steeranoff said:
Can anyone explain a good way to process the contents Of a stockpot? Should I add acid to give the solution enough
Strength to dissolve the soda ash and zinc? Seems to me That with water from rinsing things out the solution could Be very watered down.[/img]
I'm a bit confused by your question. Can you tell us why you have soda ash and zinc in your stock pot? If you have been using one as it is intended, zinc becomes the metal on which most other metals will cement--including copper. Any zinc that is present would be eventually consumed when you added solutions that contain traces of values, along with other base metals. If you had un-dissolved zind, it would be returned to the stock pot after collecting the settled cemented solids. Soda ash would likely be in solution, and would be discharged when you decanted the now barren solution.
Are you possibly confused on the purpose of the stock pot?
Regards the collected values from the stock pot----I would begin by getting all of the collected cemented solids in a filter, drying, then incinerating. That's an important step to insure you eliminate troublesome crud that is sure to collect in the stock pot. After incineration I would screen the material, run a magnet through the screened material, returning any traces that were removed to the stock pot (so they are not lost), then I'd give the material a boil in dilute nitric acid. If you have palladium present, it would be dissolved, along with copper and other base metals, including silver, assuming any found its way to the stock pot. Rinse well, then dissolve the remains with AR so you can recover the remaining values.
Process the nitric wash solution as is appropriate. If there are no values present, discard by the usual safe methods.
Harold