Science, asked by kapshokeen, 6 months ago

Aqua Regia can dissolves gold​

Answers

Answered by niranjanask1812
1

Answer:

Aqua regia is a mixture of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid with ratio 3:1. aqua regia dissolves the outer layer of the gold and an inner shiny layer appears. The dissolve of outer layer causes reduction of the jewelery.

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Answered by kirito234875
1

Answer:

Yes, Aqua Regia can dissolve Gold(Au)

Explanation:

Aqua regia dissolves gold, though neither constituent acid will do so alone, because, in combination, each acid performs a different task. Nitric acid is a powerful oxidizer, which will actually dissolve a virtually undetectable amount of gold, forming gold ions (Au3+). The hydrochloric acid provides a ready supply of chloride ions (Cl−), which react with the gold ions to produce tetrachloroaurate(III) anions, also in solution. The reaction with hydrochloric acid is an equilibrium reaction which favors formation of chloroaurate anions (AuCl4−

). This results in a removal of gold ions from solution and allows further oxidation of gold to take place. The gold dissolves to become chloroauric acid. In addition, gold may be dissolved by the free chlorine present in aqua regia. Appropriate equations are:

Au+3HNO3+4HCl↽−⇀AuCl4−+3NO2+H3O++2H2O

Au+HNO3+4HCl↽−⇀AuCl4−+NO+H3O++H2O

If the aqua regia solution only contains gold, solid tetrachloroauric acid may be prepared by boiling off excess aqua regia, and removing residual nitric acid by repeatedly heating with hydrochloric acid.

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