Looking for info on cyanide leaching for plated items.

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With your solution it depends how you intend to recover the values, if you use zinc dust then it's of no use but if you use activated carbon it will remove all the metals leaving a solution you can reuse.
One point on your thoughts of putting whole boards into the solution is you are going to need a large amount of solution plus two large rinse solutions, it's the volume you need to worry about unless you have a large safe storage area and storage containers which you can seal after use.
 
I do have a few chemical grade 55gal drums for storage if need be. I will do a little more reaserch on how to dispose of the used liquid after all values are recovered. If activated charcoal works best for recovering values then i will test with charcoal first. The purpose of this test is to see if whole boards with plated pins could be run through the solution thus eliminating the mechanical breakdown of the boards.
 
Sorry but you will have no luck with whole boards. It can be compared to situation where people try to do the same putting all sort of garbage in AR. Sort of like "garbage in = garbage out".
Cyanide solution to work the best need to be stirred or in constant motion around material which need to be stripped. Air bubbler work to some extent on some small batches but to try to strip whole boards is not going to work in my opinion. You are not going to recover plating on area of pin where it is pressed in housing which in your case may amount to about 50% of what you got there - green connectors.
There are rarely any shortcuts in recovery of gold and how you prepare your material is important and it will reflect in result.
 
goldsilverpro said:
Mcnew32(Ag) said:
Tried to search for cyanide leaching through the search bar. If anyone can link me to a good thread for cyanide leaching of gold plated material I would appreciate it.
I recently sent this as a PM to a member. Before attempting this, make sure you have read up and understand how to work safely with cyanide. There are some good websites with this info.

You might read these threads first.
http://goldrefiningforum.com/phpBB3/search.php?keywords=plunger+zinc+cyanide&terms=all&author=goldsilverpro&sc=1&sf=all&sr=posts&sk=t&sd=d&st=0&ch=300&t=0&submit=Search

About all I can do is tell you how I do it. I always tumble the gold plated parts (pins, fingers, etc) in a portable cement mixer using sodium cyanide plus a small amount of 30-35% hydrogen peroxide. No other chemicals. It's very fast and no excess oxidizer will be present to cause problems in precipitation.

I prefer a steel mixer because it's easier to cover the opening. When tumbling, drops of the solution will occasionally fly out. To prevent this, I use 4 magnets, one on each corner, to hold a sheet of thin flexible plastic over the opening. I use 2 of the very strong neodymium magnets (from hard drives) and 2 weaker horseshoe Alnico magnets. When I want to open the mixer, I stop it so the neodymium magnets are at the top, remove the 2 Alnico magnets, and then fold the plastic up over the top, leaving the 2 neodymium magnets in place securing the plastic. This is much easier to do than to explain.

Using this process, I have stripped 6 drums of material in an 8 hour day, by myself.

(1) Add 1.5 to 2 gallons of hot (about 50-60C) tap water to mixer.
(2) Add parts to be stripped. You can strip quite a lot at one time - say, 5-10 kilos, or even more, depending on how bulky the parts are. The pile of parts added can stick up out of the water - everything will get wet as you tumble it. You'll have to experiment with the amount of parts you can run at one time.
(3) Add about 100-200g of Sodium Cyanide (NaCN) and tumble until dissolved - about 1 minute.
(4) Add about 50ml of the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Cover the mixer opening and tumble. The H2O2 will heat the solution even more due to its reaction with the cyanide.
(5) After about 2 minutes, stop the mixer when the strong magnets are on top, remove the lower weak magnets. and fold the plastic over the top. With plastic gloves on, lift a handful of parts, wash with a little water from a squirt bottle, and see if they are stripped. If you see white nickel and/or uniform pink copper color on all the parts, the stripping is complete. If there is still yellow gold present or if you see a black smut (gold that's dissolved and cemented back onto the copper) on the parts, add about 50g of NaCN + about 20ml H2O2, and run for about 3 more minutes. Repeat. If, after doing this a total of 3 times, there is still gold or smut present (very rare - maybe 1 out of 25 batches), start with a fresh solution on the same parts.

Note: Essentially all gold plating on electronic material has a layer of nickel plating under the gold. If the nickel is thick (or, if the base metal is magnetic towards a weak magnet), the stripping will likely be finished in 1 to 2 minutes. If the Ni is very thin, the abrasion caused be the tumbling can remove it and expose the copper. In that case, there is a battle between the gold wanting to dissolve and the dissolved gold wanting to cement back onto the copper. When copper is exposed, the stripping will go slower.

