
Copper Plating
Mikaela Fenton, 2006
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This project makes an ever-lasting ornament
or piece of jewellery using leaves or flowers...
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Abstract
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I wanted to make some jewellery. It would
be better to use nature’s beauty and turn it
to metal rather than trying to shape metal to
look like nature’s beauty.
I thought this would be pretty and special.
I eventually found a way to make non-metal things
from nature conduct electricity so they could
then be copper plated.
This is a good way to make jewellery because
nature has many beautiful objects.
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- Plant leaves or flowers
- Copper sulphate Solution
- Electricity (3 Volts)
- Copper metal
- Alligator clip x2
- Wires
- Beaker
- Electroplating tank - an old electrophoresis
tank
- Acid wash solution
- Mikaelas Secret Plating solution (made at
home by trying different ways to get the copper
sulphate solution to plate onto the leaf.
The solution we invented is also safe for
children and works great!)
Method
Chose a small piece of plant. Paint or dip
the whole of the plant with Mikaelas Secret
Plating solution. Leave it for 15 minute days
to dry.
Make the positive electrode out of a copper
strip and screw into the tank. Put the copper
sulphate solution in the plating tank, and insert
the plastic tray.
Connect the wires of the lid to the power box.
Get a piece of copper wire and sand off the
vanish coating around it then wrap it around
the plants stem.
Wrap the other end of the copper wire to the
metal rack that is connected to the negative
electrode.
Put the safety lid on, turn on the power and
leave it for a few hours.
Turn off the power. Remove the plant. Rinse
it with normal water.
If you want to copper plate something that
is already metal, you need to wash it in the
base solution first, then the acid solution
to cancel out the base. This removes the grease
and your fingerprints so the copper will stick
properly.
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