Welcome aboard @Bruce6666 !
I'm not aware of anyone doing this, mostly because it's fairly easy to get hold of in most places. I do appreciate the fact that Australia is sometimes a little different in terms of availability of materials. Is there any particular problem getting FAC where you live? Surely, people are doing cyanotypes etc. in Australia as well?
I note that Gold Street Studios in Victoria sell (Green!) Ferric Ammonium Citrate and a whole lot of other photographic chemicals. Even stuff I've never heard of.
Hello all, is anybody making their own (Green) Ferric Ammonium Citrate ?, if so would you mind sharing your process please ?
I have been trying to make some of my own, but not very successful.
Thank you for looking up that informationYou can have a look at this patent: https://www.freepatentsonline.com/2644828.pdf
Found a few others:
a) https://patents.google.com/patent/FR2200236A1/en
b) https://patents.google.com/patent/CN108059596A/en
and long time ago I made a trial for it, which was no real success:
https://illumina-chemie.org/viewtopic.php?p=56845#p56845 (in German).
The "Hagers Handbuch der pharmazeutischen Praxis " which is mentioned in the text is free to get from archive.org:
Part 1: https://archive.org/details/HagersHandbuchDerPharmazeutischenPraxisBand21919
Part 2: https://archive.org/details/HagersHandbuchDerPharmazeutischenPraxisBand11919
Other years: https://archive.org/search?query=Hagers+Handbuch+der+pharmazeutischen+Praxis+
But is all in German...
bj68
Look up Mike Ware's "Simple" cyanotype which essentially involves making FAC in situ using Fe nitrate, citric acid and ammonia.
:Niranjan.
You can buy FAC at Gold Street and Vanbar (though they only have brown FAC at the moment). You can also buy a Jacquard cyanotype kit from a lot of art stores.
I've made ferric citrate. The hard part is usually making the ferric hydroxide. This can use ferric nitrate or ferric chloride; it's a bit messy. Ian Leake's page on making ferric oxalate is a good step-by-step, up to the addition of oxalic acid. You'd just add citric acid instead. You can also buy ferric hydroxide granules from aquarium supply stores and pulverise them.
Ammonia might be harder to source. Clear ammonia hasn't been widely available in Australia for years. You can get it a specialist cleaning supplies store, but you might have to buy 10 litres.
You can also buy ferric hydroxide granules from aquarium supply stores and pulverise them.
What you buy as ferric hydroxide is actually hydrated ferric oxide which ferric hydroxide converts to as it dries. This is very impervious to reaction with oxalic acid - it takes months or years (I have tried) to get any ferric oxalate (but it does work.) That's why the standard process is to react the ferric hydroxide soon as it is formed in the colloidal form before it dries.
My first choice would be to buy from Gold Street as others have recommended. I don't think it is worth messing around with making your own. If OP still wants to tinker in the lab, Simple cyanotype is really simple - it has other advantages as well like stability and contrast control by dialing in various quantities of ammonia in the formula.
:Niranjan.
Once upon a time I used to make my own FAC. It was economical on materials but expensive on time. Starting materials were water, ferric chloride, ammonium bicarbonate, citric acid, sodium hydroxide.
Precip the ferric chloride with the sodium hydroxide, producing a ferric hydrate mud. Wash multiple times by decant and cloth filtering, than add to a heated strong solution of ammonium citrate and citric acid made from above materials. Over the course of 15 minutes of stirring, the solution will turn a dark emerald green. Add two aspirin and it will never mold in solution. Do a final filtering.
15 years out, I still have 1/2 full 500ml bottle and it works as new. I have synthesis qtys in my notes but as mentioned, there are better, safer alternatives. I have been purchasing mine for years. But, it can be done!
Thanks Peter, very much appreciated, will give it a try, Thank youI used:
100 ml ferric chloride etchant solution 42 deg baume to 1 litre water
45g sodium hydroxide (lye) to 1 litre water
Add lye water to precip the ferric hydrate - add til ph 6-7
Wash mud well to remove salt and squeeze down til it cakes.
100g citric acid (CA)
50g ammonium bicarbonate (AB)
Add the AB first to the ferric mud in a SS pot, mix well, slowly add citric acid til fizzing stops. Heat to up to 90 c stirring well - may take 15- 20 mins to go completely green ( even a low boil will not harm it). If you add the citric acid first, you will not get green FAC! Final yield should be around 250ml of a 50% w/v solution but will depend on how much water was left in the mud.
Sodium carbonate is a safer alt to lye which is quite hazardous. Good ventillation and/or particle mask is wise, and gloves, goggles if using lye!
Peter
Perhaps of interest:
A bit along the same lines as above, but seems to yield the brown variant.
Would take more precautions than shown, ammonia hydroxide is not nice to inhale for instance !
Best,
Cor
BTW does anybody know what the percentage is of a saturated solution of FAC at room temperature ?
BTW does anybody know what the percentage is of a saturated solution of FAC at room temperature ?
Peter would it be possible to use normal household ammonia which is a strength of 20g / lt instead of the ammonium bicarbonate ?, if so how much would you suggest ?, thanksI used:
100 ml ferric chloride etchant solution 42 deg baume to 1 litre water
45g sodium hydroxide (lye) to 1 litre water
Add lye water to precip the ferric hydrate - add til ph 6-7
Wash mud well to remove salt and squeeze down til it cakes.
100g citric acid (CA)
50g ammonium bicarbonate (AB)
Add the AB first to the ferric mud in a SS pot, mix well, slowly add citric acid til fizzing stops. Heat to up to 90 c stirring well - may take 15- 20 mins to go completely green ( even a low boil will not harm it). If you add the citric acid first, you will not get green FAC! Final yield should be around 250ml of a 50% w/v solution but will depend on how much water was left in the mud.
Sodium carbonate is a safer alt to lye which is quite hazardous. Good ventillation and/or particle mask is wise, and gloves, goggles if using lye!
Peter
1200 g /L according to Sigma-Aldrich (https://www.sigmaaldrich.com/US/en/product/mm/103762); temperature unspecified, but probably near room temperature.
Peter would it be possible to use normal household ammonia which is a strength of 20g / lt instead of the ammonium bicarbonate ?, if so how much would you suggest ?, thanks
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