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Tarnishing Of Gold Jewellery And Black Skin SmudgingTarnishing of Carat Gold Jewellery
Blackening of High Carat Gold Jewellery in India and the Middle EastReports of blackening of 21 and 22 carat gold have been received from
customers in countries such as India. This is very unusual in that such
blackening is usually found only in low-medium carat golds and is attributable
to tarnishing (see below). It is normally considered that high carat golds
(such as 22 carat) do not tarnish in the conventional sense. It is a problem
that is peculiar to India and other countries in the Middle East, apparently. Recently, World Gold Council has had an opportunity to examine examples
of blackened 22 carat gold returned to retailers in India. The analysis
of the blackened layer has shown that it comprises silver (and copper)
sulphide. This is a true tarnish layer. That such high carat golds
should tarnish is unexpected and points to the jewellery being exposed
to a particularly 'corrosive' environment at some stage. Perhaps, it is
due to being worn during food preparation (some foods & spices are
very high in sulphur compounds). Maybe, the jewellery is stored in aggressive
sulphur-containing environments. Maybe, the jewellery surface is more
susceptible to tarnishing for some reason. At present we cannot be certain
as to the cause; we can only speculate. Certainly, the evidence suggests
that lifestyle or the local conditions in countries such as India are
different from other parts of the world as the problem is not reported
elsewhere. We can say that the jewellery examined was not undercarated or defective
in any significant way. Therefore, the manufacturer does not appear to
be responsible for the appearance of this blackening effect (tarnish). If blackened jewellery is returned to the retailer, he should be able to clean off this black layer and re-polish it. Some advice on minimising its occurrence is given above. Black Skin Smudging from Carat Gold JewelleryBlack smudges on the skin and even staining of clothes by jewellery is a well known phenomenon but the causes are not clear. Some people are more susceptible than others. Some salient points are:-
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![]() The blog that crosses the boundaries between research and the industrial application of gold technology ACS Fall meeting25 Aug, 2010 Inbetween meetings yesterday I managed to attend a few lectures here in (an extremely rainy!) Boston. Vince Rotello of UMass and Richard Lambert of Cambridge delivered the 2010 Langmuir lectures, both of which were excellent. Other interesting talks included Jin Zhang of UC Santa Cruz discussing his group’s work in the field of solar cell [...] |