Findings CHM 361 Case Study
Findings CHM 361 Case Study
Findings CHM 361 Case Study
Copper cyanide
3. Study the properties of compounds.
Apart from that, copper cyanide. It exists as a green powder. It is insoluble in water
and alcohol. However, it is soluble in ammonium hydroxide, aqueous ammonia, pyridine
and N-methylpyrrolidone. The melting point of the compound is 474 °C and its density is
2.92 g/cm3. Hydrogen cyanide, which results from slight decomposition, is toxic when
absorbed through the skin, through open wounds, consumed, and inhaled. It produces
harmful nitrogen oxides during fires. It is used extensively in the electroplating industry.
4. Explore the mechanism involved in the respective industries.
For the first compound which is potassium silver cyanide, it is used as silver
plating. The holloware and flatware industries use silver plating the most, where it serves
as a long-lasting decorative finish. Almost all silver plating is done with alkaline cyanide
solutions. When silver anodes dissolve in potassium cyanide solution, the metal is
introduced as potassium silver cyanide. Silver metal concentrations in plating solutions
typically range from 10 to 40 g/L (1.3 to 5.3 oz/gal) and up to 120 g/L (16 oz/gal) of free
potassium cyanide. When a less noble metal is immersed in cyanide silver plating
solutions, immersion silver deposits will form on the metal. This holds true even though
the components enter the solution "live" (with voltage applied from the rectifier). Any
later electroplated layer that is applied will adhere poorly due to immersion deposits.
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