Ryuji
Member
Donald Qualls said:Hydroquinone is a developing agent that, in the absence of other agents and in suitable conditions of preservation and pH, is accelerated by its oxidation products; its analog ascorbate or erythorbate (more correctly, L-ascorbate that functions as a vitamin and D-ascorbate that doesn't) seems likely to give similar results, though it might require slightly different solution conditions to work best.
Correct about hydroquinone.
Ascorbate is not an analog of hydroquinone. They are totally unrelated compounds. Ascorbate alone has no lith development property and it is never used as a lith developer, for research or for practical applications. Oxidation products of ascorbate have very different properties from those of hydroquinone. (Exception is ones that contain hydrazine derivatives. But then infectious development is due to hydrazine.)
Erythorbate is not D-ascorbate. Ascorbate has two chiral centers, there are 4 total of stereoisomers: L-ascorbate, D-ascorbate, D-arabo-ascorbate (erythorate), and L-arabo-ascorbate.