rightmirem
Member
I do a lot of silver jewelry, including silver casting. I've just started experimenting with electrolytic silver refining, because all my scrap is too oxidized and crappy to cast anymore
I built a silver cell and it works pretty well.
I had an OK harvest (I guess) ... of about 5 grams silver flake in 16-ish hours of runtime.
My questions are these:
I built a silver cell and it works pretty well.
- Stainless steel bowl as the cathode
- a titanium clip bridging the bowl to the negative alligator clip
- plastic basket with a nylon net to hold the small bits
- Fine silver pipe inserted into the scrap for the anode alligator clip
- 30 gram per liter pre-mixed silver nitrate solution
I had an OK harvest (I guess) ... of about 5 grams silver flake in 16-ish hours of runtime.
My questions are these:
- Is that a reasonable harvest for 16 hours runtime?
- How can I preserve the silver ion concentration in my silver nitrate when purifying sterling?
- Does the copper ion in the solution displace the silver ions, or just join it?
- Just how "coppery" can the solution get before it stops plating silver out? (I don't mind so much if it has copper residue in the crystals. I'm just going to cast more rings with it. It doesn't need to be 99.999 pure or anything. )
- How can I test the amount of silver ion in the solution electrically or chemically? Currently I'm trying the following experiment...
- I weighed two small copper plates (about 22 grams total weight.)
- I put the plates in the very blue silver ion solution, assuming any remaining silver will cement out on them.
- Measure the plates tomorrow, to get the weight difference. and then calculate the silver using ΔWsilver=3.396×ΔWcopper.
HOWEVER, I don't know if this is even a sane method, or whether my scales have the sensitivity to measure this (they are only accurate to the thousands place.)