Question About Melted Silver

jessiej920

Shake them dice and roll 'em
Valued Senior Member
I thought this was the best forum to ask this question. Maybe someone can help me.

At what temp. does silver liquify and is it possible to mix an organic solution with melted silver and still have it cool and harden correctly?

Strange question, I know, but any answers would be helpful.

Thanks! :D
 
I thought this was the best forum to ask this question. Maybe someone can help me.

At what temp. does silver liquify and is it possible to mix an organic solution with melted silver and still have it cool and harden correctly?

Strange question, I know, but any answers would be helpful.

Thanks! :D


Silver melts at 1763.474 °F (http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ag.html). Even if your organic solution doesn't cook at the temperature, the silver will still be so much more dense that you'd never be able to form a "mixture" that could later cool, trapping the mixture within the now hardened silver.
 
Silver melts at 1763.474 °F (http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ag.html). Even if your organic solution doesn't cook at the temperature, the silver will still be so much more dense that you'd never be able to form a "mixture" that could later cool, trapping the mixture within the now hardened silver.

Thanks for the help. Yeah, I figured that silver's density would not allow any type of organic solution to be trapped within it; sort of like an oil and water affect, but I wanted to check with someone more versed in chemisty then me. Thanks again! :)
 
Plus if you add it to silver at near a thousand C, if you have just organic stuff it'll cook, giving off all sorts of gas and unpleasant smells, but if there is any water it'll turn to steam and you risk blowing lumps of organic and bits of silver all over the place.
 
As far as organosilver synthesis is concerned, this is like trying to build the pyramids by nuking a quarry.
 
You could mix silver powder with the organic substance and then press it to make a solid. Silver will readily weld to itself with pressure if it's clean.
 
I'm sure silver can have some level of carbon content and by the way it will be pure only carbon, at those temperatures any organic solution will pyrolyze to carbon (and hydrogen and carbon monoxide gas).
 
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