Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 2

Monatomic Gold from Quartz

The best quartz to use for this process is the kind that contains gold particles. But even with normal quartz you can extract monatomic gold. To make this easier, you can use silicon dioxide powder, which is much cheaper than quartz crystals. The only conclusion I came to as to why quartz contains only gold would be that perhaps it's crystal matrix produces an energy that either attract monatomic gold from the air, or more likely - it creates it. 1. Dissolve 125 grams of sodium hydroxide in 1 liter of water. Do this slowly, adding only a tablespoon while stirring and waiting for it to dissolve before adding the next tablespoon. Now place your quartz in the beaker. 2. Heat for 7 days at just below boiling, refilling water as needed. There is no need to add more sodium hydroxide to the new water because the sodium hydroxide remains in the vessel and doesn't evaporate with the water. This process will leach out the monatomic elements from the quartz. 3. Filter the solution through 3 coffee filters.

4. Now lower the pH to 1 using hydrochloric acid a little at a time. If you adjusted the pH too fast, then not all of the silicon will precipitate. 5. The silicon dioxide will precipitate out of solution and settle on the bottom. Pour off the top water and filter it through 3 coffee filters. Discard the silicon precipitate. 6. Adjust the pH of the solution to 8.5, and you will get a white precipitate of monatomic gold. Wait for it to settle completely, then pour of the water and add more. Repeat until the pH is neutral (7.0) 7. You can now dry this precipitate and heat it to red hot, then let it cool. This will anneal off the hydroxy group. Run a strong magnet over it, and most of the material should stick to the magnet. This is the superconductive m-gold.

Вам также может понравиться