Gold is very inert, and unreactive to other chemicals so table salt should not affect gold at all. FYI to get gold out of ore you use seriously strong acids that oly attact the ore and leave the gold intact.
The noble metals such as gold, silver, or platinum (etc.) do not readily corrode in salt water
they will corrode
because its silly
Yes, gold can be corrode by the use of specific compounds, temperature and pressure conditions. Click on the link given in the Related questions part to see names of some 'Gold corroding' chemicals.
Gold does not corrode/tarnish.
The noble metals such as gold, silver, or platinum (etc.) do not readily corrode in salt water
Fake gold is the type that is most likely to corrode. Real gold does not corrode.
Gold alloys doesn't corrode in normal conditions.
As i rememeber gold do not corrode at all.
Gold is extremely unlikely to "corrode". It may, however, become worn, and gold alloys, especially those with low gold content, may corrode.
no it wont
The three metals that do not corrode are gold, silver and platinum.
they will corrode
because its silly
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Yes, gold can be corrode by the use of specific compounds, temperature and pressure conditions. Click on the link given in the Related questions part to see names of some 'Gold corroding' chemicals.
Yes. Some can only corrode soft things, and some can corrode everything. But in short, all acids can corrode something. It only gets dangerous if the acid can corrode you.