frank-20011
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2015
- Messages
- 183
hello everyone,
my question deals with almolst 100 little plastic bottles from a galvanic shop.
they are emptied by the workers in theyer process but in every bottle there is a little rest of these magic salt, magic to me and toxic too.
these bottles go to the waste, like the much bigger steel drums with NaCN, KaCN and AgCN which go easily into metallic recycling, without any precautions.
back to the plastic bottles, half of them are rinsed with destilled and there is still a rest of these water in em but in the other half of them (they aren't rinsed) you can see clearly the crystals...maybe 50mg or less but 40 times 50mg...
the bottles laying arround for one year or so and now my question is: the little KAg(CN)2 in the rinsewater is clearly hydrolised but the salt in the bottles, it is in contact with humidity of the air and CO2 so is there now Potassium-gold-carbonate in these bottles? Or potassium carbonate and gold cyanide, or cyanate?
How reactive is these salt...i've read KCN is reactive enough in air it smells everytime like almonds cause it reacts with water and CO2 from the air but how reactive is the KAg(CN)2, pure and in water?
Thanks and regards.
my question deals with almolst 100 little plastic bottles from a galvanic shop.
they are emptied by the workers in theyer process but in every bottle there is a little rest of these magic salt, magic to me and toxic too.
these bottles go to the waste, like the much bigger steel drums with NaCN, KaCN and AgCN which go easily into metallic recycling, without any precautions.
back to the plastic bottles, half of them are rinsed with destilled and there is still a rest of these water in em but in the other half of them (they aren't rinsed) you can see clearly the crystals...maybe 50mg or less but 40 times 50mg...
the bottles laying arround for one year or so and now my question is: the little KAg(CN)2 in the rinsewater is clearly hydrolised but the salt in the bottles, it is in contact with humidity of the air and CO2 so is there now Potassium-gold-carbonate in these bottles? Or potassium carbonate and gold cyanide, or cyanate?
How reactive is these salt...i've read KCN is reactive enough in air it smells everytime like almonds cause it reacts with water and CO2 from the air but how reactive is the KAg(CN)2, pure and in water?
Thanks and regards.