Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Ryuji, the details of mixing during making of emulsions is a subject off-limits to me for this discussion.
As for the mention of injecting silver though, I do use relatively high pressure with short times and high mixing rates. This is known in the literature and there have been patents and discussions about it.
You may be interested in the novel methodology suggested by Wey and Whiteley in their US patent. I'm sorry but I don't have the reference at hand. I'll post it later if I can find the number.
Your published approach is also from the same era and looks much like Kodak publication AJ-12 as I said in another post. You surely have more modern versions but I have not seen them, and I wouldn't think of commenting on them without trying them out.
I make my emulsions in 120 or 220 gram batches and divide them into 30 g portions for easy breakdown for finish and doctoring experiments. So, for 10 makes of even 120 grams, this is 30 experiments and for 220 gram makes that is 60 experiments.
PE
As for the mention of injecting silver though, I do use relatively high pressure with short times and high mixing rates. This is known in the literature and there have been patents and discussions about it.
You may be interested in the novel methodology suggested by Wey and Whiteley in their US patent. I'm sorry but I don't have the reference at hand. I'll post it later if I can find the number.
Your published approach is also from the same era and looks much like Kodak publication AJ-12 as I said in another post. You surely have more modern versions but I have not seen them, and I wouldn't think of commenting on them without trying them out.
I make my emulsions in 120 or 220 gram batches and divide them into 30 g portions for easy breakdown for finish and doctoring experiments. So, for 10 makes of even 120 grams, this is 30 experiments and for 220 gram makes that is 60 experiments.
PE