(6) When the parts are stripped, carefully tilt the mixer and collect the solution in a 5 gallon plastic bucket without pouring off any parts. Put 2 gal of clean water in the mixer, tumble for a minute or so to rinse the parts. The same rinse water can be used for 3 or 4 batches.

When finished, transfer all solutions and rinses into a suitable sized plastic container - 5 gal bucket, open top 55 gal drum, etc. Place the container high enough so you can siphon all of it imto another container. While dropping the gold, stirring is quite important. A prop type electric stirrer is nice, but the same results can be achieved with a homemade "plunger" stirrer. To tell how much zinc to use, you must be able to see the color of the gold/zinc powder. This requires a lifting motion while stirring the solution. A 5" dia. plastic disk mounted of the end of a plastic pipe will work great, with an up and down stroke. Go slow on the upstroke or you'll slosh the solution on you.

Precipitating the gold:
(1) Weigh out about 2g of 325 mesh "zinc dust" for each gram of expected gold. This is only an approximation - it may take more or less. Note that the zinc will also drop any silver or copper that has dissolved. Before adding, you must break up any zinc clumps that have formed. I do this by putting the zinc through a fine kitchen sieve.
(2) While stirring, add about half of the the weighed, de-clumped zinc. Stir for a minute or two. As you lift up the powder, look at the color. At first, the powder will be brown (mostly gold and/or copper). As you add more zinc, the color will become a uniform light gray color. This happens when all the gold and copper have precipitated and there is an excess of undissolved gray colored zinc. This is what you want to see. At that point, stop adding zinc and stir for 5-10 more minutes.
(3) Obtain a couple of 5 pound (or, so) zinc bars, drill a hole near the top, and hang them in the solution using some insulated house wire. Let the solution settle overnight. The purpose of the zinc bars is to prevent any gold re-dissolving.
(4) Siphon off the solution into a like sized container without disturbing any of the settled solids.
(5) Filter the solids and rinse them 4 or 5 times with hot water.
(6) Transfer the solids and the filter paper to an adequate leaching vessel (I use a 5 gal bucket). UNDER A FUME HOOD, cover the solids and paper with water. Add very small increments of nitric acid, stirring slowly in between additions. When an addition of nitric produces NO reaction, stop adding nitric.
(7) Filter, rinse well, dissolve in aqua regia, precipitate pure gold with SMB, filter, rinse well, dry, and melt.
Note: When dissolving the Au powder in aqua regia.
(1) Transfer filtered gold and paper to a large beaker.
(2) Cover with HCl. Heat to about 60C under a fume hood.
(3) Add a few ml of nitric. There should be an immediate reaction. When the reaction subsides, give it a short stir and add another small amount of nitric. Repeat until a small addition produces NO reaction. Stop adding nitric.

Dear Master Chris,


You wrote it like this. "About all I can do is tell you how I do it. I always tumble the gold plated parts (pins, fingers, etc) in a portable cement mixer using sodium cyanide plus a small amount of 30-35% hydrogen peroxide. No other chemicals. It's very fast and no excess oxidizer will be present to cause problems in precipitation."
I wonder, what is the pH value of the average 3% NaCN solution? Do not need a pH-elevating chemical? Is not HCN occurring?
Sorry, is not very good English.

Best Regards,
Mehmet
 
If you're running at 3% NaCN then you'll find that your pH is probably fine. Remember NaCN is an alkali. Feel free to add a bit of NaOH if you like but frankly I would buy a pH meter and learn what strength of solution runs at which pH.
 
anachronism said:
If you're running at 3% NaCN then you'll find that your pH is probably fine. Remember NaCN is an alkali. Feel free to add a bit of NaOH if you like but frankly I would buy a pH meter and learn what strength of solution runs at which pH.

Dear anachronism,

Thank you very much. I want to work between pH 11 and 12. I will raise the pH to 12 by dissolving the gold after NaOH addition. However, I do not think it would be a problem for me to make this addition before I start digging the gold. (If necessary)

Best Regards,
Mehmet
 
I recently sent this as a PM to a member. Before attempting this, make sure you have read up and understand how to work safely with cyanide. There are some good websites with this info.

