No - the surfactant (such as Jet Dry or dish soap) is used to break the surface tension of the water so that solids (including gold bond wires) sink instead of floating on the surface of the water
Water surface tension is caused by minerals that are naturally dissolved in the water - &/or small amounts of oil (oil floats on water) - surface tension can cause small solid particles (including small gold particles like bond wires) to float on the surface of the water - so a surfactant breaks the surface tension allowing the solids to sink instead of floating
So when you are washing the chip ash away to create your concentrates (such as panning in a gold pan) you want to add "a few" drops of surfactant to the water to break the surface tension so that gold doesn't float & wash out the pan
Though dish soap will work - a product like Jet Dry works better & that is because Jet Dry does not create soap suds (bubbles) like dish soap (if you use to much dish soap) - soap suds (bubbles) can also capture small gold particles causing them to wash away
So you want to look for a product "like" this -------
https://reviewed.usatoday.com/dishwashers/features/what-the-heck-is-rinse-aid-and-why-do-i-need-it
That said - something to be aware of when processing IC chips --- you will NEVER recover 100% of the gold bond bonding wires - or - I should say you will never get ALL the bond wires to end up in your final concentrates
At EVERY step along the way -
after you have milled the incinerated chips
some gold bond wires get lost
So the goal in the processing steps is to minimize those loses at each step
So the question becomes - do you do a good enough job at each step in the process to be concerned about these loses - or not
Places gold gets lost ------
1) the bond wires are
brazed to the Kovar &/or copper legs/leads of the chips & as well brazed to the silicon die inside - so part of the purpose of milling the chips (besides turning the incinerated epoxy to fine powder) is to break the brazed bond wires free from legs/leads & silicon dies & you will "never" get 100% of the bond wires to break free from their brazing --- so "some" gold gets lost when you do the magnetic separation of the Kovar as well as when you sift out the larger copper legs/leads because "some" bond wires remain stuck/brazed to the Kovar/copper --- how much depends on well the chips where milled
2) magnetic separation - you have to spread the ash out
very thin (like 1/4 inch & no more then 3/8 inch beep) & run the magnet just above the surface of the ash - not though the ash --- if the ash is to deep &/or you run the magnet "though" the ash - when the magnet pulls the Kovar out of ash the magnet also pulls the Kovar together causing the Kovar to "grip" ahold of "free" bond wires taking those bond wires with it --- so you want the magnet to "lift" the Kovar out of the ash allowing free bond wires to fall back into the ash before the Kovar actually comes together at the magnet that is being passed over & above the ash
3) Over size particles of the (incinerated) epoxy carbon/ash - 80 mesh size particles are not big enough to hold gold bond wires - particles "large" then 80 mesh can & will hold bond wire so "some" bond wires will be stuck in any "over size" that does not go through a 80 mesh screen --- 60 mesh particle of ash/carbon are big enough to hold a gold bond wire & because the particles of ash/carbon are light weight they can & will wash away when panning or washing on a concentrator table
4) Washing the ash away to get your concentrate - there are two things here that cause the loss of gold
1) just flat out being to aggressive with the washing
2) overloading whatever method you choose to do you washing with (pan or concentrator table or blue bowl etc. etc.)
This is where the most gold can (or not) be lost
I meant to get to this today but have run out of time so that will be my next post
I just thought it was worth the time to explain how/where & why "some" gold is ALWAYS lost in the processing of IC chips because those loses can be significant - or not significant enough to be concerned with - all depending on how well you do with each step in the process
And for what it is worth - those loses can be recovered - it is just a question of if they are significant enough to be worth chasing - or not
Kurt