Add the solute little by little to the solvent to avoid boiling. The blue color in the solution indicates the presence of Copper. When you added D-Glucose to the Silver Oxide, it turned into this gray powder that is the Metallic Silver that you melted and transformed into a Silver ingot, ready for electrorefining.
Thanks for your Comment, Great observation! Adding the solute gradually really helps in controlling the reaction and prevents any unwanted boiling. Science is all about precision! Kindly keep watching and commenting to our videos.
You are correct dear, I used to do the same as you said but at the moment it had happend. Thanks for the comment. Please keep watching our videos and commenting.
Adam, screen the silver dust Wear gloves Catch pan under glass beaker What was your source of silver ? I saw wires, MCLCC, crystal oscillator’s, wires ? Nice bar
Thanks for your attention and wonderfull advices, We are jewellers & manufacturer and used our own working dust and scrapes for refining for ourself only.
@@adamjewellery ok it looked like you had a couple of computer components. We call the dust , wood chips, etc. , “sweeps “ I’m new to refining and plan on casting myself , would you please check this out and share if you would ? Jeff Pouring Silver Bars .999 silver ua-cam.com/video/6xZQ7HXbNOQ/v-deo.html
Very wrong procedure to follow. The correct way is to put silver dust first. Then, pour in ithe water. Then, add the acid in small increments to avoid splattering of the liquid
Usefull video but surely sodium hydroxide converts the silver chloride to silver oxide ( it must be completely black), then slow addition ( it is exothermic and can boil over) of dextrose or sugar reduces the silver oxide to metallic silver. At the end it is metallic silver you are melting, not silver oxide. Silver oxide, if heated will turn in metallic silver but will be very difficult to melt and will produce a silver bar that is very contaminated.
Please watch full video do not forget to like share comment and subscribe the channel.
Add the solute little by little to the solvent to avoid boiling.
The blue color in the solution indicates the presence of Copper.
When you added D-Glucose to the Silver Oxide, it turned into this gray powder that is the Metallic Silver that you melted and transformed into a Silver ingot, ready for electrorefining.
Thanks for your Comment,
Great observation! Adding the solute gradually really helps in controlling the reaction and prevents any unwanted boiling. Science is all about precision! Kindly keep watching and commenting to our videos.
Next time, put the silver in the beaker first and slowly drop in the liquids using a stirring rod. You won’t have a blow over that way.
You are correct dear, I used to do the same as you said but at the moment it had happend. Thanks for the comment. Please keep watching our videos and commenting.
Dear???
Useful Video👌
Very dangerous process..... But very good and knowledgeable video. I enjoyed it very much❤
Definitely
Only dangerous if you’re this guy.. clearly no respect for the chemicals nor experience
Thank you for sharing the knowledge and experience 🙏
So nice of you, It is my pleasure to have viewers like you.
Nice and knowledgeable❤❤❤
Thanks a lot
Great video,btw is that acid pickling process with hydrochloric acid?
Thanks for your attention and comment,
kindly let me know the time at which the video is showing that process, it will help me to explain clearly.
Supper
Nice
Thanks
Adam,
screen the silver dust
Wear gloves
Catch pan under glass beaker
What was your source of silver ? I saw wires, MCLCC, crystal oscillator’s, wires ?
Nice bar
Thanks for your attention and wonderfull advices, We are jewellers & manufacturer and used our own working dust and scrapes for refining for ourself only.
@@adamjewellery ok it looked like you had a couple of computer components. We call the dust , wood chips, etc. , “sweeps “ I’m new to refining and plan on casting myself , would you please check this out and share if you would ?
Jeff Pouring Silver Bars .999 silver
ua-cam.com/video/6xZQ7HXbNOQ/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/SEte6DcC9fA/v-deo.htmlsi=bbItFGkn68pLwHlb
Silver Cell operation
Pouring Silver Bars
ua-cam.com/users/shorts0H-TM1Ezxbg?feature=share
Osam
Very good❤
Very wrong procedure to follow.
The correct way is to put silver dust first. Then, pour in ithe water.
Then, add the acid in small increments to avoid splattering of the liquid
Thanks for sharing the correct procedure! It's always helpful to have the right steps to follow for safety and accuracy.
Usefull video but surely sodium hydroxide converts the silver chloride to silver oxide ( it must be completely black), then slow addition ( it is exothermic and can boil over) of dextrose or sugar reduces the silver oxide to metallic silver. At the end it is metallic silver you are melting, not silver oxide. Silver oxide, if heated will turn in metallic silver but will be very difficult to melt and will produce a silver bar that is very contaminated.
really thankful for your suggestion and advices.
So long process...use 'cu' to purify 'ag' from agno3...ppt is 100%ag...wash again n again ...and melt it down..silver ppt
Thanks for the tip
Great work
Thank you so much 😀
Agar kisi ke pass watch japnese cell hoga tho contact kare
Have a blessed week child of God remember Jesus loves and wants to talk to you