• Please join our new sister site dedicated to discussion of gold, silver, platinum, copper and palladium bar, coin, jewelry collecting/investing/storing/selling/buying. It would be greatly appreciated if you joined and help add a few new topics for new people to engage in.

    Bullion.Forum

Chemical Sodium Hydroxide -vs- SMB to Precipitate Gold

Gold Refining Forum

Help Support Gold Refining Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Bc I was was wondering if I could just skip the whole pre-process my material thing, save time and money on acids, and just dissolve it all at once and use Soah to precipitate out the iron, which I found out that I can, and I was wondering what my ph limits were by doing this... I work with Gold (III) oxide and iron, so the gold dissolves in hcl alone without an oxidizer. So no matter what I do, if I try cleaning material with pre-acid treatment, gold will still go into solution... which really complicates things for me... And because of the high iron content, the gold has hard time falling out. I'd first have to roast the material, converting back into metallic gold, and THEN pretreat it with acid to remove base metals. But anyways this response is getting way too long. Gotta roll.
As long as the Gold is dissolved just use one of the usual precipitants.
It won't touch the Iron.
Make sure the pH is no higher than 2 and then add SodiumMetaBisulfite (SMB) or Ferrous Sulfate.
The Gold should drop straight out with the Iron still in solution.
 
As long as the Gold is dissolved just use one of the usual precipitants.
It won't touch the Iron.
Make sure the pH is no higher than 2 and then add SodiumMetaBisulfite (SMB) or Ferrous Sulfate.
The Gold should drop straight out with the Iron still in solution.
Mine won't drop bc of the super super high iron content. Also ph of 3 to 3.5 would probably make larger particles. Iron, particularly in its Fe³⁺ (ferric) form, can also be reduced by sodium metabisulfite, potentially competing with gold (Au³⁺) for reduction. This is a problem for me. But we'll try adjusting the ph, and see if it works. Appreciate the advice.
 
Mine won't drop bc of the super super high iron content. Also ph of 3 to 3.5 would probably make larger particles. Iron, particularly in its Fe³⁺ (ferric) form, can also be reduced by sodium metabisulfite, potentially competing with gold (Au³⁺) for reduction. This is a problem for me. But we'll try adjusting the ph, and see if it works. Appreciate the advice.
I usually precipitate at 0-1 pH, The 2-4 boundary is closer to where it will not drop anymore.
If you have trouble try to cement it on Copper.
It will drop precious metals only and Mercury if it is there.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top