Things You'll Need
Instructions
Refining from Ore
Melt. If a large amount of base metals metals are present, the first step is to use a crucible to heat the metals to their melting points. Because gold melts at 1102 degrees C, this is not generally a practical process for most amateurs.
Bind. When the material is melted, borax or soda ash is stirred into the crucible to bind with the base metals. The liquid is poured into a mold, where the larger impurities collect on the top as slag. The more dense gold sinks to the bottom.
Separate. When the mold has cooled, the gold can be broken off from the slag and remelted. This time, when it is poured into a mold, the contents will be gold of approximately 80 to 95% purity.
Refinining Jewelry and Scrap
Collect. Refining jewelry or scrap gold that has already been refined from ore, but is in a less than pure alloy can be done at home. First collect old rings, necklaces, earrings, dental fillings or anything else made of gold that's no longer wanted in its current form.
Acid bath. Gold can be separated out of an alloy by soaking in a bath of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid. Commercial refining acid products are available. Typically, the acid bath must be left to soak for anywhere between 1 to 24 hours.
Neutralize acid. The gold that is lifted out of the alloy will be suspended in the acid and needs to be separated from the acid. But before that can be done, the acid must be neutralized by adding a mixture of boiling water and uric acid, a less caustic acid that will raise the pH of the acid bath.
Precipitate. Add to the mix a solution of borax and water, which will precipitate the gold out of solution over a period of several minutes. The brownish mud at the bottom of the container is gold.
Filter and heat. Pour off the remaining liquid so that only the precipitate remains. Use a blowtorch to melt this material into a more recognizable form of gold. The result of this process is roughly 99% pure.