eeTHr said:Barren---
Were you using home made nitric?
eeTHr said:Barren---
You already know that you can end up with chlorides in home made nitric, right?
I would think that for there to be enough in water, to dissolve any Au, you would be able to smell it.
:?:
I still want one of the experts to explain why I can drop the gold out of the nitric. I never can get an answer on that one.
4metals said:I still want one of the experts to explain why I can drop the gold out of the nitric. I never can get an answer on that one.
I think you mean can't drop the gold.
The reason you cannot drop the gold until the nitric is gone is because the nitric continues to regenerate Chlorine molecules from the HCl which will re-dissolve the gold. Actually the gold does drop and redissolve and cause the red fuming to continue. When all of the nitric is exhausted, the gold will drop. It's just using an excess of chemical to kill off the nitric by reacting with the gold that has just dropped from solution.
Often larger refiners will gas with SO2. The reaction often blows red fume while gold is being dropped and redissolved. A waste of SO2 but it is done often.
Barren Realms 007 said:On this perticular batch I am working with the glassware was cleaned and washed throughly but not with distilled water. It was some inquirted jewlery that I had been processing. I had run only nitric and distilled water in this batch no other solutions were used in this. The solution was not boiled it only on a coffee hot plate and had been washed with ammonia prior to this happening. I had put 3 runs of nitric thru this so now I will go back and check the other solutions.
Thanks Steve
Irons said:Barren Realms 007 said:On this perticular batch I am working with the glassware was cleaned and washed throughly but not with distilled water. It was some inquirted jewlery that I had been processing. I had run only nitric and distilled water in this batch no other solutions were used in this. The solution was not boiled it only on a coffee hot plate and had been washed with ammonia prior to this happening. I had put 3 runs of nitric thru this so now I will go back and check the other solutions.
Thanks Steve
Have you checked your water with Silver Nitrate to check for Chlorides? It wouldn't hurt to check your Nitric as well.
Never use Acetylene to precipitate metals. It will form highly sensitive and explosive acetylides. Some of these compounds have been used in detonator compositions.
Don't even think about it.
4metals said:Barren, a few suggestions.
The blue perforated disc you use as the bottom of the filter has holes all the way to the edge. On a Buchner funnel the holes stop about 3/8" from the edge. That provides a smooth surface for the paper to seal against the bottom and prevent liquid from leaking around and under the paper rather through the paper.
You could get by with less holes (which tend to blow through with a good vacuum) you can put a circle of fiberglass window screen which is smaller in diameter than your hole pattern which will raise the paper just a hair off the plastic and allow it to flow better. The smooth edge is still important to seal the paper to the filter at the edges.
Otherwise, nice job.
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