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The Chemistry of Photography

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Presentation on theme: "The Chemistry of Photography"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Chemistry of Photography
Peter Jantz Chemistry 496 February 27, 2004

2 Black and White Film/Developing Color Film/Developing
Overview History Black and White Film/Developing Color Film/Developing

3 1824, Joseph-Nicephore Niepce
First Permanent Image “Heliogravure” Asphalt on a Pewter Plate Exposure took 5 days

4 1839, Louis Daguerre “Daguerreotypes”
Sensitized Silver-plated Copper Sheet Mercury-vapor developer

5 1841, William Henry Fox Talbot
“Calotypes” Salt Solution with Silver nitrate Quicker Development/Lower Image Resolution

6 The Gelatine Emulsion 1881, George Eastman 1887, Hannibal Goodwin
Gelatin Dispersion of Silver-Halide 1887, Hannibal Goodwin Plastic-backed “modern film”

7 The Chemistry of Black and White Film

8 AgI >> AgBr >> AgCl
silver halide salts AgI >> AgBr >> AgCl Silver halides form imperfect crystals in the Dispersion A photon of light may hit the crystal, exciting the electron on the negatively charged halide The electron is transferred into the conduction band of the silver halide microcrystal at the sensitivity speck

9 Chemical engineer’s resource page www.cheresources.com/photochem
Image Formation Chemical engineer’s resource page

10 The emulsion layer is ~12% silver halide
Grain size affects contrast and light sensitivity 0.1 ~ 3 microns Anti-halation backing prevents reflections More photons = more silver

11 Developer: Amplifies the Image
A reducing agent (Hydroquinone) Sodium hydroxide and sodium carbonate added as accelerators Potassium bromide added as restrainer Reaction must be timed

12 Stop Bath Developers work at high pH
A weak acid (acetic acid) is used to halt the reaction

13 Fixer Sodium thiosulfate makes water soluble silver thiosulfate
Removes undeveloped silver halide crystals Sodium thiosulfate makes water soluble silver thiosulfate Photo paper is rinsed and dried

14 1912, Rudolph Fischer's Dye Coupler Process
Color Film 1912, Rudolph Fischer's Dye Coupler Process

15 Color Film Silver halides only sensitive up to 525 nm
Coupling to dyes expands sensitivity range Lower resolution than Black and White film Latent images are black and white

16 Color Development paraphenylendiamine
Silver halide crystals are reduced by developer Oxidized developer reacts with the dye couplers, activating the dye color Printing paper has dye-coupled layers

17 History of Silver halide Chemistry
Summary History of Silver halide Chemistry B&W vs. Color Film

18 References [1] Ian R. Gould et al Two-Electron Sensitization: A New Concept for Silver Halide Photography. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 122 (48), pp [2] Tao Deng et al Fabrication of Metallic Microstructures Using Exposed, Developed Silver Halide-Based Photographic Film. Anal. Chem., 72 (4), pp [3] Current, Ira. Photographic Color Printing: Theory and Technique. Copyright 1987, Butterworth Publishers. [4] C. Swedlund. Photography. Copyright Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. [5] The Chemical Engineer’s Resource Page. retrieved [6] T. Naugler. University of Nova Scotia retrieved


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