HAuCl4
Well-known member
Do any of these have a place in refining precious metals?:
Many different mixture ratios are commonly used, and all are called piranha. A typical mixture is 3:1 concentrated sulfuric acid to 30% hydrogen peroxide solution; other protocols may use a 4:1 or even 7:1 mixture.
A closely related mixture, sometimes called "base piranha", is a 3:1 mixture of ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) with hydrogen peroxide. Base piranha is also known under the names of TL1 cleaning and SC1 cleaning and is part of the RCA clean procedure.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piranha_solution
What happens if you drop any of these two (not both) on a silver-gold or copper-gold inquart?. On sterling silver?.
At first look, the first one would play as a subtitute for nitric acid, which is hard to come by in some places. Maybe too violent?. Certainly dangerous stuff.
Many different mixture ratios are commonly used, and all are called piranha. A typical mixture is 3:1 concentrated sulfuric acid to 30% hydrogen peroxide solution; other protocols may use a 4:1 or even 7:1 mixture.
A closely related mixture, sometimes called "base piranha", is a 3:1 mixture of ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) with hydrogen peroxide. Base piranha is also known under the names of TL1 cleaning and SC1 cleaning and is part of the RCA clean procedure.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piranha_solution
What happens if you drop any of these two (not both) on a silver-gold or copper-gold inquart?. On sterling silver?.
At first look, the first one would play as a subtitute for nitric acid, which is hard to come by in some places. Maybe too violent?. Certainly dangerous stuff.