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The components used for etching copper are acetic acid, hydrogen peroxide and sodium chloride. I think the equation may be similar to this:

$$\ce{2H3C2O2H + H2O2 + 2NaCl + Cu -> CuCl2 + 2H3C2O2Na + 2H2O}$$

Is this equation correct? There are a lot of bubbles created. What is the gas that is given off?

A.K.
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Todd
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  • Hi and welcome to chemistry.stackexchange.com. Feel free to take a [tour] of the site. I improved the formatting of your post with MathJax. For more information on how to do so yourself, check out the [help], this meta post or this one. – Jan Nov 11 '15 at 19:18

1 Answers1

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Well your equation balances but that isn't the right reaction.

First lets break this down into half cell reactions.

Oxidation reaction

$\ce{Cu_{(s)} <-> Cu^{2+}_{(aq)} + 2e^{-}}$

Reduction reaction

$\ce{H2O2 + 2 H^+ + 2e^{-} -> 2 H2O_{(l)}}$

Decomposition reaction

Hydrogen peroxide spontaneously decomposes in acid solution.

$\ce{2H2O2 -> 2H2O_{(l)} + O2_{(g)}}$

Stoichiometric reaction between copper and hydrogen peroxide

So the stoichiometric reaction between copper and hydrogen peroxide is:

$\ce{H2O2 + 2 H^+ + Cu_{(s)} -> Cu^{2+}_{(aq)} + 2 H2O_{(l)}}$

the $\ce{2 H^+}$ ions come from the vinegar. (Let's use $\ce{HOAc}$ for vinegar).

$\ce{H2O2 + 2 HOAc + Cu_{(s)} -> Cu^{2+}_{(aq)} + 2OAc^{-} + 2H2O_{(l)}}$

Sodium chloride's Role

Finally the role of the $\ce{NaCl}$ plays in the etch. The $\ce{NaCl}$ must be fairly high to drive the $\ce{Cu^{2+}}$ to a copper chloride complex. This thus reduces the "free" $\ce{Cu^{2+}}$ in solution which keeps the electrochemical potential of copper high so that the solution keeps dissolving copper. (Think of the half-cell copper reaction as if it is in a battery. The voltage of the half-cell would drop as the copper builds up.)

Jan
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MaxW
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  • Before I edit it away amoung another minor typo I found, is there a reason why you write $\ce{Cu+^2}$ rather than $\ce{Cu^2+}$? – Jan Nov 12 '15 at 09:23
  • Changed it. Didn't realize that there was such a strong convention, or that anyone would care... – MaxW Nov 12 '15 at 16:23
  • Will, I'm not aware of any conventions, but I only ever saw $\ce{Cu^2+}$ (or $\ce{Cu++}$ from a particularly old biology teacher) so I thought I'ld better ask before doing things wrong ;) – Jan Nov 12 '15 at 16:35
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    @Jan - LOL Pauling "The Nature of the Chemical Bond" used the $\ce{Cu^{++}}$ notation so your odd biology teacher was in good company.... – MaxW Nov 12 '15 at 16:50
  • I guess "++" was a good notation until the number of pluses required got larger ;) – SasQ Nov 20 '19 at 19:20