You might read these threads first.
http://goldrefiningforum.com/phpBB3...posts&sk=t&sd=d&st=0&ch=300&t=0&submit=Search
About all I can do is tell you how I do it. I always tumble the gold plated parts (pins, fingers, etc) in a portable cement mixer using sodium cyanide plus a small amount of 30-35% hydrogen peroxide. No other chemicals. It's very fast and no excess oxidizer will be present to cause problems in precipitation.

I prefer a steel mixer because it's easier to cover the opening. When tumbling, drops of the solution will occasionally fly out. To prevent this, I use 4 magnets, one on each corner, to hold a sheet of thin flexible plastic over the opening. I use 2 of the very strong neodymium magnets (from hard drives) and 2 weaker horseshoe Alnico magnets. When I want to open the mixer, I stop it so the neodymium magnets are at the top, remove the 2 Alnico magnets, and then fold the plastic up over the top, leaving the 2 neodymium magnets in place securing the plastic. This is much easier to do than to explain.

Using this process, I have stripped 6 drums of material in an 8 hour day, by myself.

(1) Add 1.5 to 2 gallons of hot (about 50-60C) tap water to mixer.
(2) Add parts to be stripped. You can strip quite a lot at one time - say, 5-10 kilos, or even more, depending on how bulky the parts are. The pile of parts added can stick up out of the water - everything will get wet as you tumble it. You'll have to experiment with the amount of parts you can run at one time.
(3) Add about 100-200g of Sodium Cyanide (NaCN) and tumble until dissolved - about 1 minute.
(4) Add about 50ml of the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Cover the mixer opening and tumble. The H2O2 will heat the solution even more due to its reaction with the cyanide.
(5) After about 2 minutes, stop the mixer when the strong magnets are on top, remove the lower weak magnets. and fold the plastic over the top. With plastic gloves on, lift a handful of parts, wash with a little water from a squirt bottle, and see if they are stripped. If you see white nickel and/or uniform pink copper color on all the parts, the stripping is complete. If there is still yellow gold present or if you see a black smut (gold that's dissolved and cemented back onto the copper) on the parts, add about 50g of NaCN + about 20ml H2O2, and run for about 3 more minutes. Repeat. If, after doing this a total of 3 times, there is still gold or smut present (very rare - maybe 1 out of 25 batches), start with a fresh solution on the same parts.

Note: Essentially all gold plating on electronic material has a layer of nickel plating under the gold. If the nickel is thick (or, if the base metal is magnetic towards a weak magnet), the stripping will likely be finished in 1 to 2 minutes. If the Ni is very thin, the abrasion caused be the tumbling can remove it and expose the copper. In that case, there is a battle between the gold wanting to dissolve and the dissolved gold wanting to cement back onto the copper. When copper is exposed, the stripping will go slower.

(6) When the parts are stripped, carefully tilt the mixer and collect the solution in a 5 gallon plastic bucket without pouring off any parts. Put 2 gal of clean water in the mixer, tumble for a minute or so to rinse the parts. The same rinse water can be used for 3 or 4 batches.

When finished, transfer all solutions and rinses into a suitable sized plastic container - 5 gal bucket, open top 55 gal drum, etc. Place the container high enough so you can siphon all of it imto another container. While dropping the gold, stirring is quite important. A prop type electric stirrer is nice, but the same results can be achieved with a homemade "plunger" stirrer. To tell how much zinc to use, you must be able to see the color of the gold/zinc powder. This requires a lifting motion while stirring the solution. A 5" dia. plastic disk mounted of the end of a plastic pipe will work great, with an up and down stroke. Go slow on the upstroke or you'll slosh the solution on you.

