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  2. Silver cyanide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_cyanide

    The silver ion is then separated from the skimmed froth with cyanide, yielding a solution of [Ag(CN) 2] −. The silver metal can then be plated out by electrolysis of such solutions. [8] Both AgCN and KAg(CN) 2 have been used in silver-plating solutions since at least 1840 when the Elkington brothers patented their recipe for a silver-plating ...

  3. Silver nitrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_nitrate

    A typical reaction with silver nitrate is to suspend a rod of copper in a solution of silver nitrate and leave it for a few hours. The silver nitrate reacts with copper to form hairlike crystals of silver metal and a blue solution of copper nitrate: 2 AgNO 3 + Cu → Cu(NO 3) 2 + 2 Ag. Silver nitrate decomposes when heated:

  4. Immersion silver plating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immersion_silver_plating

    Immersion silver plating (or IAg plating) is a surface plating process that creates a thin layer of silver over copper objects. It consists in dipping the object briefly into a solution containing silver ions.

  5. Silver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver

    Silver is rarely used for its electrical conductivity, due to its high cost, although an exception is in radio-frequency engineering, particularly at VHF and higher frequencies where silver plating improves electrical conductivity because those currents tend to flow on the surface of conductors rather than through the

  6. Silver compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_compounds

    Some silver oxide powder.. Silver is a relatively unreactive metal, although it can form several compounds. The common oxidation states of silver are (in order of commonness): +1 (the most stable state; for example, silver nitrate, AgNO 3); +2 (highly oxidising; for example, silver(II) fluoride, AgF 2); and even very rarely +3 (extreme oxidising; for example, potassium tetrafluoroargentate(III ...

  7. Tollens' reagent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tollens'_reagent

    Tollens' test for aldehyde: left side positive (silver mirror), right side negative Ball-and-stick model of the diamminesilver(I) complex. Tollens' reagent (chemical formula ()) is a chemical reagent used to distinguish between aldehydes and ketones along with some alpha-hydroxy ketones which can tautomerize into aldehydes.