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Talk:Chloroauric acid

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Potential sources for writing this article

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  • 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

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

Body art

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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

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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

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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]