Thanks for your response. My follow-up question is, Why is the hardening agent not of the more common potassium/sodium alum form (i.e. potassium/sodium aluminium sulfate)? Do the components listed allow the formation of the more common alum form in the solution?
It's going to depend on what else is in the fixer. Sometime a formula is made up from components that react to form what's needed, Rodinal uses Potassium Metabisulphte and Potassium Hydroxide to form Potassium Sulphite (and water).
So it's what the components form in equilibrium reactions in the final solution that's more important, without seening the entire list of components it's hard to be more precise.
It is the Al+3 ion which does the hardening. It really doesn't matter what salt supplies it. It can come from aluminum sulfate or from sodium aluminum sulfate. I suspect that the bottom line determines which one is used. Sodium aluminum sulfate is one of a group of compounds known as alums which are double salts. For example sodium sulfate plus aluminum sulfate. They exist as definite compounds in the solid state but dissociate in water into the component ions.
Thanks for your response. My follow-up question is, Why is the hardening agent not of the more common potassium/sodium alum form (i.e. potassium/sodium aluminium sulfate)? Do the components listed allow the formation of the more common alum form in the solution?