Gold parting is the separating ofgold fromsilver (and other metallic impurities). Gold and silver are often extracted from the sameores and are chemically similar and therefore difficult to separate. The alloy of gold and silver is calledelectrum.[1]
Two technologies are dominant. They both start with relatively pure gold.
Alternative methods exist for parting gold. Silver can be dissolved selectively by boiling the mixture with 30% nitric acid, a process sometimes calledinquartation. Affination is a largely obsolete process of removing silver from gold using concentratedsulfuric acid.[4]
The Acidless Separation (ALS) has been investigated to pre-refinedoré and jewelry alloys even when there is high silver content, which is normally a problem for existing chemical pre-refinement processes. The metals are separated by distillation.[5]
Cupellation removes gold and silver from mixtures containinglead and other metals, but silver cannot be separated from gold by this process alone.
Gold parting as a process was invented specifically to remove silver. The advent of coinage required methods to remove impurities from the gold. Over the centuries special means of separation have been invented.
The main ancient process of gold parting was by salt cementation, of which there is archaeological evidence from the 6th century BC inSardis,Lydia. In the post-medieval period parting usingantimony,sulfates andmineral acids was also used.
The very earliest attempts at refining gold can be shown by the surface enhancement of gold rings. Gold quality was increased at the surface by 80–95% gold compared to 64–75% gold at the interior found in Nahal Qanah Cave dated to the 4th millennium BC. Further evidence is from three gold chisels from the 3rd Millennium BC royal cemetery at Ur that had a surface of high gold (83%), low silver (9%) and copper (8%) compared with an interior of 45% gold, 10% silver and 45% copper. The surface was compacted and heavily burnished and indicates early use ofdepletion gilding.
Separation of gold from silver was not practised in antiquity prior to the Lydian Period (12th century BC to 546 BC).[6] Material fromSardis (in modernTurkey) is evidence of the earliest use of gold and silver parting in the 6th century.[7] Literary sources and the lack of physical evidence suggest that gold-silver parting was not practised before the mid first millennium BC. Gold parting came with the invention of coinage and there is no evidence for the use of a true refining processes before the introduction of coinage. As refining gold (as opposed to surface enhancement) results in a noticeable loss in material, there would have been little reason to do this before the advent of coinage and the need to have a standard grade of material.
The first possible literary reference to the salt cementation parting process is in theArthashastra, a 4th-century BC treatise fromIndia, that mentions heating of gold with Indus earth. Indus earth is taken to mean soils high insalt,nitre and ammonium salts and therefore ideal for the cementation parting process. A better known and more detailed early description is given byDiodorus Siculus in the 1st century BC quoting an earlier lost book,On the Erythraean Sea from the 2nd century BC byAgatharchides of Cnidus.[8] An experiment recreating the process as described by Diodorus Siculus by heating a mixture of the gold andsalt in a sealed pot for 5 days was done by Notton and was found to be successful.
Pliny in hisNaturalis Historia mentions the purification of gold a number of times and makes reference to the salt cementation process of gold parting. He says that the gold is "roasted with a double weight of salt and three times the weight of misy (ferric sulfates) and again with two portions of salt and one of the stone which is called schiston." Here he is describing the heating of gold with salt and iron sulfates which act to dissolve the copper and silver in the gold.[9] Parting vessels used for refining gold with the cementation process have been found inLondon,Lincoln,York andWinchester. The London vessels, dating from theFlavian period (c. 70–85 AD), were sealed using lutingclay;XRF analysis detected gold and silver, with highest concentration around the sealed region showing possible escape of silver as the volatilesilver chloride.[10]
Gold parting had been well used throughout the ancient times but only in theMedieval period were clear and detailed descriptions of the processes written. All the archaeological finds of Roman and early medieval parting point to a solid state process using common salt as the active ingredient.[11] The only large group of medieval parting vessels so far discovered were found atCoppergate andPiccadilly sites in York.[12] The pinkish-purple discolouration of the vessels showed them to have been used with the salt cementation process which removes iron from the clay asferric chloride. Other vessel fragments are known from Carlisle and Winchester.[13]Theophilus was a 12th-century German monk and in his bookDe Diversus Artibus[14] gives the clearest description of the salt cementation process.
break into tiny pieces a tile or piece of burnt and reddened furnace-clay and when it is powdered, divide it into two equal parts by weight and add to it a third part of salt of the same weight. It should then be lightly sprinkled with urine and mixed so that it does not stick together but is just moistened.
This mixture is then added to an earthenware pot and layered with thin sheets ofgold foil. The pot is then sealed and heated in a furnace.
Then put the fire and wood below and see that a plentiful fire is not lacking for the space of a day and a night. In the morning, however, take out the gold and melt it again, hammer it, and put it into the furnace as before. After another day and night take it out again, mix a little red copper with it, melt as before, and put it back into the furnace. And when you have taken it out a third time, wash it and carefully dry it. Weigh it, when dried, and see how much has been lost, then fold it up and keep it.
