The rotten egg smell and the milky solution are the tell-tale signs of hypo reacting with an acid. The former is the SO2 and latter elemental sulfur which precipitates. So how did this happen. I would try and repeat the same sequence without the film just to make sure it has nothing to do with the film itself. Also, why not introduce a plain water rinse before fixer. For salt prints, I use sodium carbonate (2%) which is supposed to deter this reaction from taking place if there is an acid carry-over from an earlier step. Or sodium sulfite should work as a deterrent to acidification (and oxidation in storage) too. I think Ilford spec for the film recommends the rapid fixer that includes sodium sulfite, if I am not mistaken.
If I remember my school chemistry (and school "stink bombs") correctly, the bad egg smell is hydrogen sulphide, (Sulphur dioxide has a rather nasty strong smell, with burning sensation in the nose.) But Wiki says that hydrogen sulphide can be smelt at 0.00047 parts per million, so it would probably take very little citric acid carry-over to cause a distinct smell.
The rotten egg smell and the milky solution are the tell-tale signs of hypo reacting with an acid. The former is the SO2 and latter elemental sulfur which precipitates. So how did this happen. I would try and repeat the same sequence without the film just to make sure it has nothing to do with the film itself. Also, why not introduce a plain water rinse before fixer. For salt prints, I use sodium carbonate (2%) which is supposed to deter this reaction from taking place if there is an acid carry-over from an earlier step. Or sodium sulfite should work as a deterrent to acidification (and stability in storage) too. I think Ilford spec for the film recommends the rapid fixer that includes sodium sulfite, if I am not mistaken.
Edit: I mixed up the egg smelling H2S with a more noxious SO2. Thanks for railwayman3 for pointing it out. So while whiteness could be precipitated sulfur, the egg smell could be something else. Egg on the face....
Fixers acidified using Acetic Acid don't give of Hydrogen Sulphide, so it's not so simple.
Ian
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