Talk:Chloroauric acid

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Bernardirfan in topic Ambiguous article

Potential sources for writing this article edit

  • A. M. Schwartzberg, C. D. Grant, T. van Buuren, and J. Z. Zhang (2007). "Reduction of HAuCl4 by Na2S Revisited: The Case for Au Nanoparticle Aggregates and Against Au2S/Au Core/Shell Particles". J. Phys. Chem. C 111 (25): 8892–8901. doi:10.1021/jp067697g.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)


The MSDS linked is the wrong one. Ashi Starshade (talk) 14:21, 29 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Image edit

Image in infobox is not of chlorauric acid but of granular auric hydrochloride. Gubernatoria (talk) 03:10, 2 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

Body art edit

current revision states: "For example, it is infrequently used to place gold particles subcutaneously in body art." While this is intriguing, I can't find any evidence of this. I'm removing it until someone can find a source to support the claim. -Verdatum (talk) 15:51, 24 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Natural occurrence edit

Given chlorine is abundant in water and minerals, is the acid found at trace levels in deep ocean water? Is it found in complex salts in areas with gold deposits?- Adam37 Talk 17:22, 3 December 2016 (UTC)Reply

Ambiguous article edit

About which compound is this article? Is this article about [H5O2]+[AuCl4] (which is actually a salt of tetrachloroauric(III) acid, not the tetrachloroauric(III) acid itself) or H[AuCl4] (which is the tetrachloroauric(III) acid) or one of their hydrates? Those two compounds are not the same. This article is water-chauvinistic. Ammonia, ethanol, urea and a bunch of other molecules of crystalisation or solvents can be involved, why assuming water???Bernardirfan (talk) 17:05, 10 April 2023 (UTC)Reply