It was during the medieval period thatdistillation was discovered and the first description of nitric acid production was given byPseudo-Geber in theSumma perfectionis, 1330.Nitric acid is able to dissolve silver. The addition ofsal ammoniac to nitric acid createsaqua regia and this acid is able to dissolve gold. Both acids are used in the acid method of parting but the acids were expensive so were not used until the post medieval period.[17]
Comprehensive accounts of the salt cementation processes is given byBiringuccio in hisThe Method of cementing gold and of Bringing it to its Ultimate Fineness.; in theProbierbuchlein – Little Books on Assaying; byGeorgius Agricola in book 10 ofDe Re Metallica; and by Ercker in hisTreatise on ores and assaying. This was a period where new techniques began to be explored. Granulation of the gold instead of gold foil increased surface area and therefore the efficiency of the reaction. Salt cementation continued to be the main method of parting until the 16th century but in later Middle Ages processes usingsulfur,antimony and mineral acids began to be used. There are archaeological finds at sites in London of distillation vessels for making acids in Britain from the 15th century which include fragments of ceramic cucurbits (vessels for heating reacting chemicals) which were used with alembics for distillation.[18] By the 18th century cementation was rarely used and had been replaced by acid treatment. Into modern times the acid parting method continued to be used but other methods were discovered. In 1860s Australia theMiller process was developed, this removed silver by bubblingchlorine gas through the molten gold mixture. Soon after, in the 1870s,electrolyticrefining of gold was developed, theWohlwill process, to deal with the problem of removingplatinum from the gold. This technique is the most commonly used today.[19]
This process was used fromLydian to post-medieval times. It is a solid state process relying on commonsalt as the active ingredient but it is possible to use a mixture ofsaltpetre (KNO3) and green vitriol (FeSO4). The basic process involved the mixing of argentiferous gold foil (in later periods granules were used), common salt and brick dust or burnt clay in a closed and sealed container. Theophilus mentions the addition of urine to the mix. With heating, the silver reacts with the salt to form silver chloride which is removed leaving a purified gold behind. Conditions needed for this process are below 1000 °C as the gold should not melt. Silver can be recovered by smelting the debris.[20] Heating can take 24 hours. Hoover and Hoover[21] explains the process thus: under heating salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) decomposes in the presence of silica and alumina (from the brick dust or clay) to produce hydrochloric acid and also some chlorine. This reacts with the silver to produce silver chloride (AgCl). The urine is acidic and aids decomposition. Silver chloride is volatile and would be removed from the metal. And the container is sealed to stop the escape of the silver which can be recovered later. Notton in experiments found that with one heating the gold content could be taken from 37.5% to 93%[22]
This is similar to the salt cementation process but creates sulfides instead of chlorides. Finely divided impure gold and elemental sulfur are reacted together under moderate heat in a sealed crucible. The impurities form metal sulfides and the gold is left unreacted. The gaseous sulfide condenses on the crucible fabric. The antimony process is the same but usesstibnite (Sb2S3) instead of sulfur because stibnite is stable at a higher temperature than sulfur. This is much quicker than the salt process and gave a purer gold, but it could dissolve some of the gold as well. This process is first described in theProbierbuchlein.[23]
The distillation was used in the 12th century Europe after its introduction from the East[24] and after that period more powerful acids could be created. Nitric acid (aqua fortis, called byAgricolaaqua valens) could be made by the distillation of saltpetre (KNO3) with water and alum (KAl(SO4)2) or vitriol (FeSO4).[18][19]
2KNO3 + H2O + FeSO4 → FeO + K2SO4 + 2HNO3
Nitric acid, after distillation to increase the acid strength, is capable of dissolving the silver but it will not (by itself) dissolve the gold. However, nitric acid is not able to (fully) extract silver and other impurities from an alloy with a high content of gold. Therefore, one part of scrap gold was typically alloyed with three parts of copper (quartering) before parting with nitric acid. Another method uses Sterling silver instead of copper. One part pure gold is alloyed with three parts Sterling silver (inquarting). The resulting six karat (6K) gold can then be parted with dilute nitric acid (one part 68–70% nitric acid to one part distilled water). With the karat gold this low (6K), and over medium high heat, the dilute nitric acid will dissolve the Sterling silver (and other base metals in the karat gold) starting on the outside surface of the 6K gold alloy, working its way into the gold alloy, forming a honeycomb structure as it works its way into the metals. Since nitric acid will not dissolve gold, nearly pure gold (very close to 99.5% pure) will be left behind after the reaction is complete. After removing the solid gold other elements like silver and copper may be extracted from the liquid. To get the gold to a very high level of purity (999 fine gold) it is sometimes processed further with aqua regia to effectively remove all the impurities.
Aqua regia was also used for parting. It was made by adding sal ammoniac to nitric acid which produced a mixture ofhydrochloric acid and nitric acid. This acid dissolved the gold to a solublechloride and the silver was attacked and precipitated as an insoluble chloride. Silver was removed by filtering and gold was then recovered by evaporating the liquid and heating the residue. Nitric acid was suitable for separating small quantities of gold from silver andaqua regia used to separate small quantities of silver from gold. Aqua regia acid process is used by refiners of scrap gold used in jewelry manufacturing. This process is also well suited to recycling consumers' used or broken jewelry directly back onto the global market 24kt inventory.[17]