jerryshizzle123 Posted July 30, 2010 Posted July 30, 2010 I'm trying to refine gold using nitric acid (NOT aqua regia). Will the non-gold components dissolve and leave behind pure gold, or will the fact that it's an alloy somehow prevent the individual components from dissolving?
UC Posted July 30, 2010 Posted July 30, 2010 (edited) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depletion_gilding Nitric acid isn't magical and able to penetrate solid materials, so you'll only remove what little is on the surface, building up an impenetrable layer of pure gold Have a look at this. By diluting the gold with silver (which is susceptible to nitric acid), you can penetrate the entire solid and leave behind only gold and other metals that do not dissolve in nitric acid: Plenty of reading material here: http://goldrefiningforum.com/ Edited July 30, 2010 by UC
jerryshizzle123 Posted July 31, 2010 Author Posted July 31, 2010 Ah, your response was quite helpful. Thanks
dragonstar57 Posted August 11, 2010 Posted August 11, 2010 can it be done with something that isn't as valuable as silver?
John Cuthber Posted August 11, 2010 Posted August 11, 2010 Yes, copper for example, but that needs more acid to dissolve it. Since you can get the silver back fairly easily it gets used in spite of its cost.
dragonstar57 Posted August 27, 2010 Posted August 27, 2010 can someone post a video that also includes how to get the nearly as valuable silver back? after all an ounce of silver can be worth as much as 350 dollars (or at least that what I have to pay for it)
Arthur Dent Posted August 30, 2010 Posted August 30, 2010 ...after all an ounce of silver can be worth as much as 350 dollars (or at least that what I have to pay for it) Huh? $350? The current value of an ounce troy of pure .999 silver is $19.17 as of this morning! Where do you get your silver? I don't think you're buying if from the right place that's for sure! Even United Nuclear (which is known for their expensive prices) sells 2.6 g of pure silver for $2.50... that's less than $30 an ounce! Robert
dragonstar57 Posted August 30, 2010 Posted August 30, 2010 the idiot put the decimal point in the wrong place (the owner of the jewelry store) so it was 35.0 an oz which. i guess is higher than normal
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