Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/426

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1857.]
of Gold (and other Metals) to Light.
411

Diffused particles of gold—production—proportionate size—colour—aggregation and other changes.

Agents competent to reduce gold from its solution are very numerous, and may be applied in many different ways, leaving it either in films, or in an excessively subdivided condition. Phosphorus is a very favourable agent when the latter object is in view. If a piece of this substance be placed under the surface of a moderately strong solution of chloride of gold, the reduced metal adheres to the phosphorus as a granular crystalline crust. If the solution be weak and the phosphorus clean, part of the gold is reduced in exceedingly fine particles, which becoming diffused, produce a beautiful ruby fluid.

This ruby fluid is well obtained by pouring a weak solution of gold over the phosphorus which has been employed to produce films, and allowing it to stand for twenty-four or forty-eight hours; but in that case all floating particles of phosphorus should be removed. If a stronger solution of gold be employed, the ruby fluid is formed, but it soon becomes turbid and tends to produce a deposit. When the gold is in such proportion that it remains in considerable excess, still the ruby formation is not prevented, and being formed it mingles unchanged with the excess of gold in solution. If an exceedingly weak solution of gold be employed the production of ruby appears to be imperfect and retarded. The nearer the solution is to neutrality at the commencement the better; when a little hydrochloric acid was added the effect was not so good, and the colour of the fluid was more violet than ruby.

If a pint or two of the weak solution of gold before described be put into a very clean glass bottle, a drop of the solution of phosphorus in sulphide of carbon added, and the whole well shaken together, it immediately changes in appearance, becomes red, and being left for six or twelve hours, forms the ruby fluid required; too much sulphide and phosphorus should not be added, for the reduced gold then tends to clot about the portions which sink to the bottom.

Though the sulphide of carbon is present in such processes and very useful in giving division to the phosphorus, still it is not essential. A piece of clean phosphorus in a bottle of