group member: carol; frank; nick; alice; joe; taylor

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16.2 Application of Oxidation-Reduction Reactions ——Redox in Photography Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

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Page 1: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

16.2 Application of Oxidation-Reduction Reactions——Redox in Photography

Group member:Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Page 2: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Enjoy this original technology

Page 3: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

PREPARE——some special tool

A container for liquid which is used to develop film. It must keep out of the light.

Developing tank

Obscura

Page 4: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Something to know• Until 1838, the French inventor L.J.M Daguerre fixed

the image in a camera on highly polished, silver-plated copper to make the first photograph.

• These early photographs were called daguerreotype in his honor.

• The polished silver surface of a daguerreotype gives a feeling of presence where the image appears to be floating in space.

• The image is formed on the surface of the silver plate (resembling the surface of a mirror) and is unstable; it can easily be rubbed off and will oxidize in the air, so from the outset daguerreotypes were mounted in sealed cases or frames with a glass cover.

Page 5: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Background • The daguerreotype was the first

commercially successful photographic process.

• The raw material for plates was called Sheffield plate, plating by fusion or cold-rolled cladding and was a standard hardware item produced by heating and rolling silver foil in contact with a copper support.

• Depending on the angle viewed, and the color of the surface reflected into it, the image can change from a positive to a negative

Page 6: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Theory

• Modern photographic film is made of a plastic backing covered with a layer of gelatin.

• The reaction begins when the shutter on a camera is opened.

Page 7: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Theory

• Light from the scene being photographed passes through the camera’s lens and shutter and strikes the light-sensitive silver bromide on the film.

• The light energy causes electrons to be ejected from a few of the bromide ions, oxidizing them to elemental bromine.

• The electron are transferred to silver ions, reducing them to metallic silver atom.

• In areas where the light is brightest, more grains are activated, and after developing, they become the darker area.

Page 8: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Manipulation

The developer reduces all the silver ions to silver atoms in any grain of silver bromide that was hit by light.

AgBr(s)+2S₂O₃²⁻(aq) →[Ag(S₂O₃)₂]³⁻(aq)+Br⁻(aq)

Page 9: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Manipulation

The fixed film is washed to remove any remaining developer or fixed solution.

When light is shone through the negative onto light-sensitive photographic paper, a photographic print is made.

Page 10: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor
Page 11: Group member: Carol; Frank; Nick; Alice; Joe; Taylor

Thank you!