Vinegar, H2O2 and NaCl etch solution
2011-08-19 by kx4om
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2011-08-19 by kx4om
Before I posted, I did a search in the archives for "vinegar". Returned several hits. Here is a link to a web article where the etching process does indeed use household vinegar (with drugstore-strength hydrogen peroxide and table salt.) http://quinndunki.com/blondihacks/?p=351
2011-08-20 by Norm
On 8/19/2011 11:16 AM, kx4om wrote: > > Before I posted, I did a search in the archives for "vinegar". > Returned several hits. Here is a link to a web article where the > etching process does indeed use household vinegar (with > drugstore-strength hydrogen peroxide and table salt.) > > http://quinndunki.com/blondihacks/?p=351 > > _ Not 100% sure about the chemistry - it's been 60+ years since chem classes, but as I recall, vinegar (5% acetic acid, HAc) + Salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) => HCl (hydrochloric acid) + NaAc (sodium acetate?). It would be a very weak HCl, and when combined with the drugstore H2O2 yields a very weak version of the same etchant as the CuCl version (just add copper). I have no idea what the NaAc might contribute to the etching process. The very weak acid/oxidizer solution tends to agree with quindunki's report of very slow etching time__ <http://quinndunki.com/blondihacks/?p=351> (1 hour +). It obviously works for him, and possibly the very weak etchant contributes to his success with fine traces. To me, the commercial HCl is easier and faster than messing with kitchen condiments. Just my opinion - - - YMMV. Norm W6NIM [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
2011-08-21 by garydeal
>Here is a link to a web article where the etching process does indeed use
>household vinegar (with drugstore-strength hydrogen peroxide and table salt.)
I've used this to remove nickel plating from a brass substrate. The
brass was very shiny underneath and I wondered if it was being removed as
well, but I never cared enough to test it on the copper on a pcb.
For anyone who cares, this is what I did:
Start with about two ounces of white vinegar
Dissolve about two tablespoons of non-iodized table salt in the
vinegar
Add about two ounces of plain drugstore peroxide
Stir with part to be etched until the desired material has been
removed.
In reality, it was: slop vinegar into a paper cup to about 1/3 full,
pour two piles of salt in hand and dump in, stir, slop in peroxide to
about 2/3 full, stir with plated part. It went faster than I anticipated.
It might be slow for a pcb, but it has advantages for those who
don't want HCl around the house - the kids can only get into so much
trouble with a bottle of vinegar.
-Gary