guycanadian
Member
Hello. Thanks for giving me a moment of your time.
I have been reading extensively on how to refine gold from various methodologies and techniques outlined in the forum here.
I believe I managed to dissolve some gold in an acid solution, with a bit of oxidizer, as my ram fingers are now bare to the board. The solution is blue and at the time of dissolving was slightly green. I am suspect that Chlorine may have been what gave it a yellow tint, and I gave that time to be destroyed by sunlight by leaving the container outside for 2 days. I did make the mistake of leaving the RAM chip in the solution but I had tilted it far enough it was stuck to the container out of the solution a few inches.
I have filtered the solvent and found a very fine black powder that passed through a coffee filter, while some remained. The solution appears to be nothing but blue now, like Gatorade.
Is it possible I cemented the gold out of solution with the copper still on parts of the board? Would this be the black precipitate I'm seeing?
I have created some stannous chloride by heating some hcl(20ml) distilled water(30ml), a few drops of 30% h2o2 and some fishing weights I'm 99% sure are tin, as they cry when bit, and do not show any serious coloration indicating they are a bismuth tin alloy( kind of yellowish according to the pictures I can find)
With the first solution, did I destroy my stannous chloride with the addition of hydrogen peroxide?
I noticed a white precipitate forming but quickly re dissolving everytime I gave it a slight shake, at approx 50C (fruit dehydrator for heating).
I tested this solution of stannous chloride against my dissolved ram chip solution, which showed a very VERY faint red ring on the stain, and a large yellow spot where the stannous chloride did not interact with the solution.
I second guessed myself and tossed this mixture thinking it was a dud, and only when I dried the filter paper did I notice the reddish ring and the yellow spot appeared. It has not faded since it appeared.
Second question, does stannous chloride normally turn paper yellow when dried? If it doesn't does this indicate a very low ppm but positive indication that the gold is still in solution?
I have calculated that I probably have about 75 to 125 ppm gold dissolved as a rough estimate, and upon inspection of others results in the forum, this faint brown ring might be an indicator of gold being present in solution?
I also threw a very small chunk of zinc anode into a small cup of the solution and noticed that it immediately turned black, and copper started to rain out of the solvent as shiny reddish copper particles.
Is the zinc turning black because the gold is cementing to it? This solution should contain a large amount of CuCl by the look of it and the chemistry involved, but maybe its just oxidizing? I'm not sure.
I am making up a gold standard testing solution and more stannous chloride without peroxide and what I believe to be an excess of tin (12g to approx 50ml of HCl(50% dissolved in 24h, slow boat to China indeed!) , but as I live basically in the middle of no where, I have to wait to find a source of gold chloride or fine quality gold to melt in HCl and H2O2 and test my stannous against that.
Thank you for reading over my problems, and any advice is very welcome.
I have been reading extensively on how to refine gold from various methodologies and techniques outlined in the forum here.
I believe I managed to dissolve some gold in an acid solution, with a bit of oxidizer, as my ram fingers are now bare to the board. The solution is blue and at the time of dissolving was slightly green. I am suspect that Chlorine may have been what gave it a yellow tint, and I gave that time to be destroyed by sunlight by leaving the container outside for 2 days. I did make the mistake of leaving the RAM chip in the solution but I had tilted it far enough it was stuck to the container out of the solution a few inches.
I have filtered the solvent and found a very fine black powder that passed through a coffee filter, while some remained. The solution appears to be nothing but blue now, like Gatorade.
Is it possible I cemented the gold out of solution with the copper still on parts of the board? Would this be the black precipitate I'm seeing?
I have created some stannous chloride by heating some hcl(20ml) distilled water(30ml), a few drops of 30% h2o2 and some fishing weights I'm 99% sure are tin, as they cry when bit, and do not show any serious coloration indicating they are a bismuth tin alloy( kind of yellowish according to the pictures I can find)
With the first solution, did I destroy my stannous chloride with the addition of hydrogen peroxide?
I noticed a white precipitate forming but quickly re dissolving everytime I gave it a slight shake, at approx 50C (fruit dehydrator for heating).
I tested this solution of stannous chloride against my dissolved ram chip solution, which showed a very VERY faint red ring on the stain, and a large yellow spot where the stannous chloride did not interact with the solution.
I second guessed myself and tossed this mixture thinking it was a dud, and only when I dried the filter paper did I notice the reddish ring and the yellow spot appeared. It has not faded since it appeared.
Second question, does stannous chloride normally turn paper yellow when dried? If it doesn't does this indicate a very low ppm but positive indication that the gold is still in solution?
I have calculated that I probably have about 75 to 125 ppm gold dissolved as a rough estimate, and upon inspection of others results in the forum, this faint brown ring might be an indicator of gold being present in solution?
I also threw a very small chunk of zinc anode into a small cup of the solution and noticed that it immediately turned black, and copper started to rain out of the solvent as shiny reddish copper particles.
Is the zinc turning black because the gold is cementing to it? This solution should contain a large amount of CuCl by the look of it and the chemistry involved, but maybe its just oxidizing? I'm not sure.
I am making up a gold standard testing solution and more stannous chloride without peroxide and what I believe to be an excess of tin (12g to approx 50ml of HCl(50% dissolved in 24h, slow boat to China indeed!) , but as I live basically in the middle of no where, I have to wait to find a source of gold chloride or fine quality gold to melt in HCl and H2O2 and test my stannous against that.
Thank you for reading over my problems, and any advice is very welcome.
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