a strong solution to do air-regeneration.
> For H2O2, anything works, but as it grows denser the time between H2O2  
> applications can be extended, wile at the beginning with a very weak  
> solution you need to add it each time you etch, at least. Density, and a  
> enough volume, are the key to air regeneration i think.
> 
> 

Yes, the more copper the faster, and the more acid the faster. You are 
only limited by solubility, and HCl fuming. A good compromise I found is 
to run at sp.gr 1.38~1.45 and acid at 2~3 Molar. This will be almost 
fast as fresh undiluted ferric chloride. Unfortunately you have to 
invest in a hydrometer, and perform titration (using a 1 ml syringe) to 
determine acid concentration about every 20~30 PCBs or so etched.


Adam

Attachments

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.