Hey guys,
I am a chemistry teacher but haven't had my own lab until this year, therefore a lot of years went by without me tinkering, but on the up-side I have been doing a lot of my own experiments on the side now that I can. The kids really enjoy it, not the least of which was the shiny silvery substance I produced by adding a Cu electrode to 0.1 M AgNO3 solution.
I want to be able to refine this further. Greyish-black by-products have formed which I put down to unavoidable oxides and other inpurities caused by a not-quite 100% clean Cu electrode. I placed the silver/solids in a test tube under vacuum and heated it hoping to decompose the compunds but with no luck.
Does anyone know what these substances are and how I may seperate them from silver? Decanting? Flotation? I'd try myself but I have already used enough silver solution that I wanna avoid trial and error at this time.
Also, the silver is in tiny little spikes, which should be easy to melt. I tried to heat it under vacuum (to avoiding burning) so that it would melt into a solid, but this caused the TT to warp so I had to abort.
Can anyone suggest how I may, once impurities are removed, turn the silver flecks into one solid mass?
My students ask "Can you make money that way" - Yes, but I'd lose more in the process! Ha ha