Doing some tests using a gold electrode to split water. Basically I'd like to know if you'd expect what I'm seeing, which is a brown gunk building up on the gold anode and it seeming to be eroded. I was expecting it not to react at all.
Set up:
1 micron thick 24 carat gold foil at the positive electrode. 2 square cm. Legit supplier of gold foil.
Titanium negative electrode. 4 square centimetres.
Sodium hydroxide solution electrolyte.
20 volts.
I see 2 amps or so flowing and plenty of bubbles, and unfortunately the gold electrode discolours, some brown gunk builds up on it, and the edges look like they're getting eaten away.
I saw in the topic below that someone mentioned the possibility of gold hydroxide being formed. I'm thinking it's either this, or my gold foil isn't as pure as claimed.
Does anyone have any opinion or experience of this situation, and how likely the gold hydroxide is? If it's this, might a potassium hydroxide electrolyte be worth a shot, or if the gold hydroxide is forming, should I give up on the gold anode?
Apologies, I have very limited chemistry knowledge, but willing to learn. Cheers.