Hello,
Since i've gained lots of experience from the forum, here comes time for payback
Reverse electroplating of silver from brass/bronze/copper(even stainless steel) is very well possible.
However, from my experience, i would bother with it only if you have heavily plated items, or lots of them(100kg +).
What i've seen: Industrial silver plating for electrical components: Small pieces(about 10 cm long, 2 cm wide, 0,5 cm thick) contain about 1-2% of silver by weight. Larger items(type of block 20x20x20) contain only about 0,2-0,6% of silver by weight.
Deplating is usually 95-99% effective.
Electrolyte should be concentrated sulphuric acid(at least 90% - recommending use of 96%), with a bit of nitric acid(often used 5%, but by my experince, 0,5-1% is ok for start, adding small amounts when necessary during operation)(electrolyte will thicken during operation - nitric acid will react with some tiny silver particles, forming AgNO3, sulphuric acid will immediately react with AgNO3 to form HNO3 and AgSO4 )
Cathode is lead bar - this is where silver deposits in form of small pure silver crystals(in conc. sulphuric acid more like silver-acid paste)(lead does not get attacked in sulphuric acid, diluted or concentrated) - do not use copper, i had bad experience with it.(Can't remember what was wrong, but something was) Make sure to connect with copper wire
above the electrolyte surface(copper is not attacked by conc suplhuric acid, but will be attacked when on cathode).
Anode is deplated material - i usually used a cage made of copper wires and plates, into which i would shed to-be-deplated material. Connect with copper wire (copper does not get attacked by conc sulphuric acid on anode, and by my experience, the tiny bit of nitric in the electrolyte will have practically no effect on the copper cage.)
Make sure to construct the cage in a way which will allow you to easily remove from container and to shake it a bit(on the contact places(where one plated item touches other) the deplating will not be proceeding) - you need to rearrange items in the cage once during deplating. The smaller the items are, the more important this is.
Voltage used should be about 12-14 volts for start, after most item have been deplated, i often switch to 24-30 volts to speed finishing a bit.
When deplating 15kg of material, using 6 amps @12volts it takes usually about 20-30 minutes to get most silver down, with 1-2 more hours on 30volts to finish it.
If you plan on processing large amounts of plated silver, then be aware that to process 300 kgs of standard silver plated items(0,2 weight % of silver), it takes about 8 hours @ 50amps.
Temperature does not matter much, only take care to not go above 60 or 70 deg. celsius - when hot, sulphuric acid will attack copper.
When removing deplated items from electrolyte - pay attention - large cloud of SO2 will be released, also prepare some hook to suspend the cage on for at least 10 minutes, to allow electrolyte to flow and drip from deplated items.
Next post in 10 minutes