Canadian Paper - The Electromotive Force of Metals in Cyanide Solutions

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
S. B. Christy
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
83
File Size:
2777 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1901

Abstract

The practice of the cyanide-process of gold-extraction has brought to light many important contradictions of familiar chemical analogies, which still obscure both the theory and the practice of the art with distinctions subtler and more difficult to make or follow than those which delighted the heart of the old-time metaphysician. Yet Nature herself has drawn these distinctions; and if we hope to succeed in this modern search for the Golden Fleece, we must be able to follow her through the winding labyrinth. There are so many phases of this question that I shall attempt to touch on only one of them at this time, but it is one that lies at the root of many others. In reviewing my paper on " The Solution and Precipitation of Cyanide of Gold,"* Mr. E. B. Wilson contends† that" in the solution of gold by means of alkaline cyanides the various reactions are determined, as to their order and intensity, by the relative position of the elements concerned in the electro-chemical series, or series of voltaic tension." In a modified form this statement is probably true. That is to say, the difference of electrical potential in any closed electrical circuit determines the nature of the reactions which ensue. But the matter is not so simple as Mr. Wilson assumes. Recent investigations show that the order of the metals in the electro-chemical series depends not only on the nature of the elements themselves, but also on the chemical composition of the solution in which they are placed; its degree of concentration; its temperature; and, in the case of gases, on the pressure. Unless all these conditions are taken into account, inferences drawn from the electro-chemical series are likely to prove more
Citation

APA: S. B. Christy  (1901)  Canadian Paper - The Electromotive Force of Metals in Cyanide Solutions

MLA: S. B. Christy Canadian Paper - The Electromotive Force of Metals in Cyanide Solutions. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1901.

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