Nova02
New member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2024
- Messages
- 2
Hello, everyone!
I'm new to gold refining, and for my first experiment am doing a small batch of about an ounce of gold filled scrap (1/5 12k, 1/10 10k, 1/20 10k, etc) which I unfortunately did not check for steel/tin content. I decided to use the AP method but used 20-30% H2O2 with it (Pequa Cess-Flo from Home Depot), which dissolved some of my gold. The solution has saturated with base metals, though, and a stannous test shows no more dissolved gold in solution, which I believe means the gold has precipitated. I have sediment (sludge) on the bottom of my vessel, and if I assume the worst (given my previous error), I'm assuming it has iron, tin, and copper precipitates in it. How can I separate these other precipitates from the gold?
Could I poor off the AP solution and start anew with weaker H2O2/HCl solution to just dissolve the base metal precipitates, leaving the gold behind, or is there some precipitate that would inhibit this (I've heard about AP-dissolved steel making a slimy precipitate that gunks up everything)?
I've scoured the forums, and from what I can tell, tin and iron tend to be a pain to filter out or remove. What if I selectively dissolve them using something they're soluble in (copper (i) chloride is soluble in HCl, while copper (ii) chloride is soluble in water)? I could do rinses with water for the water-solubles, rinses with HCl for stuff like copper (i) chloride, and so on until the gold is left over?
I'm very interested to learn about what y'all think, as I'm finding this forum and the concepts within fascinating! Please help me learn about this process.
I'm new to gold refining, and for my first experiment am doing a small batch of about an ounce of gold filled scrap (1/5 12k, 1/10 10k, 1/20 10k, etc) which I unfortunately did not check for steel/tin content. I decided to use the AP method but used 20-30% H2O2 with it (Pequa Cess-Flo from Home Depot), which dissolved some of my gold. The solution has saturated with base metals, though, and a stannous test shows no more dissolved gold in solution, which I believe means the gold has precipitated. I have sediment (sludge) on the bottom of my vessel, and if I assume the worst (given my previous error), I'm assuming it has iron, tin, and copper precipitates in it. How can I separate these other precipitates from the gold?
Could I poor off the AP solution and start anew with weaker H2O2/HCl solution to just dissolve the base metal precipitates, leaving the gold behind, or is there some precipitate that would inhibit this (I've heard about AP-dissolved steel making a slimy precipitate that gunks up everything)?
I've scoured the forums, and from what I can tell, tin and iron tend to be a pain to filter out or remove. What if I selectively dissolve them using something they're soluble in (copper (i) chloride is soluble in HCl, while copper (ii) chloride is soluble in water)? I could do rinses with water for the water-solubles, rinses with HCl for stuff like copper (i) chloride, and so on until the gold is left over?
I'm very interested to learn about what y'all think, as I'm finding this forum and the concepts within fascinating! Please help me learn about this process.