Kirk Keyes
Member
I just put a pinch of potassium ferricyanide into some glacial acetic acid - No visible reaction. One of these days, I'll test that mix and see how much cyanide is released when it is boiled.
When I was teaching Organic Chem Lab 301, a young gal was shaving sodium metal under benzene. She decided to pour the scraps down the sink and wash it away with water. I was running towards her screaming NONONONONONONO, when she turned the tap on. Boom! The flame reached the ceiling.
We have all sorts of these things in the lab. I could spend a day just relating lab and AF stories here for APUG.
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whicever is applicable.
PE
Vaughn,
Was this an accident or are you conducting experiments based on what you read in the APUG posts? :confused:
Steve
Potassium Ferricyanide is NOT Prussian Blue! That is a common misconception. Go here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian_blue For an explanation.
Actually, we studied the Krebs cycle in Biochemistry 601.
And, our studies at Kodak along with what has been said here, indicates that the bond of CN with Ferric ion can be broken by strong acid and heat or UV from sunlight! A Rochester photofinisher was shut down when free cyanide was detected in downstream effluent due to excess ferricyanide from the Ektaprint C process. They were the first company to trade trial the Ektaprint 3 process due to that shutdown event.
PE
This is why I hate Sigma-Aldrich (I love the original Aldrich)...their chemical labeling sucks...tremendously.
Actually, as the ferricyanide is used up in bleaches,
it forms the ferrocyanide.
And, this is what happens in farmers reducer.
Ferro -> Ferri with use. PE
Working on an image's elemental silver it forms an
insoluble silver ferrocyanide complex. How convenient!
The image stays in place. If some halide, a chloride, bromide
or iodide is present then an immediate conversion to that
halide takes place. How convenient again. The light
sensitive silver halides are once again restored.
Ferro -> Ferri with use? Dan
Working on an image's elemental silver it forms an
insoluble silver ferrocyanide complex. How convenient!
The image stays in place. If some halide, a chloride, bromide
or iodide is present then an immediate conversion to that
halide takes place. How convenient again. The light
sensitive silver halides are once again restored.
Ferro -> Ferri with use? Dan
Actually, as the ferricyanide is used up in bleaches, it forms the ferrocyanide. If prussian blue does not form, then the ferrocyanide is most likely the source of cyanide as it is more prone to decomposition wiht UV or heat + acid.
Therefore, the users of ferricyanide should be aware that the reduced ferrocyanide is potentially more apt to produce hydrogen cyanide. And, this is what happens in farmers reducer. Ferro -> Ferri with use.
PE
Ferro to Ferri does not take place in ordinary photographic usage.
PE
But this is what you wrote earlier: (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Markus
Actually, as the ferricyanide is used up in bleaches, it forms the ferrocyanide. If prussian blue does not form, then the ferrocyanide is most likely the source of cyanide as it is more prone to decomposition wiht UV or heat + acid.
Therefore, the users of ferricyanide should be aware that the reduced ferrocyanide is potentially more apt to produce hydrogen cyanide. And, this is what happens in farmers reducer. Ferro -> Ferri with use.
PE
There's only one type of Potassium Ferricyanide.
Ian
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