Where to acquire a small amount of bromine

Where to acquire a small amount of bromine

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  • Author
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  • #450885
    Ian Parkin
    Participant
      @ianparkin39383

      I need for a photography project a small amount of bromine

      has anyone an idea where I can find such?

      #35744
      Ian Parkin
      Participant
        @ianparkin39383
        #450889
        Don Cox
        Participant
          @doncox80133

          I don't know if it's the same stuff, but Hot Tubs use it in powder, or in tablet, form as a disinfectant, I would have thought an owner of such would be prepared to donate you some.

          Don

          #450890
          John Haine
          Participant
            @johnhaine32865

            Bromine is a gas, liquid at room temperature IIRC my A level chemistry. It is an element in the same group as chlorine and fluorine in the periodic table. Nasty, corrosive stuff, used alongside chlorine as a poison gas I think in WW1. See: **LINK**

            Do you really need bromine as such or a bromide? (E.g. silver bromide.)

            #450893
            pgk pgk
            Participant
              @pgkpgk17461
              Posted by John Haine on 06/02/2020 14:43:50:

              Bromine is a gas, liquid at room temperature IIRC my A level chemistry. It is an element in the same group as chlorine and fluorine in the periodic table. Nasty, corrosive stuff, used alongside chlorine as a poison gas I think in WW1. See: **LINK**

              Do you really need bromine as such or a bromide? (E.g. silver bromide.)

              Exactly.
              Silver bromide on ebay is quite breathtakingly expensive. As a pure aside we used to use Potassium bromide powder (cheap) weighed out for solution as an anticonvulsent in dogs before the tablets became available.

               

              pgk

              Edited By pgk pgk on 06/02/2020 14:59:01

              #450903
              Ian Parkin
              Participant
                @ianparkin39383

                I’m sensitising a silver plate with iodine and then making it more sensitive with the bromine so i need the liquid element

                #450908
                peak4
                Participant
                  @peak4

                  Fisher Scientific certainly sell it, but where the quantities are small enough for your needs is a different matter

                  The brand name might give you something to search on.

                  It used to be much easier when we could just pop down to Prestons on West St.

                   

                  Bill

                  Edited By peak4 on 06/02/2020 16:36:55

                  #450911
                  Neil Wyatt
                  Moderator
                    @neilwyatt

                    You don't need pure bromine, I imagine, just bromine water?

                    I found this, which I recall is how schools (used to) do it:

                    Make up a bottle using cleapss method (12g potassium bromide and 14ml of 2M hcl make up to a litre with water, mix well and leave for 24hr).

                    Neil

                    #450915
                    V8Eng
                    Participant
                      @v8eng

                      Photo chemicals

                      These people (link above) were used by a former colleague who dabbled in old photo processes a long time ago now, might be worth checking out.

                      Edited By V8Eng on 06/02/2020 16:52:41

                      Edited By V8Eng on 06/02/2020 16:54:30

                      #450919
                      Ian Parkin
                      Participant
                        @ianparkin39383

                        I believe that i need bromine which will fume and sensitise the plates

                        fishers seem to have what i need thanks for that bill

                        just remains to see if they will sell it to me

                        #450924
                        Versaboss
                        Participant
                          @versaboss

                          Used to make it myself when I was 13 years old (read: looong ago…). Cant remember the method, but most probably the one using KBr, MnO2 and sulphuric acid. See Wikipedia.

                          Kind regards,
                          Hans

                          (still around, no self poisoning…)

                          #450925
                          Georgineer
                          Participant
                            @georgineer

                            Bromine is horribly corrosive to flesh and causes burns which are very difficult to heal. I knew somebody who had a hideous scar on one hand from bromine. I can't believe that bromine vapour is any better for your lungs, quite apart from its smell. I understand that the name comes from the Greek 'bromos' which means a stench. Bromine water smells bad enough, but is useful in testing for unsaturated hydrocarbons.

                            Fun fact: only two elements are liquid at room temperature, bromine and mercury.

                            George B.

                            Edited By Georgineer on 06/02/2020 17:34:00

                            #450937
                            Nick Clarke 3
                            Participant
                              @nickclarke3

                              Your plate, even with the dual sensitisation will be incredibly slow and developing with mercury is definitely a no-no!

                              Have you considered the Bequerel process??

                              Bequerel Process

                              #450948
                              mark smith 20
                              Participant
                                @marksmith20

                                Sounds like your dabbling with the Daguerrotype process. Bromine is nasty stuff ,not something you should mess with outside a fume cupboard. It has the same health rating as other nasties like hydrogen cyanide.

                                #450955
                                SillyOldDuffer
                                Moderator
                                  @sillyoldduffer

                                  dsc06217.jpg

                                  The flasks should probably be ground glass stoppered rather than rubber or cork.

                                  Potassium Bromide and Manganese Dioxide are both readily available. Strong Sulphuric Acid is controlled, but 40% is roughly the strength used in Car Batteries.

                                  Note warnings in other posts about toxicity and my photo instructions mention of a Fume Cupboard. Nasty stuff – under no circumstances get any in your lungs or eyes.

                                  Dave

                                  #450981
                                  Alan Charleston
                                  Participant
                                    @alancharleston78882

                                    Hi Ian,

                                    I used to use bromine in a lab. Mark and Dave are right about using and storing it in a fume hood – it's nasty stuff. Although the boiling point is 59C, it has an appreciable vapour pressure at room temperature and gives off brown fumes which are as toxic as chlorine which was the first poisonous gas used during the First World War and has been used in Syria. I would suggest that unless you've had more than just secondary school training in chemistry that you give it a miss.

                                    Regards,

                                    Alan

                                    #450991
                                    not done it yet
                                    Participant
                                      @notdoneityet

                                      I agree entirely with Alan – likewise, I have worked with it a long time ago. One would not contemplate working with these free Group seven elements – Fluorine, Chlorine or Bromine – any more than the lower Group one elements – Caesium, Potassium or Sodium – without taking careful precautions during their manipulation.

                                      These Group seven elements are even more potentially dangerous than the metals, because of their physical form. Being a volatile liquid, the risks with Bromine are obviously slightly different to the gases but the liquid contact can create a particularly nasty outcome for the user. Inhalation is a definite no-no, just like the gases.

                                      Doubtless there are warnings on the internet. These need to be heeded!

                                      #451023
                                      Nick Clarke 3
                                      Participant
                                        @nickclarke3

                                        All of the risks that have been mentioned are important and the warnings useful – But am I alone in worrying that the suggestions for the use of bromine is in the Tea Room Forum?

                                        Edited By Nick Clarke 3 on 07/02/2020 10:46:23

                                        #451030
                                        Journeyman
                                        Participant
                                          @journeyman
                                          Posted by Nick Clarke 3 on 07/02/2020 10:46:06:

                                          the use of bromine is in the Tea Room Forum?

                                          Are you perhaps referring to the WW1 myth concerning the use of the anaphrodisiac potassium bromide as an additive to soldier's tea to prevent "lustful behaviour"? If so most on here, including me, are probably past the age of worrying about that sort of thingblush

                                          John

                                          #451031
                                          roy entwistle
                                          Participant
                                            @royentwistle24699

                                            Nick Could you be thinking of bromide ( army days ? )

                                            Roy

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