How exactly is this cleaning reaction working?
The Lady Mermaid asked:
I am working in the jewelry industry and was wondering how this reaction is working. We frequently clean tarnished silver with a bowl of water lined with aluminum foil, hot water, baking soda, a pinch of salt and a little dishwashing liquid. I have a little chemistry in my background and figure it is an oxidation/reduction reaction. I am curious to exactly what happens and how it is working. Also, are there any other effective methods for cleaning tarnished silver jewelry?
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Filed Under Chemistry |
Tagged With Aluminum Foil, Baking Soda, Hot Water
Comments
One Response to “How exactly is this cleaning reaction working?”
The tarnish is actually Ag2S, Silver Sulphide. The baking soda, salt act as electrolytes and the silver and the aluminium foil act as electrodes. A cell is set up where the Ag+ ions are reduced and Al is oxidised. Thus Ag is cleaned.