Precipitating the gold:
(1) Weigh out about 2g of 325 mesh "zinc dust" for each gram of expected gold. This is only an approximation - it may take more or less. Note that the zinc will also drop any silver or copper that has dissolved. Before adding, you must break up any zinc clumps that have formed. I do this by putting the zinc through a fine kitchen sieve.
(2) While stirring, add about half of the the weighed, de-clumped zinc. Stir for a minute or two. As you lift up the powder, look at the color. At first, the powder will be brown (mostly gold and/or copper). As you add more zinc, the color will become a uniform light gray color. This happens when all the gold and copper have precipitated and there is an excess of undissolved gray colored zinc. This is what you want to see. At that point, stop adding zinc and stir for 5-10 more minutes.
(3) Obtain a couple of 5 pound (or, so) zinc bars, drill a hole near the top, and hang them in the solution using some insulated house wire. Let the solution settle overnight. The purpose of the zinc bars is to prevent any gold re-dissolving.
(4) Siphon off the solution into a like sized container without disturbing any of the settled solids.
(5) Filter the solids and rinse them 4 or 5 times with hot water.
(6) Transfer the solids and the filter paper to an adequate leaching vessel (I use a 5 gal bucket). UNDER A FUME HOOD, cover the solids and paper with water. Add very small increments of nitric acid, stirring slowly in between additions. When an addition of nitric produces NO reaction, stop adding nitric.
(7) Filter, rinse well, dissolve in aqua regia, precipitate pure gold with SMB, filter, rinse well, dry, and melt.
Note: When dissolving the Au powder in aqua regia.
(1) Transfer filtered gold and paper to a large beaker.
(2) Cover with HCl. Heat to about 60C under a fume hood.
(3) Add a few ml of nitric. There should be an immediate reaction. When the reaction subsides, give it a short stir and add another small amount of nitric. Repeat until a small addition produces NO reaction. Stop adding nitric.


Mr.GSP,

I tried above method for stripping my gold plated jewelry. Everything goes fine. After collecting all solutions there is a green color sediment was settled. I dont know the reason. Can you figure out. I used 20gNacn and 20ml H2o2.
 
Mr.GSP,

I tried above method for stripping my gold plated jewelry. Everything goes fine. After collecting all solutions there is a green color sediment was settled. I dont know the reason. Can you figure out. I used 20gNacn and 20ml H2o2.
Sorry GSP won't answer, he passed away some time ago.
Hopefully one of the CN gurus will chime in.
 
I tried above method for stripping my gold plated jewelry. ------------ I used 20gNacn and 20ml H2o2.

So you are using 1 ml H2o2 for every gram of NaCN

That is not what the instructions posted by GSP says to do

(3) Add about 100-200g of Sodium Cyanide (NaCN) and tumble until dissolved
(4) Add about 50ml of the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).

So - according to GSP you should be using between 1/4 to 1/2 ml H2o2 for every gram NaCN (no more the 1/2 ml H2o2 per gram NaCN)

in other words - you are using 2 to 4 times more H2o2 then suggested by GSP

amount of 30-35% hydrogen peroxide.

Is that what you are using or are you using a weaker H2o2 ?

(1) Add 1.5 to 2 gallons of hot (about 50-60C) tap water to mixer.

Are you running the leach hot (as posted by GSP)

After collecting all solutions there is a green color sediment was settled


so IF (the big IF) you are using 30 - 35% H2o2 --- running the leach hot - & then using 2 - 4 times more H202 then suggested --- then this is what I "think" is happening (though I could be wrong)

Using to much H2o2 (as the oxidizer) is causing you to dissolve not just the gold but copper (&/or other base metals)

Also - a hot solution will hold more dissolved metal then a cold solution - that is especially true in a high (11 - 12) Ph (alkali/base) solution --- so - when the solution cools it has the potential to drop some of those dissolved metals back out of the solution especially those higher on the reactive series (base metals including copper)

Because the solution is a high Ph alkali solution - IF (the big IF again) should base metals drop out when the solution cools they will likely drop out as hydroxides

So - though I am not standing there watching what you are doing - this is what I "think" is happening

Nick & or Deano would be the ones to correct me if I am wrong as though I have worked with cyanide they have worked with it MUCH more than I have
 
So you are using 1 ml H2o2 for every gram of NaCN

That is not what the instructions posted by GSP says to do



So - according to GSP you should be using between 1/4 to 1/2 ml H2o2 for every gram NaCN (no more the 1/2 ml H2o2 per gram NaCN)

in other words - you are using 2 to 4 times more H2o2 then suggested by GSP



Is that what you are using or are you using a weaker H2o2 ?



