boringneil
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Repair tungsten wedding ring
Hi all this is my first post but this forum looks awesome.
In my foolishness I heated my tungsten wedding ring in a Bunsen flame to show a class of 14 year olds that it wouldn't melt despite glowing bright
red.
Well after I did it I dipped it straight into a beaker of cold water so I could put it back on my finger.
The beautiful shiny ring is now the colour of pewter!
I'm led to believe that tungsten wedding rings are ACTUALLY tungsten carbide?
In any event I've tried vigorous rubbing with all types of sandpaper to no avail.
I'm thinking a dip into some kind of acid or maybe aqua regia might take off whatever oxidation I've applied to the surface?
Any help gratefully received!
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woelen
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This indeed is not the smartest thing you did.
Probably you have something to explain to your wife ;-)
What happened is formation of a layer of oxide. WO3 is the standard oxide, but in the (very very thin) layer at the interface between the WO3 and the
underlying metal, there is a mixed layer, with composition WOx, where x gradually goes from 3 to 0 when going from the oxide layer to the metal. These
compounds are dark blue, nearly black and may give your metal a dull appearance.
WO3 does dissolve in acids, like HCl, but the deeper lower oxygen content material will most likely be very hard to remove.
You _may_ have success with very dilute HCl, to which some H2O2 is added. You could take 3% H2O2 (e.g. 10 ml) and add 1 ml of 10% HCl to this. This
makes a mildly acidic and mildly oxidizing solution. You could put your ring in this and leave it there for a few tens of minutes.
Such a weak solution is slow-acting, but at least it is safe. It will not eat away your ring in minutes and you can watch what happens.
Do not expect too much of this treatment. It is more of the sort of: if it does not work, it also does no harm. You can give it a try.
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Pok
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Try to put the ring in a NaOH solution. If this doesn't work, you could polish it with diamond powder. A high melting point doesn't mean that a
material is not attacked if you heat it in oxygen! Tungsten carbide gets oxidized at higher temperatures, probably to WO3 (an maybe
additionally to CO2). The dull surface coult either result from this oxide layer (removable with NaOH solution) or from the material loss
(the WC got "etched"). The second case seems more probable to me and then you can only get the shiny surface again if you polish it with something
equally hard or harder.
The WC could also contain other metals, like Cobalt. Co oxides could be removed with sulfuric acid.
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Sulaiman
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I think that you should ask a jeweller or jewellery forum
or give it a strong uniform heating and have a solid black tungsten ring,
but leaving it as is, you have a story to tell to whoever notices,
and your wife will always complain about something anyway,
it may as well be something easy to deal with like a failed science experiment
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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Morgan
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Tidbits
Tungsten Ring Tarnish Remover and Polishing Kit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuZrDjA-lZY
how to polish tungsten carbide ring
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHdSc7-n34k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsHN2-Xbd1w#t=1m11s
https://www.forevermetals.com/metal-jewelry-quality/
[Edited on 19-7-2017 by Morgan]
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elementcollector1
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Have you tried tumbling it in a rock tumbler with fine-grained sand? You can make a makeshift one with a drill, a plastic bottle and some sand, and
that should work to polish it if you leave it in there long enough.
Elements Collected:52/87
Latest Acquired: Cl
Next in Line: Nd
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Chemetix
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You could try electropolishing. This works for tungsten, not sure your ring is carbide as WC is a sort of hematite looking black material.
If it's a lustrous metallic looking metal ring normally, then attach to a copper wire and dunk into a NaOH solution with another electrode. It can be
carbon or even a TIG welding rod of tungsten. Don't worry too much about polarity as reversing the current intermittently cleans off the oxide layer a
bit better. You'll see the lustre return more solidly on one electrode and when it's shiny then remove and clean. 12- 20v in a 50ml beaker should
work.
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boringneil
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Guys thank you so much this is all excellent help and information!
I will give all these methods a try and see if I can jazz this ring up a bit :-)
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NedsHead
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This is why I let my facial hair grow long and shabby, if you give them something obvious to complain about they won't notice all the other things
you're doing wrong:D
Leave the ring as is
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zed
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Ahhh.
Yes. So true!
They say the prophet Mohammad, was the perfect man. Imbued with every noble quality.
None-the-less; his wife could find things wrong with him.......
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battoussai114
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These rings are made of carbide with a filler metal in the pores right? Wouldn't putting the ring in an acid bath dissolve the filler metal before the
carbide?
Batoussai.
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gdflp
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Thread Split 24-7-2017 at 10:05 |