RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
Well, there were 2 answers hidden in that post Ralph. I'll answer both.
1. Diluting fixer changes the complexation ability (ratio) of hypo and ammonium ion towards the silver and changes the equillibrium. Look at it this way.... AgX (lots) and Hypo (lots) --> Complex (lots) + excess hypo (lots) but....
AgX(lots) and Hypo (Dlute but lots) --> Complex (lots) + excess hypo (dilute) ---> AgX(some) + free hypo again.
And, as the concentration of hypo changes, the type of complex changes. This is what Mees and James show.
2. Testing fix by making it a blix. The rate determining step in a blix is how fast the silver salt that forms can be removed from the coating. If the hypo is dead, the blix will bleach silver slowly to a brownish silver complex but fail to fix it. So, you get a discolored brownish or blackish strip of paper. If the hypo is active, all silver vanishes and leaves a white to yellow white strip of paper. So, the better the hypo, the whiter the strip becomes and the faster it changes.
I usually make a run with fresh fix and then know what the time is for a given paper and test as I go.
PE
PE
Do I understand this right that the ammonium ferric turns the developed silver into a silver salt that the fixer can act upon again?