Gerald Koch
Member
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2004
- Messages
- 1,662
- Format
- Multi Format
Kodak has published two fogging developers for B&W reversal based on sodium hydrosulfite, they are FD-70 and FD-72.
Jordan said:Sodium hydrosulfite is very different from thiourea... I think there's a formula for a "fogging agent" based on the hydrosulfite in Grant Haist's book.
The "sepia toner" method works well for me. I do not see any visible problems with reduced density... in fact, the dark tones are qualitatively "deeper" with thiourea toning than with re-exposure and re-development, probably because the latter does not go to completion. I pretty much use only Pan F and FP4 for reversal, so the disgusting T-grain tone doesn't bother me.
Photo Engineer said:Another is that thiourea, under the right conditions can act as the entire reducing agent and form metallic silver directly (directly form silver image or silver sulfide image). We must distinguish between these two and the form of silver that can be formed from the two reactions. This is essentially a restatement of what Ryuji said above, but in less technical terms.
In a similar fashion, dithionite (hydrosulfite) can probably act the same way, but I am not as familiar with it as with the thiourea.
Ryuji said:Thiourea is not strong enough as a reducing agent to convert AgX to Ag0 to any appreciable degree. Usually those sulfur compounds that can reduce AgX contain S-S bond. Instead, thiourea has C=S and this sulfur can convert AgX to Ag2S. Jordan's reversal process replaces fogging and second developer with alkaline thiourea bath to convert undeveloped, unbleached grains to stable Ag2S grains, which are also opaque to visible light.
Dithionite contains S-S bond that gives it a rather strong reducing property.
Jordan said:I wonder how much Ag(0) I'm producing when I immerse my bleached-and-cleared film in alkaline thiourea. Probably not too much, as the "sulfiding" is very rapid (seems complete within seconds). Complexes of thiourea where sulfur is an electron-pair donor are not stable at all in basic solution, IIRC. This is used in organic chemistry to selectively generate thiols from organic halides. Urea is another product.
Donald Qualls said:Copper sulfate in a sulfuric acid or sodium bisulfate
solution is a true bleach, which I believe originally
came from holography.
Dithionite, also called hyposulfate as well as hydrosulfite. If you look in the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, find sodium sulfite and a little farther down you will find sodium hydrosulfite with its synonyms. I don't know where to buy it other than at a supermarket as an additive to detergents to remove or prevent iron stains. I haven't looked to see if it's listed on www.chemistrystore.com.Alessandro Serrao said:Gainer: do you mean sodium dithionAte or sodium dithionIte?
The image is metallic silver.Donald Qualls said:Say, Gadget, do you happen to know if the density produced by dithionite/bisulfite solution is bleachable (that is, is it metallic silver, or some stable compound)? If it were resistant to bleaching, it might be possible to use that stuff to move the bleach bath to after all developments -- that is, first dev (produces a bleachable image), stop, fogging dev, rinse, bleach, rinse, fix, wash -- and allow use of a self-fixing bleach like Farmer's Reducer, which would combine steps and doesn't damage the gelatin. This *does* work with a sulfiding developer like thiourea (according to one who has done it), but the thiourea also seemingly reacts with the developed silver to make unbleachable highlight density (high Dmin).
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |