I've seen formulas for ferricyanide bleaching with and without potassium bromide. What exactly does the addition of KBr provide to the bleach solution?
And what is your favorite formula and method of bleaching?
Thanks!
Hi PVia,
In a nutshell;
When you buy your paper the emulsion contains silver combined with a 'halide' - that is a bromide (silver bromide), a chloride or iodide, or commonly a mix of these 'silver halides'. After exposure the developer converts the exposed silver to silver metal (black) and the fix then removes unused silver halides. You now have a black (& grey) image.
Pot.ferricyanide acts on this metallic silver to convert to silver ferr
ocyanide - near colourless (straw colour ish). But if a halide (e.g. bromide) is included, it 'rehalogenates' the silver back into a silver halide - i.e. back where you started in the first place, except that it is now only in the image area (the fixer removed it from elsewhere) and it is more stable in room light than the original unexposed sheet was.
Being a silver halide this can now be redeveloped.
This might be in a toner (eg sepia) or in another developer of higher or lower contrst, warmer or cooler tone, lith, and so on.
It can be pretty useful.
Tim