Tzoax
Well-known member
After 8 months of processing IC chips, flatpacks and BGA chips, I collected certain amount of iron wires from inside of chips on the following way:
1. I mechanically striped all wires from the edges of chips with scalpel
2. Incineration of the chips
3. Shaking in the jar and pass through the sieve
4. I repeat 2. and 3. until all of the chips becomes incinerated and then passing through the sieve once again the whole powder
5. Rinsing with water until color becomes clear
6. Then I leave couple of inches of water in the jar and I remove the iron wires with magnet through water and that is the way how I get the wires
7. I dried the wires and weight them, they have 195 grams. Here is the picture:
So, I looked trough the microscope and I saw a plenty of golden wires. I was thinking to mechanically separate it since the gold is heavier than iron, and it worked partially. When I shake a bit and collect the wires with magnet this it what was left on the bottom:
The pure golden wires. I thought that it is the most of the gold but when I looked through the microscope again there are still a plenty of golden wires and it seems that some of the iron wires are plated with gold.
Now it was clear to me that this must be done chemically. Now I did one more step:
I took the magnet again (this time when the wires was dried) and I removed iron wires. This time I had a residue that was about 5 percents of total weight. There was golden wires with some of copper wires. That concentrate is familiar to me and I will process it with diluted nitric and AR. The problem was that 95% of total weight of iron wires with a lot of golden wires trapped there.
I decided to boil the iron wires with HCl(10%).
I was surprised with the green color of solution, I thought it would be brown like rust. After 4 hours of boiling I had to stop because I was in a hurry. So I planned to filter solution, wash with water and save it to continue boiling next time. Here is the picture of what was left in the filter. I think it is a rust (iron oxide).
And here is the remaining solution of HCl plus it was about 50% dilluted because I mixed it with water that was used for cleaning the rest of wires. Next time I will use fresh HCl since this was dilluted and this color is a strange to me since there is a lot of iron and maybe a little of copper. Maybe it is because of nickel...
...I will continue in the next post since the 5 images per post is maximum...
1. I mechanically striped all wires from the edges of chips with scalpel
2. Incineration of the chips
3. Shaking in the jar and pass through the sieve
4. I repeat 2. and 3. until all of the chips becomes incinerated and then passing through the sieve once again the whole powder
5. Rinsing with water until color becomes clear
6. Then I leave couple of inches of water in the jar and I remove the iron wires with magnet through water and that is the way how I get the wires
7. I dried the wires and weight them, they have 195 grams. Here is the picture:
So, I looked trough the microscope and I saw a plenty of golden wires. I was thinking to mechanically separate it since the gold is heavier than iron, and it worked partially. When I shake a bit and collect the wires with magnet this it what was left on the bottom:
The pure golden wires. I thought that it is the most of the gold but when I looked through the microscope again there are still a plenty of golden wires and it seems that some of the iron wires are plated with gold.
Now it was clear to me that this must be done chemically. Now I did one more step:
I took the magnet again (this time when the wires was dried) and I removed iron wires. This time I had a residue that was about 5 percents of total weight. There was golden wires with some of copper wires. That concentrate is familiar to me and I will process it with diluted nitric and AR. The problem was that 95% of total weight of iron wires with a lot of golden wires trapped there.
I decided to boil the iron wires with HCl(10%).
I was surprised with the green color of solution, I thought it would be brown like rust. After 4 hours of boiling I had to stop because I was in a hurry. So I planned to filter solution, wash with water and save it to continue boiling next time. Here is the picture of what was left in the filter. I think it is a rust (iron oxide).
And here is the remaining solution of HCl plus it was about 50% dilluted because I mixed it with water that was used for cleaning the rest of wires. Next time I will use fresh HCl since this was dilluted and this color is a strange to me since there is a lot of iron and maybe a little of copper. Maybe it is because of nickel...
...I will continue in the next post since the 5 images per post is maximum...