The fact that it's leaf complicates the issue, being so thin, I'm not 100% sure it will react identically to normal foil.
Do you have some sort of citation that explains how the chemical properties of aluminum and silver are altered by being as leaf instead of foil, or wire, or lump?
No. If I had then I wouldn't be so vague as "not 100% sure". We all know that nanoparticles behave differently chemically, and in this case, although not a nanoparticle, the thickness of the material is on a microscopic scale.
The main problem with chemical tests on it, as I found with the copper sulfate test I tried is that the actual amount of material is tiny even if you tear off what looks like quite a large chunk so it very difficult to see if anything's happening or not. It's most likely, as you suggested, aluminium, however, the experiment with copper sulfate was inconclusive because there just wasn't enough material to get visible bubbles, measurable temperature increase, or a product that was actually visible. In that reaction I would expect no reaction with silver and copper displaced if it was aluminium. What I actually saw was the metal disintegrate as I stirred it and was left with tiny metal particles that I couldn't even see properly.
Do the math, according to Enthalpy (the user, not energy per mole!), the leaf must be less than 1μm thick to be displaying transparency. So if I take a piece 2cm on each side, my maximum total volume (using 1μm) is 4x10
-10m
3. This is probably a significantly high estimate.
Given a density of aluminium of approx 2700 kg/m
3 that gives me under 1mg of metal if we accept that it is LESS than 1μm. Given the amount I have, 2x2cm is quite a hefty chunk to take for a reaction that might not even be visible.