Heating Ferric Oxalate
Joe,
I'm a bit wary of heating FO in a closed bottle since I had a dropper bottle explode once. I wasn't happy nor was my darkroom.
Since yesterday I added 5 ml to the 50 ml solution and a lot of the FO dissolved over night. However there still remains a small quantity that didn't dissolve. As a result I added 5 more ml of water and placed the bottled in a water bath heated gently on my darkroom gridle. Hopefully it will all dissolve but I won't have a 20 % solution - 16.6 % instead.
I have weighed the resulting undissolved ferric oxalate after drying the filter paper and subtracting the weight of an unused piece of filter paper and the actual weight is a very small amount. It just looks like a lot.
I use an isopro camp stove in my darkroom for heating up to 1 liter of solution. I mix and heat ferric oxalate in a boiling flask over the flame. The round profile improves heat transfer. Place a rubber stopper LOOSELY on the top of the bottle or flask. This serves as a pressure valve similar to the weight used on a pressure cooker. The stopper also reduces evaporation of liquid which can be significant if heating over a flame. I heat up to the boiling threshold but do not boil. You can feel it with your fingers as you hold the flask. 170 degrees might do it but I suspect slightly higher heat will improve the speed of solubility.
I have a darkroom ceiling covered with ferric oxalate stains from an eruption the first time I mixed my own from powder. I had pressed the stopper into the flask. Fortunately I was wearing goggles and a dust mask and the glass didn't break. I still had to take an immediate shower to wash ferric oxalate out of my hair.
Now you understand why I suggested against adding water. You now have a 16.6% solution. Compensate with your Pt/Pd accordingly so you don't waste metal.
In the grand scheme of things, don't worry about a little undissolved powder. There are a million variables in this process so minor variations from the small amount of undissolved powder won't make enough difference to matter.
That's my 2 cents...time to get the last print out of the wash.
Bob Herbst