Photographic fixer





Photographic fixer is a mix of chemicals used in the final step in the photographic processing of film or paper. The fixer stabilises the image, removing the unexposed silver halide remaining on the photographic film or photographic paper, leaving behind the reduced metallic silver that forms the image. By fixation, the film or paper is insensitive to further action by light. Without fixing, the remaining silver halide would darken and cause fogging of the image. Fixation is commonly achieved by treating the film or paper with a solution of thiosulfate salt. Popular salts are sodium thiosulfateâ€"commonly called hypoâ€"and ammonium thiosulfateâ€"commonly used in modern rapid fixer formulae. Fixation involves these chemical reactions (X = halide, typically Brâˆ'):

AgX + 2 S2O32âˆ' â†' [Ag(S2O3)2]3âˆ' + Xâˆ'
AgX + 3 S2O32âˆ' â†' [Ag(S2O3)3]5âˆ' + Xâˆ'

Fixer is used for processing all commonly used films, including black-and-white films, Kodachrome, and chromogenic films. In chromogenic films, the remaining silver must be removed by a chemical mixture called a bleach fix, sometimes shortened to blix. This mixture contains ammonium thiosulphate and ferrous EDTA, a powerful chelating agent.

After fixation, washing is important to remove the exhausted chemicals from the emulsion. Otherwise they cause image deterioration. Other treatments of the remaining silver-based image are sometimes used to prevent "burning".

Hypo was apparently first used in photography by the Rev. Joseph Bancroft Reade in 1837.

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