[Boatanchors] Question for Metallurgically-Smart People
Gary Peterson
kzerocx at rap.midco.net
Thu May 21 12:19:45 EDT 2020
Back in my chemistry teaching days, there was a fairly urgent need for some half-silvered mirrors. The ones that had been ordered were back-ordered.
I prepared some Tollens’ reagent (the Internet will give you details). I added formaldehyde to the reagent and poured it on glass plates. This caused metallic silver to be deposited on the glass. By experimenting with diluting the reagent and measuring with a photographic light meter, I was able to make some usable half-silvered mirrors. This method should work for depositing silver on a quartz crystal blank. Unless you have access to a laboratory, it is a bit involved. Also, any leftover reagent must be disposed of properly or it may become dangerous.
However, now that I think of it, I have two products at my work bench that might work. One is GC Silver Print. It is a paint for repairing broken circuit board traces. It contains metallic silver. I also have a Techspray, Trace Technologies conductive pen, which also contains metallic silver. These products are not inexpensive.
Gary
KzeroCX
“Does anyone here know a way to deposit a metal coating on
the surface of a quartz crystal blank, without spending a gazillion
bucks on a Phazer-Atom-Smasher-Hellbore vacuum chamber furnace?
David Stinson”
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