reducing to a dry powder, as that stuff probably won't be good to breathe or get in your eyes or anything
you are right, it isn't good for you.
and neither are the fumes given off by evaporation ( or so i have been told by people smarter than me )
back in the 80s i worked for a company that sold evaporation units .. they were like a drum and a heat source and a fan
and a thick liner. the in structions were like the oven ron popeil ( RONCO ) used to sell " set it and forget it " ...
except in a not-good ventilated area, the fumes could collect and were not good for you ...
ALSO ...
pre-treat the waste solution with steel wool
the thing about steel wool is that if the solution goes through it too fast and doens't "trickle" it doesn't trade ions very well.
that is why a trickle tank has a slow rate. i had a colleague who didn't use the trickle tank, just the media bucket ( big bucket of steel wool or iron/core )
and she'd pour her fixer in a hose and it left as fast as she poured it in. the steel wool ( &c ) probably did absolutely nothing ... and if you do the steel wool soak
what do you do with your steel wool covered with other "stuff" can't just throw it out if you do and it is in the landfill its the same as dumping it in your back yard ..
The problem with doing silver recovery by yourself is that you have to do something with the silver sludge, which is even more of a "hazardous material" than spent fixer. For me, taking fixer to the photofinisher for recovery is an ideal solution; no muss, no fuss and only a trip every month or two.
Doremus
couldn't agree more !