Are you running the leach hot (as posted by GSP)




so IF (the big IF) you are using 30 - 35% H2o2 --- running the leach hot - & then using 2 - 4 times more H202 then suggested --- then this is what I "think" is happening (though I could be wrong)

Using to much H2o2 (as the oxidizer) is causing you to dissolve not just the gold but copper (&/or other base metals)

Also - a hot solution will hold more dissolved metal then a cold solution - that is especially true in a high (11 - 12) Ph (alkali/base) solution --- so - when the solution cools it has the potential to drop some of those dissolved metals back out of the solution especially those higher on the reactive series (base metals including copper)

Because the solution is a high Ph alkali solution - IF (the big IF again) should base metals drop out when the solution cools they will likely drop out as hydroxides

So - though I am not standing there watching what you are doing - this is what I "think" is happening

Nick & or Deano would be the ones to correct me if I am wrong as though I have worked with cyanide they have worked with it MUCH more than I have

mr.kurtak

Your assumption is correct. I used 1ml h2o2 for 1gram nacn. But i used 30%h2o2 that sure. Mr.Gsp said excess h2o2 does not give any problem so i thought stripping will happen quickly.

I dont know the correct ratio of h2o2 to neutralize the Nacn. I little afraid of redox reaction.

Before i did small sample stripped with gold stripper+Nacn+H2o2. During that experiment i neutralize the Nacn by 10ml H2o2 for 20g Nacn. During precipitation the zinc dust is covered with red color. But i sucessfully precipitate the gold. I dont know that red color was copper or redox. Thats why i use more h2o2.
 
Using to much oxidizer will do nothing but cause you problems - more is NOT better when it comes to oxidizer + cyanide

There are "several" problems to much oxidizer can cause including but limited to - destruction of the CN which reduces the amount of gold the CN will dissolve - dissolving base metals instead of gold - the "possibility" to produce HCN the gas that can kill you - etc. etc.

Though GSP gave good instructions on cyanide leaching - in no way are they complete instructions

Therefore - before you continue to work with cyanide I suggest you do MUCH more research/study concerning cyanide leaching (it can kill you)

Start by looking at things Nick & Deano have posted (go to their profiles) & search what they have posted using cyanide as search key/word

Read EVERYTHING they have posted & read it until you FULLY understand it

Example; - gold and silver strippers

Also - if you are going to work with cyanide you MUST have a HCN (the gas that kills you) meter - it's a meter you clip onto your shirt &/or is sitting VERY near your work that detects "very small" amounts of HCN gas in the air - if/when it goes off get away & get away NOW & wait until you are SURE the HCN has stopped gassing off & the air has had time to clear

For what it is worth - a couple years ago I had the very good fortune of meeting & working with both Nick & Deano

During the week we worked together - we set that HCN meter off two or three times

Bottom line - Cyanide is one of the best ways of/for leaching gold - but it can also kill you - so if you are going to work with cyanide then you MUST first - make sure you FULLY understand it - & second make SURE you have an HCN meter when working with it

Kurt
 
Using too much peroxide will kill your cyanide solution very quickly.
Also remember that weak cyanide solutions are much more selective for gold than strong ones and cyanide will dissolve copper and nickel in preference to gold that is also true for any silver in the mix which is why cyanide isn’t a good method for the inexperienced , mixing materials also adds further complications as plating thicknesses and different substrates cause problems.
If you are running one specific type of product then it’s easy but the more products the more problems.
 
HI,

Which type is this, I searched and got many results. How can we be sure of the one to go for
In your setup I would not even consider it.
You NEED a proper ventilated controlled area like a fume hood.
Or like if you are doing heap/vat leaching a area that are controlled with respect to who is present at all times.

Edit for spelling.
 
Notes on CN processing.

1) Attend/take the online safety course before using.
2) As previously mentioned have a calibrated and tested detector on hand.
3) Have the antidote kit on hand for each individual participating in the process. Cyanide Antidotes - CHEMM
4) Use proper clean up procedures on all equipment that comes in contact with the CN solutions (hoses, funnels, filters, glass, pumps, etc) immediately after the processing is complete.

Stay safe.

Steve
 
Last edited:
In your setup I would not even consider it.
You NEED a proper ventilated controlled area like a fume hood.
Or like if you are doing heap/vat leaching a area that are controlled with respect to who is present at all times.

Edit for spelling.
Dont worry, Ive had my share of learnings from seniors like you. Ill build a small fumehood along with a scrubber. Will do my proper research and make notes. Will ask as many questions along the way to clarify and ensure that the process is carried out safely and smoothly.
 
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