Photo Engineer
Subscriber
I have been asked what the options are for various gelatin preservatives.
Here is a list in ascending order of potency. Thymol, Thujaplicin, Phenol, Ottasept and Kathon.
Thymol we all know about, Thujaplicin was once used by Kodak and Phenol is currently in use by several companies including Ilford. Thujaplicin is very expensive, and at least 2x better than Thymol. Phenol is very good but very very toxic and causes severe, often permanent damage to humans in the form of burns and nerve destruction. DO NOT USE IT. Just posted FYI. Ottacept, (4-chloro, 3, 4 dimethyl phenol is the active ingredient) is quite good, about 40x better than Thymol, and presents low risk to humans if proper precautions are taken such as rubber gloves and a good lab coat.
Kathon is a recent addition to the Kodak repertoire and is superb, but very very toxic to fish and requires a special license for use in most locations. It is used in some color photographic stabilizers (final rinses) and this presents the possible use for a final rinse being used as both a preservative and surfactant in emulsions.
I suggest you stick with Thymol unless you need a really strong preservative. In that case, use the Ottacept active ingredient but use it with caution. It extreme cases, try a color final rinse.
In all cases, these ingredients, being organic, alter the spread characteristics of an emulsion on paper, film and glass.
Have fun - safely.
PE
Here is a list in ascending order of potency. Thymol, Thujaplicin, Phenol, Ottasept and Kathon.
Thymol we all know about, Thujaplicin was once used by Kodak and Phenol is currently in use by several companies including Ilford. Thujaplicin is very expensive, and at least 2x better than Thymol. Phenol is very good but very very toxic and causes severe, often permanent damage to humans in the form of burns and nerve destruction. DO NOT USE IT. Just posted FYI. Ottacept, (4-chloro, 3, 4 dimethyl phenol is the active ingredient) is quite good, about 40x better than Thymol, and presents low risk to humans if proper precautions are taken such as rubber gloves and a good lab coat.
Kathon is a recent addition to the Kodak repertoire and is superb, but very very toxic to fish and requires a special license for use in most locations. It is used in some color photographic stabilizers (final rinses) and this presents the possible use for a final rinse being used as both a preservative and surfactant in emulsions.
I suggest you stick with Thymol unless you need a really strong preservative. In that case, use the Ottacept active ingredient but use it with caution. It extreme cases, try a color final rinse.
In all cases, these ingredients, being organic, alter the spread characteristics of an emulsion on paper, film and glass.
Have fun - safely.
PE