I had a leftover waste solution of metabisulfite with dilute HCl (which also included sulfuric acid formed from the reaction) after dropping gold, and was curious to see if this could be used to strip base metals from pins.
I put some pins into in and closed the lid on the plastic jar, and placed it into our warm boiler room. The base metals partly dissolved over time, and eventually the solution became saturated, along with forming base metal sulfates and sulfites in various insoluble complexes.
After pouring out the saturated solution, which tested negative for gold, I added HCl and dissolved all the remaining base metal cores of the pins. Again, the solution tested negative for gold, but was forming black solids in addition to blue-green copper chloride and sulfate crystals. Once more, the solution was poured out and this time distilled water was added to dissolve the salts. I closed it up again, and that when interesting things began to happen! The solids began to change, first turning a greenish-grey and floating, then turning black over time and sinking. The solution began to test positive for gold and the foils began to disappear. I found this extremely interesting, as a dilute highly aqueous solution of only chlorides and sulfates/sulfites with no nitrate theoretically should not dissolve gold. And yet it was!
So, I dropped in some copper bits to cement the gold, and added more water out of a sense of suspicion of what was taking place, until the stannous test became negative, about 3 days after the cementation reaction began. A very dense black powder mixed with a significant amount of gold dust resulted (mixed in with the remaining gold foils) which proved utterly insoluble. I washed it several times in hot water.
I observed the acid waste solution as well in a beaker. It continuously forms an insoluble blue-green crust on the surface as it reacts with air, likely unstable sulfites or sulfides oxidizing and releasing SO2 at the surface, while forming copper hydroxide.
Then, I began to check what the black powder could be. After eliminating all the base metal salts (most from what is found on pins would be highly soluble salts, with only lead sulfate being insoluble... but that's white, and there could only be a tiny amount of it from the solder on the base of the pins.
The clue came from a faint rotten eggs smell I would detect every time I opened the jar during the various steps. Apparently, I was hitting on just the right combination of chemicals to produce hydrogen sulfide when the jar was closed tight, and in the aqueous acid mix, a small amount of gold was able to dissolve. It turns out that this very dilute chloroauric acid, when hydrogen sulfide is present, can precipitate out gold(III) sulfide! And with my set-up, more dilute chloroauric acid was made as the sulfide dropped out, freeing up the acid chloride to react again with more of the gold foils.
It is also likely that increasing the water percentage at the step where gold had been dissolving caused the sulfides to begin to decompose back to metallic gold, hence the very fine gold dust mixed in with the black powder. If it is indeed gold sulfide, then it should decompose entirely to gold and sulfuric acid with modest heating of the moist powder.
This is rather exciting from a chemistry point of view, as methods of producing gold(III) sulfide appear to give inconsistent results. If it proves to be gold(III) sulfide and I can repeat this result, I could make a standard protocol and get a chemistry paper out of it!
I put some pins into in and closed the lid on the plastic jar, and placed it into our warm boiler room. The base metals partly dissolved over time, and eventually the solution became saturated, along with forming base metal sulfates and sulfites in various insoluble complexes.
After pouring out the saturated solution, which tested negative for gold, I added HCl and dissolved all the remaining base metal cores of the pins. Again, the solution tested negative for gold, but was forming black solids in addition to blue-green copper chloride and sulfate crystals. Once more, the solution was poured out and this time distilled water was added to dissolve the salts. I closed it up again, and that when interesting things began to happen! The solids began to change, first turning a greenish-grey and floating, then turning black over time and sinking. The solution began to test positive for gold and the foils began to disappear. I found this extremely interesting, as a dilute highly aqueous solution of only chlorides and sulfates/sulfites with no nitrate theoretically should not dissolve gold. And yet it was!
So, I dropped in some copper bits to cement the gold, and added more water out of a sense of suspicion of what was taking place, until the stannous test became negative, about 3 days after the cementation reaction began. A very dense black powder mixed with a significant amount of gold dust resulted (mixed in with the remaining gold foils) which proved utterly insoluble. I washed it several times in hot water.
I observed the acid waste solution as well in a beaker. It continuously forms an insoluble blue-green crust on the surface as it reacts with air, likely unstable sulfites or sulfides oxidizing and releasing SO2 at the surface, while forming copper hydroxide.
Then, I began to check what the black powder could be. After eliminating all the base metal salts (most from what is found on pins would be highly soluble salts, with only lead sulfate being insoluble... but that's white, and there could only be a tiny amount of it from the solder on the base of the pins.
The clue came from a faint rotten eggs smell I would detect every time I opened the jar during the various steps. Apparently, I was hitting on just the right combination of chemicals to produce hydrogen sulfide when the jar was closed tight, and in the aqueous acid mix, a small amount of gold was able to dissolve. It turns out that this very dilute chloroauric acid, when hydrogen sulfide is present, can precipitate out gold(III) sulfide! And with my set-up, more dilute chloroauric acid was made as the sulfide dropped out, freeing up the acid chloride to react again with more of the gold foils.
It is also likely that increasing the water percentage at the step where gold had been dissolving caused the sulfides to begin to decompose back to metallic gold, hence the very fine gold dust mixed in with the black powder. If it is indeed gold sulfide, then it should decompose entirely to gold and sulfuric acid with modest heating of the moist powder.
This is rather exciting from a chemistry point of view, as methods of producing gold(III) sulfide appear to give inconsistent results. If it proves to be gold(III) sulfide and I can repeat this result, I could make a standard protocol and get a chemistry paper out of it!