smieglitz
Member
It has been decades since I took any chemistry course and I have forgotten almost everything from that experience. I want to attempt substituting one salt for another in a photographic formula. For example, today I acquired some sodium bromide that I'm hoping will replace either ammonium bromide or potassium bromide in several wetplate collodion formulas.
Does the substitution somehow involve the molecular weights of the compounds in grams/mole? If the compound weights are:
NaBr = 102.894 g/mol
NH4Br = 97.943 g/mol
KBr = 119.01 g/mol
is the substitution (e.g., NaBr for KBr) something simple like 119.01/102.894 = 1.157 and does this indicate I'd have to use 1.157 times the amount of the Sodium salt when substituting it for the Potassium salt? So if the formula called for 1 gram KBr I would need to use 1.157 grams NaBr, or no?
Do I need to calculate something else?
Where's Avogadro when you need him?
Help and thanks for any input.
Joe
Does the substitution somehow involve the molecular weights of the compounds in grams/mole? If the compound weights are:
NaBr = 102.894 g/mol
NH4Br = 97.943 g/mol
KBr = 119.01 g/mol
is the substitution (e.g., NaBr for KBr) something simple like 119.01/102.894 = 1.157 and does this indicate I'd have to use 1.157 times the amount of the Sodium salt when substituting it for the Potassium salt? So if the formula called for 1 gram KBr I would need to use 1.157 grams NaBr, or no?
Do I need to calculate something else?
Where's Avogadro when you need him?
Help and thanks for any input.
Joe