- Joined
- Mar 19, 2021
- Messages
- 92
I have a fairly decent amount of experience processing older tophat transistors. I do these directly in AR, and always have to deal with dirty solutions. Processing E-waste is very unpredictable and nothing ever goes "by the book" so I have a lot of experience figuring things out when they appear to go sideways. Not today, I need some suggestions...
Today I processed a lot of transistors for an estimated 20-30 grams. After everything was dissolved into solution, I added Sulfamic Acid when the solution was still hot/warm and used it until it stopped reacting...as always. I then added ice, filtered, and 17 grams SMB dissolved in water was added to one beaker containing half the total solution (5000ml). Gold dropped and could be seen but decanting it was a serious issue because the precipitate was about as fine as baby powder. In fact, decanting was impossible without disturbing the gold and it just poured into the decant vessel along with everything else. This is common. My usual fix is adding a bit of sulphuric and heating the solution. I also added a bit more Sulfamic acid thinking there was possibly re-dissolution of my gold going on. I then began to heat the solution and the gold dropped again. The photo below shows the precipitated gold which was looking pretty good. I left the solution on the heat for about 20 minutes, but noticed it was bubbling (effervescently, like soda). I then turned off the heat. I was doing something else but noticed (barely) a vigorous foaming starting...when all of the sudden it erupted out of the flask. About a third of it got way . I have a catch basin and NO precipitated gold was found in either the beaker or the basin!?! Where did it go? I am fairly certain it is back in solution as my Stannous test indicates. After and hour or two I added a pinch of sulfamic acid just to see if any thing would happen. Nothing. I added SMB again and the solution foamed pretty vigorously and was giving off NOX fumes...WTH??? Wouldn't that mean there is still free nitric in my solution??? Just to be clear BOTH vessels have done exactly the same thing...! Fool me twice...
My total solution was 3750ml of HCL and 1250ml of nitric. That consumed quite of bit of base metals and gold on high heat.
Today I processed a lot of transistors for an estimated 20-30 grams. After everything was dissolved into solution, I added Sulfamic Acid when the solution was still hot/warm and used it until it stopped reacting...as always. I then added ice, filtered, and 17 grams SMB dissolved in water was added to one beaker containing half the total solution (5000ml). Gold dropped and could be seen but decanting it was a serious issue because the precipitate was about as fine as baby powder. In fact, decanting was impossible without disturbing the gold and it just poured into the decant vessel along with everything else. This is common. My usual fix is adding a bit of sulphuric and heating the solution. I also added a bit more Sulfamic acid thinking there was possibly re-dissolution of my gold going on. I then began to heat the solution and the gold dropped again. The photo below shows the precipitated gold which was looking pretty good. I left the solution on the heat for about 20 minutes, but noticed it was bubbling (effervescently, like soda). I then turned off the heat. I was doing something else but noticed (barely) a vigorous foaming starting...when all of the sudden it erupted out of the flask. About a third of it got way . I have a catch basin and NO precipitated gold was found in either the beaker or the basin!?! Where did it go? I am fairly certain it is back in solution as my Stannous test indicates. After and hour or two I added a pinch of sulfamic acid just to see if any thing would happen. Nothing. I added SMB again and the solution foamed pretty vigorously and was giving off NOX fumes...WTH??? Wouldn't that mean there is still free nitric in my solution??? Just to be clear BOTH vessels have done exactly the same thing...! Fool me twice...
My total solution was 3750ml of HCL and 1250ml of nitric. That consumed quite of bit of base metals and gold on high heat.