The gold refining technique described here is the rather ancient wet chemical method whereby the gold-bearing scrap is dissolved. The gold solution is then filtered and the jewelers bench dirt, sandpaper grit, etc remains on the filter as a solid sludge, together with any silver present, which will be in the form of silver chloride. The filter and sludge are washed with repeated small amounts of water to wash all gold chloride solution down through the filter. Other metals that were in the alloy or in the scrap (nickel, zinc, copper, iron, etc.) are also in this solution, which is usually green in color. The nitric acid from the excess of aqua-regia used in the digestion is removed either by boiling or chemical reaction. To recover the gold as metal, a reducing chemical is added to selectively change the gold chloride into solid gold particles and leave the other metal chlorides unchanged and in solution. When tests show this to be complete, the solution is filtered and the gold in the filter thoroughly washed. The clean gold is then melted and poured into molds or made into shot. This process is also used to remove stones from finished jewelry.
Doral also offers this service for a fee of $375. It commonly takes about 3-4 business days and all precious and semi-precious stones are returned to the customer on completion of the job.