Sampling & Assay

Technical Evaluation Before Recovery Planning

AG Precious Metals Group supports the technical review of catalyst-bearing materials through sampling logic, assay coordination, and material consistency checks before recovery or commercial settlement decisions are made.

Representative Sampling depends on material form, batch condition, and stream consistency.
Technical Assay coordination helps create a clearer basis for recovery planning.
Practical Crushed material, powders, pellets, granules, and fines need different review logic.
Technical Route
Evaluation
Sampling is not just taking a piece of material. The sample must represent the batch condition, material form, and consistency before results can support the next decision.
Sample Logic Form / batch / consistency
Assay Route Data / review / next step
Technical Evaluation Route

Sampling and assay are used when material value cannot be judged by appearance alone.

Prepared catalyst materials, powders, pellets, granules, fines, and mixed streams often require a technical route before a recovery plan or commercial decision can be made.

Why It Matters

A poor sample can create a poor decision.

The purpose of sampling is to reduce uncertainty. A sample should reflect the material batch as accurately as possible, especially when the material is crushed, mixed, processed, dusty, or inconsistent.

Whole converters are not evaluated the same way as crushed catalyst or powder.

Industrial pellets and refinery granules need batch and source context.

Mixed residues and fines may need additional review before assay direction is clear.

Assay results only become useful when the sample properly represents the material stream.

Prepared Material

Crushed Catalyst

Bulk catalyst material that usually needs representative sampling before assay or settlement review.

Fine Material

Catalyst Powder

Powdered catalyst material where moisture, particle size, and batch mixing can affect review quality.

Industrial

Pellets & Beads

Spent industrial catalyst media requiring source, batch, and consistency review before evaluation.

Refinery

Granules & Bed Material

Petrochemical or refinery-related catalyst materials where documentation and controlled stream review matter.

Residues

Process Fines

Dust-like fractions, secondary residues, or fines from processing, filtration, cleaning, or handling.

Unclear Stream

Mixed or Unknown Material

Unclassified catalyst-bearing streams that need initial review before sampling or assay direction is chosen.

Evaluation Workflow

A technical path from material review to recovery direction.

Sampling and assay should support a decision. The workflow starts with the material itself, then moves into sampling logic, assay coordination, result interpretation, and the next commercial route.

01

Material review

We review material type, source, physical form, quantity, packaging, photos, and any available documentation.

02

Sampling logic

The sampling approach depends on whether the material is crushed, powdered, pelletized, granulated, mixed, or inconsistent.

03

Assay coordination

When assay is required, the material route is coordinated around representative sample preparation and technical review.

04

Result interpretation

Assay data is reviewed in relation to material source, batch condition, and the selected recovery route.

05

Commercial next step

The result supports quotation, recovery planning, settlement discussion, or further technical clarification.

Sample Quality

What affects the reliability of a catalyst sample?

The quality of sampling is affected by the physical condition of the material. Before assay, AG reviews whether the sample can reasonably represent the larger batch.

01

Batch consistency

Mixed batches, uneven lots, or different material sources can reduce confidence in a single sample.

02

Particle size

Powder, fines, crushed catalyst, pellets, and granules behave differently during sampling and preparation.

03

Moisture and contamination

Wet material, dirt, foreign material, or packaging contamination can affect technical review.

04

Material separation

Automotive, industrial, and refinery-related materials should not be mixed without clear identification.

05

Packaging condition

Bags, drums, boxes, pallets, and bulk loads should be described clearly before shipment or sample review.

06

Documentation

Prior assay reports, batch notes, labels, source documents, and photos can improve the evaluation route.

Before Sending Samples

Information needed before technical review starts.

Clear information helps the team decide whether the material needs sampling, assay, direct quotation review, or a different route.

Sampling starts with context, not only material.

A sample without source details can be difficult to interpret. Before review, AG needs to understand the material origin, physical form, quantity, condition, packaging, and whether the stream is separated or mixed.

If the material is unknown, photos and basic descriptions are often enough to start the first classification step.

01

Material type

Crushed catalyst, powder, pellets, granules, fines, residues, honeycomb, or mixed stream.

02

Quantity and packaging

Approximate weight, number of bags, drums, boxes, pallets, or bulk load details.

03

Source and condition

Automotive, industrial, petrochemical, refinery-related, trading, or unknown origin.

04

Photos and documents

Clear photos, labels, batch notes, prior assay reports, and available technical records.

Need sampling or assay direction for catalyst material?

Send material type, source, quantity, photos, packaging details, and available documents. AG will review the material and guide the correct technical next step.