dteberian
New member
Hey there, everybody!
I am working with a ton of old PCBs and connectors that are gold plated, I have been working on recovering some gold, and I am making good progress. That being said, I need all the advice I can get, so I have decided to come here and ask the experts.
I have several methods that have worked (kind of):
1. Aqua regia - The classic, reliable method. The issue is that I can't really afford the amount of nitric acid that I would need to recover the amount of gold that I need to. I can make my own, using nitrate salts and concentrated sulfuric acid, but that is very time-consuming, and it often has problems.
2. Manually removing gold - This is the worst method, and it is not even close. If you want to end up injuring yourself, ruining gold, and having to use another method to make use of the stuff you manage to salvage via this method, this method is for you. I really do not like this method, and I would encourage others to avoid it.
3. Reverse electro-plating - This is the most interesting method to me right now. It has worked well, it has removed gold plating almost immediately, but I have not figured out how to use the gold powder that I get from this method. Could I melt that "mud" down into a small bead of gold, put it in hot sulfuric/nitric acid, and allow the acid to purify the gold by dissolving the base metals?
4. A weird method to remove the plating, using pretty common stuff - I have found that it is incredibly easy to remove all of the gold from a PCB by putting a glass dish on a hotplate, putting muriatic/hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide into the dish, and heating it up. It ends up eating the adhesive that keeps the plating attached to the boards and pulls the gold off of them.
I am most interested in some advice as to how I can use the third method, but feel free to lead me toward another method if you think I should try something else. I am excited to see what you all come up with! Thanks, and God bless!
I am working with a ton of old PCBs and connectors that are gold plated, I have been working on recovering some gold, and I am making good progress. That being said, I need all the advice I can get, so I have decided to come here and ask the experts.
I have several methods that have worked (kind of):
1. Aqua regia - The classic, reliable method. The issue is that I can't really afford the amount of nitric acid that I would need to recover the amount of gold that I need to. I can make my own, using nitrate salts and concentrated sulfuric acid, but that is very time-consuming, and it often has problems.
2. Manually removing gold - This is the worst method, and it is not even close. If you want to end up injuring yourself, ruining gold, and having to use another method to make use of the stuff you manage to salvage via this method, this method is for you. I really do not like this method, and I would encourage others to avoid it.
3. Reverse electro-plating - This is the most interesting method to me right now. It has worked well, it has removed gold plating almost immediately, but I have not figured out how to use the gold powder that I get from this method. Could I melt that "mud" down into a small bead of gold, put it in hot sulfuric/nitric acid, and allow the acid to purify the gold by dissolving the base metals?
4. A weird method to remove the plating, using pretty common stuff - I have found that it is incredibly easy to remove all of the gold from a PCB by putting a glass dish on a hotplate, putting muriatic/hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide into the dish, and heating it up. It ends up eating the adhesive that keeps the plating attached to the boards and pulls the gold off of them.
I am most interested in some advice as to how I can use the third method, but feel free to lead me toward another method if you think I should try something else. I am excited to see what you all come up with! Thanks, and God bless!