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Yes they can use it as food. Actually we can metabolise it too, it's called the Citric Acid Cycle and is absolutely essential for life (Kreb's Cycle). I never really did pay enough attention to undergraduate biochemistry.... I thought the concentrate would be too strongly acid to support microbial life. Evidently not.
I phoned the company and spoke to their technical chap. I was told that microbial growth can occur in citric acid stop unlike in stronger acetic acid based concentrates. I was advised that I could carry on using it if I filtered it through a coffee filter. I said thank you, put the phone down, threw the old stop away and opened a fresh bottle.
Incredibly bad advice from the manufacturer. If the microbes are capable of chewing up citric acid just think what they can do to a gelatin based emulsion. Does anyone want to infect their film or prints by attempting to use this stuff.
+1I use citric acid as a stop bath. I buy it in a powder form which I mix a tablespoon per liter of water right before I use it. I toss it after I use it.
I have good experience with Ilford Ilfostop which is citric acid based. I use in the Nova slot processor and keep another batch in a PET bottle for film. I use it up until it starts to change colour which can take a few months. I mix it with plain tap water and never have seen any growth of anything in it.
Add 1g/l of Benzoic Acid to the stop bath. This retards the growth of "bugs".
PE
Somewhat surprisingly. the OP's problem is with undiluted concentrate, not working strength solution.To be fair to whomsoever produced your stop-bath, I have had similar problems with Ilford's citric acid stop in a Nova slot processor but this was only after a considerable non-printing period. Leave citric acid stop in any kind of open container, even a slot container with its tube fitted and I suspect that "bugs" will grow
pentaxuser
Somewhat surprisingly. the OP's problem is with undiluted concentrate, not working strength solution.
Ron, do you know of any sources? I checked Artcraft, Photoformulary, and Bostick-Sullivan - none of them list it.
Incredibly bad advice from the manufacturer. If the microbes are capable of chewing up citric acid just think what they can do to a gelatin based emulsion. Does anyone want to infect their film or prints by attempting to use this stuff.
I wonder if the Ilfostop concentrate is more concentrated than the product you were using? If so, that might help prevent the "growth" that you are concerned with. The Ilford product is designed to be diluted 1+ 19.
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