Iron bleaching for reversal B&W film, works, but how to improve

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Ausar

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My suggestion would be to iterate on what you are already doing @Ausar . You have something that is headed in the right direction. Try using citric acid instead of acetic acid. In all the testing I did, I found that citric acid sequestered more silver than I was able to get acetic acid to do. It will stain, however, (forms silver citrate) and requires a clearing bath like the one you are already using. Additionally, having read a lot of patents, most target pH values are like I said, in the range of 2-4 for effective bleaches. I don't think I'd want either my film or my tanks in pH 0.2 soup, never mind my extremities.

ok, will do further test this weekend, including using EDTA-FeNa instead of using Fe2(SO4)3, let's see if it will make difference.

BTW, I heard that citric acid is prone to mold growth, any way to make it last longer?
 

koraks

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Is there any alternative formula available?

You could try sodium polysulfide / sodium sulfide. However, this breaks down to form hydrogen sulfide, which is smelly, toxic and tends to fog photographic materials nearby that are not packed airtight.

Note that thiourea is a common chemical building block, so the odds that you can somehow get hold of it in China are pretty good. There are thousands of tons of it in your country at any given moment, I'm pretty sure.
 

lamerko

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You could try sodium polysulfide / sodium sulfide. However, this breaks down to form hydrogen sulfide, which is smelly, toxic and tends to fog photographic materials nearby that are not packed airtight.

Note that thiourea is a common chemical building block, so the odds that you can somehow get hold of it in China are pretty good. There are thousands of tons of it in your country at any given moment, I'm pretty sure.

I have noticed that some chemicals in China have slightly different names or are less common than in Europe/USA. This can make it difficult to find the exact chemical, even though it is actually freely available.
 

koraks

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I have noticed that some chemicals in China have slightly different names or are less common than in Europe/USA.

Yes, it may be easier to find under its alternative name "thiocarbamide". Or simply by CAS number: 62-56-6. According to Wikipedia, around 4000 tons are produced annually in China alone. Surely, some of it finds its way onto the local market, although most of it is likely used in the textile industry as a precursor of thiourea dioxide. The latter can also be used as a sepia toner btw, but I've never tried it myself. @Cor likes to use it on prints, but I don't think he ever tried it in a reversal process as we're discussing here.
 
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Ausar

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Yes, it may be easier to find under its alternative name "thiocarbamide". Or simply by CAS number: 62-56-6. According to Wikipedia, around 4000 tons are produced annually in China alone. Surely, some of it finds its way onto the local market, although most of it is likely used in the textile industry as a precursor of thiourea dioxide. The latter can also be used as a sepia toner btw, but I've never tried it myself. @Cor likes to use it on prints, but I don't think he ever tried it in a reversal process as we're discussing here.
thiourea dioxide is easier to buy, maybe thiourea just can't sell on the internet(like NaOH), so, maybe I should buy some thiourea dioxide ?
 

koraks

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You could give it a try with thiourea dioxide.
I'm pretty sure thiourea dioxide is more reactive and thus more dangerous to ship than thiourea. I suspect the reason why you can by the dioxide more easily where you live is because it's used as a mordant for dying clothes at a very large scale.
Around here it's the opposite; it's nearly impossible to buy small amounts of thiourea dioxde, but thiourea proper is no problem...
 
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fert

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I think that high cerium sulphate, with sulphuric acid and iron sulphate (10028-22-5), with a bleaching time of 3 to 5 minutes is already acceptable.
 
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john_s

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"Rehal" = rehalogenating.
The idea is that you develop the negative image in the usual way. Then you fog all remaining silver halide into silver sulfide using a thiourea toner (sodium sulfide / polysulfide toner will work, too). Afterwards, you bleach the original silver negative image using a rehalogenating bleach. This can be for instance a normal ferricyanide + bromide bleach. Finally, the silver halide negative image is fixed out.

The advantage is that this can be done with quite ordinary chemistry and the process is easy and robust. The drawback is that the silver sulfide image will be brown to yellow in color. It's not possible to obtain a neutral greyscale image this way. If you like sepia toned slides, this approach works great, however.

That's an interesting process. I need to do some reversal processing to make some copy negatives (with increased contrast). I have been a bit concerned about permanganate bleach softening the emulsion. However the process described above seems simple, and for a copy negative the brown tone would not be a problem. Do you think it's suitable?
 

john_s

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Yes, I think it should work. The drawback is that you can't modify anything with bleaching etc. since silver sulfide is highly stable.
Thanks, I'll try it. I'll experiment a bit with exposure and then with amount of development. And the permanence of silver sulfide isn't necessarily a disadvantage.
 
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