Benefits of Oxidizing Gold: Rust Prevention & More

AI Thread Summary
Oxidizing gold is primarily relevant for refining purposes, as it helps achieve higher purity levels necessary for applications like electrical conductors. While gold is generally considered inert and does not oxidize easily, certain processes, such as using aqua regia or nitric acid, can oxidize gold, but these methods often remove the metal from surfaces. In a lab context, one participant is attempting to oxidize a 50nm gold layer on a glass prism for the deposition of a membrane protein, DPPC, but is facing challenges with existing methods. Suggestions include using low-pressure air plasma, which can clean and oxidize without removing gold, as opposed to aqueous solutions that would dissolve the metal. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the oxidation process and its implications for specific applications in materials science.
devious_
Messages
312
Reaction score
3
What are the benefits of oxidizing gold? I suppose that prevents it from rusting, but are there any other benefits?
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
I thought one of the reasons gold was so useful was because it didn't oxidize.

then again I'm not a chemist, so maybe someone's discovered that gold really dose oxidize.
 
Gold oxidization is mainly used for refining purposes, as it is sometimes not sufficiently pure, especially for conductors. Gold amalgams (alloys with mercury) can be broken down by oxidization.

In addition, gold ores are processed with oxidization with "King's water" (\displaystyle 3HCl + HNO_3) and treated with cyanide, afterwards reduced with zinc rods; so very pure (up to 99.99%) quality gold can be prepared.

As imabug said, gold isn't oxidized, since it is an inert metal; you hardly prepare a [AuCl_4]^- complex and can easily reduce it to the metal with elemental potassium, etc.
 
I'm quite late to this discussion but actually it's very relevant to some recent issues that have come up in my lab:

I'm looking to oxidize a 50nm gold layer on the back of a BK-7 glass prism. Despite being quite familiar with the use of Aqua Regia, I want to oxidize gold and not remove it from the back of the prism.

Our UV cleaner isn't powerful enough to oxidize it, so I've been thinking of using Nitric acid. Can anybody give me an idea of how long this should take, how much gold will be oxidized, etc.? I'm trying to get an idea of how this should go before I actually proceed.

Thanks
 
Any liquid capable of oxidizing gold will certainly remove it from the glass. Think low pressure air plasma for your application.
 
chemisttree said:
Any liquid capable of oxidizing gold will certainly remove it from the glass. Think low pressure air plasma for your application.

Seconding this; gold oxide is soluble in aqueous solutions.
 
Thank you for your assistance.

This is a bit of a problem then, and my complete lack of Chemistry knowledge compounds this.

My ultimate goal is the deposition of DPPC (a membrane protein) on to gold by vesicle fusion. The paper that I've been referencing claims they used a gold substrate that was oxidized by UV lamp... As I said, apparently our UV cleaner isn't powerful enough to do this, and as was pointed out, oxidation by acqueous solution is not an option...

Perhaps you can expand on this low pressure air plasma? I'm not familiar with it.

Thank you
 
Here it is...

http://www.3dtllc.com/plasmadyne.html"
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6TFR-4F2V57F-2&_user=10&_coverDate=02%2F01%2F2005&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1254629359&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=49c9b1720182cd1e2d33919bea90656b"
http://surfxtechnologies.com/?gclid=CIbrl5frwKACFQdY2godMHccSw"
http://www.tantec.com/Corona-and-Plasma-Treatment-products/Surface-treaters/corona-treatment-and-plasma-treatment.html"

Cleans and oxidizes in one easy step.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #10
FiberOptix said:
Thank you for your assistance.

This is a bit of a problem then, and my complete lack of Chemistry knowledge compounds this.

My ultimate goal is the deposition of DPPC (a membrane protein) on to gold by vesicle fusion. The paper that I've been referencing claims they used a gold substrate that was oxidized by UV lamp... As I said, apparently our UV cleaner isn't powerful enough to do this, and as was pointed out, oxidation by acqueous solution is not an option...

Perhaps you can expand on this low pressure air plasma? I'm not familiar with it.

Thank you

Almost surely they meant that the gold was exposed to UV-generated ozone and oxygen radicals, and that it was the organic contaminants that were oxidized (and volatalized) to leave the gold as clean as possible before deposition. This is a common procedure.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top