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Digger goldDigger gold is the common slang term for gold recovered from electronics components such as board fingers, CPUs, and connector pins. Digger gold is commonly removed from electronic components via dissolution of the gold in aqua regia. For the gold fingers on boards or circuits, often a stripping solution is used to remove the gold from the board material, nitric acid also works well in this regard as many gold components are soldered to boards with silver-based solders that are soluble in nitric acid (which gold is not). After dissolving all other metals in solution, the digger gold is recovered by dissolution of the gold in Aqua Regia and subsequent selective precipitation of the gold using copperas or another selective reducing agent such as hydrazine. Due to the cost required and the small amount recovered, digger gold is not necessarily cost effective.
Categories: Electronic waste | Gold | Recyclable materials |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Digger_gold". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |