Yes silver can form silver chloride quite easily but then this forms a coating that prevents the process going further.
Ian
Sorry I was answering DannL's point, but by the time I finished eating my evening meal you & Kirk had posted
There's an excellent Kodak film (video) online about how film is made and how the whole process works, someone posted a link to it a few weeks ago. It's well worth watching as it's talked about in laymans terms and explains excatly what you're asking. Sorry I can't remember the link.
Ian
That's true but Silver doesn't dissolve in Acetic or Sulphuric acid
Usually to form other salts combinations of acids are used, or a silver cyanide is acidified, which is potentially lethal, and not to be tried.
Ian
Cool! So new question now - After one gets a viable silver halide (ie the silver salt precipitates to halide which is photon sensitive):
- Then a photon strikes the halide which bumps an electron up to a higher orbital?
- When developed, the halide gives up an electron and drops back down into a visible silver salt?
That is a neat experiment - thanks for sharing!
Thanks!
Yes silver can form silver chloride quite easily but then this forms a coating that prevents the process going further.
Ian
Wow - incredible - so the crystal actually turns into a metal by the sheer proximity of the laticework of neighboring atoms with higher energy orbits - and then that gets amplified by the developer...
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