How To Use Mercury To Recover Gold

Forever and ever, mercury has been used to recover gold, fine gold in particular.  When it comes to chemicals like Hg, one must be careful.

THE DANGERS OF MERCURY AND NITRIC ACID

  • Mercury and nitric acid can kill if swallowed.
  • Nitric acid can be absorbed through the skin, causing nitric acid poisoning. WEAR RUBBER GLOVES! We recently reviewed a list of the best waterproof work gloves.
  • Always use mercury, sulfuric acid and nitric acid in a well-ventilated area. Do not breathe the fumes!
  • Nitric acid can ruin your clothes and shoes.

    How To Use Mercury To Recover Gold - 911Metallurgist
    Recover Gold without Mercury
  • Always add acid to water ; Never add water to acid!
  • Always wear rubber gloves, plastic safety glasses and a plastic or rubber apron.

By absorbing mercury, you are exposing yourself to terrible health risks:

  • Nervous disorders.
  • Growing evidence it causes cancer.
  • Kidney damage.
  • Respiratory failure.
  • Even death!

EQUIPMENT USED

  • Large copper gold pan.
  • Rubber spatula.
  • Tweezers.
  • Oral syringe or large veterinarian’s syringe.
  • Virgin cotton balls.

INGREDIENTS USED

  • Mercury.
  • Nitric acid.
  • Sulfuric acid.
  • Distilled or spring water.
    Any clean water without chlorine. Chlorine mixed with nitric acid can dissolve gold. Gold must be clean. In order for mercury to attach itself. Sometimes placer gold will be covered with a thin film of oil, which will prevent the gold from being amalgamated unless the oil is cleaned off first.

PROCEDURE to Recover Gold with Mercury

  1. Bathe the concentrates in a 10 to 1 solution of nitric acid – meaning 10 parts of water to 1 part of nitric acid. Use a glass jar or beaker.
    CAUTION! Working with nitric acid, can be very dangerous. Be extra careful to avoid spilling it onto yourself of splashing it in your eyes. DO NOT breathe it fumes! When a solution of nitric acid is poured onto a dirty set of concentrates, the effect will be a bubbly reaction. Allow the concentrates to bathe until all such visible reaction has stopped.
  2. Rinse the concentrates with fresh water so that the acid is diluted and washed away. Once this is done, the concentrates are properly set up for amalgamation.
  3. Take a clean, large, copper gold pan and coat thoroughly with mercury, using a pad of folded cloth. Deposit the concentrates in the pan, add some fresh water and swirl and agitate until all-visible gold has been taken in by the mercury. If you want to check for platinum, if you suspect it may be present, wash the black sands into a separate pan which can be checked later.
  4. Using a rubber spatula, scrape the gold bearing mercury from the copper gold pan into a glass jar or beaker.
  5. Wet a ball of virgin cotton and squeeze out the excess water. Place it into the bottom of an oral syringe and pour in the amalgam ball. Replace the plunger and holding the end of the syringe over a container, press the plunger to extract the excess mercury. If the container is filled with water, the mercury will be prevented from splashing or bouncing as it drops into the container.
  6. Remove the plunger from the syringe and extract the cotton containing the amalgam, using the tweezers. Put the amalgam ball into a glass jar or beaker and set it in a safe place, downwind of any populated area within the vicinity.
  7. Mix and pour in a 4 to 1 solution of sulfuric acid and allow it to bubble until there is no visible reaction.
    BE CAREFUL NOT TO BREATHE THE FUMES GIVEN OFF BY THE CHEMICAL REACTION!
  8. Pour of the acid solution into another glass jar or a beaker; so that, the mercury in solution can be recovered later (see page 5).
  9. If all of the mercury has not been dissolved from step 7, with the gold back in its natural flake and powder form, pour fresh water into the jar and use an old screwdriver to poke it around and break it up. Pour out the water and pour in another 4 to 1 solution of nitric acid. Sometimes it is necessary to poke at the gold just a bit to break it up while it’s being worked on by the acid. An old screwdriver works well for this.
  10. When the reaction stops, flush with fresh water. If the gold is still not back in its natural form, increase the strength of the acid solution and repeat the above steps. When dealing with small amounts of amalgam, usually the gold will be thoroughly cleaned off it after step 7. Sometimes when working with larger amounts of amalgam, it is necessary to do the steps a few times as described above, or to use a stronger acid solution.

NOTE: If you have a large amount of concentrates, you may wish to ignore steps 3 and 4

Recovering The Mercury From The Nitric Acid Solution

To recover the mercury in solution (see step 8), simply drop some aluminum foil into the acid solution. A chemical reaction takes place and the acid solution will drop the mercury to attack the aluminum. This causes the mercury to revert to its natural liquid metal form at the bottom of the jar. Then rinse out the acid solution and you will be left with most of your original mercury.

Cleaning Mercury

After mercury has been used a number of times in the process of amalgamation, it becomes dirty and tends to break down into smaller, separate balls instead of it all-coming together into a single mass. To clean dirty mercury, you simply bathe it in a nitric acid solution of 30 parts of water to 1 part of acid. This will clean the impurities out and allow it to amalgamate properly again. Mercury can be used over and over to amalgamate and cleaned when necessary in this way.

Warning