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Does anyone have a reference source (or link) for optimal acid digestion temperatures for various metals? Specifically, I'm interested in Cupric AP solution. I can't seem to find any compiled data. I appreciate your input.
We all just use it I guess.Does anyone have a reference source (or link) for optimal acid digestion temperatures for various metals? Specifically, I'm interested in Cupric AP solution. I can't seem to find any compiled data. I appreciate your input.
I'm not sure there has been done extensive research on this.Thanks Yggdrasil, It relates back to my 1300 grams for pins I'm digesting. It's been 2+ weeks and the volume of pins do not seem to be reducing much. I run my nitric digestion at 70C based on paper's I've read to minimize the evaporative loss without much extension of time vs. 90C and was hoping to find something on Cupric A/P.
While I'd like to say " time isn't a problem", the truth is my patience wears thin after a few weeks. I was hoping to place the reaction vessel on a warmer plate but I never do something without looking at the published data first.
You've got pins in nitric. Well, first question is, is it conc. nitric, or 50/50 nitric/distilled water? Because conc. nitric has issues dissolving much metal. The reaction products don't dissolve in the concentrated acid well, and there's also the issue of the formation of solid metastannic acid if your pins are tin brass in their cores, which is a problem no matter what concentration of nitric you use.Thanks Yggdrasil, It relates back to my 1300 grams for pins I'm digesting. It's been 2+ weeks and the volume of pins do not seem to be reducing much. I run my nitric digestion at 70C based on paper's I've read to minimize the evaporative loss without much extension of time vs. 90C and was hoping to find something on Cupric A/P.
While I'd like to say " time isn't a problem", the truth is my patience wears thin after a few weeks. I was hoping to place the reaction vessel on a warmer plate but I never do something without looking at the published data first.
Copper and tin make bronze. Copper and zinc make brass. It's a very common mistake.there's also the issue of the formation of solid metastannic acid if your pins are tin brass in their cores
I searched few times with no results. As all common reactions, AP dissolution accellerates with raising temperature. Contrary, dissolution of oxygen in the solution decrease with temperature. Below room temperature, AP is working very slowly. Best case scenario would be hot AP with pure oxygen bubbling through it. That way, there would be no evaporative loss since you will adjust oxygen flow the way all will be absorbed into the solution = no outgas. But noone will probably do this since this will be expensive (if you don´t have some spare oxygen concentrator in hand).Does anyone have a reference source (or link) for optimal acid digestion temperatures for various metals? Specifically, I'm interested in Cupric AP solution. I can't seem to find any compiled data. I appreciate your input.
This link came up during an AP leach search on this site. Some of your questions should be answered ... https://cdn.imagearchive.com/goldre...307d580e055e689fa7d4cdc54954b19247a9c9ca2a1a5Does anyone have a reference source (or link) for optimal acid digestion temperatures for various metals? Specifically, I'm interested in Cupric AP solution. I can't seem to find any compiled data. I appreciate your input.
I appreciate the "rant". There are very few things more important to a researcher than the number of citations of their publications. Giving credit to those hobbyist that share their work, encourage more sharing and peer review. Enough can't be said.The above cited link is the most comprehensive paper by a hobbyist on the subject of AP/CuCl leach parameters. I actually got permission from the original author to post the document here. I strongly recommend getting an authors permission before re-posting his/her work.
Despite what anyone tries to tell you, that document is the original spark that was the foundation of all things acid peroxide/copper chloride that you see here on the forum and around YouTube. Imagine if all the YouTube stars mentioned their source material what it would do for those that actually developed these processes. It truly amazes me what constitutes an "expert" in this day and age of instant fame. Please pardon my
Works fine with me, what kind of browser do you use?When I click on the link. This is all I see.
Edited because it showed my posting as Darkthirty's
"This XML file does not appear to have any style information associated with it. The document tree is shown below.
<Error>
<Code>AccessDenied</Code>
<RequestId>tx000000000000028815088-00649c2327-4bdec571-nyc3b</RequestId>
<HostId>4bdec571-nyc3b-nyc-zg02</HostId>
</Error>"
No problem you fixed itThanks for the help.
I don't know how that happened. I clicked on reply and typed my posting. Then added copy and paste of the Error code.
Then tried to delete Darkthirty's part to just show my posting.
But then it put my post in where his quote was.
Sorry for causing an issue.
My browser is chrome on my phone. I use nord VPN if that matters.
Edited to add browser info.
Works like a charm from my Safari too.Thanks for the help.
I don't know how that happened. I clicked on reply and typed my posting. Then added copy and paste of the Error code.
Then tried to delete Darkthirty's part to just show my posting.
But then it put my post in where his quote was.
Sorry for causing an issue.
My browser is chrome on my phone. I use nord VPN if that matters.
Edited to add browser info.
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