[alt-photo] Re: Stoichiometry for the nonscientist

EJ Photo ejnphoto at sbcglobal.net
Thu Aug 5 20:28:02 GMT 2010


Well, the best way I know is to measure it. The figures on the web, may not
be the ones in your possession. For this solution pH paper test indicators
will be fine. broad range will work.  

Eric Neilsen
Eric Neilsen Photography
4101 Commerce Street, Suite 9
Dallas, TX 75226
 
www.ericneilsenphotography.com
skype me with ejprinter
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Let's Talk Photography
 

-----Original Message-----
From: alt-photo-process-list-bounces at lists.altphotolist.org
[mailto:alt-photo-process-list-bounces at lists.altphotolist.org] On Behalf Of
Loris Medici
Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2010 12:52 PM
To: The alternative photographic processes mailing list
Subject: [alt-photo] Re: Stoichiometry for the nonscientist

Hi Eric, I don't know how to calculate this (anyone willing to explain?),
but all the web sources state something around 8... I had looked that up
once.

K2C2O4 + H2O -> ??? (I know C2O4 = -2 and K = +1...)

Regards,
Loris.


On 05.Ağu.2010, at 17:44, EJ Photo wrote:

> Loris, My measurements of store bought potassium oxalate is much closer to
5
> if I recall, but that was many years back. Are you mixing that with
> distilled water? Different makers may give you different pH ranges. The
Alfa
> Aesar book at my fingers does not give me a pH of a solution.
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