alanrockwood
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If we abstact of the nuances of formulation, it seems to me that there is nothing supernatural in the HC-110. In my humble opinion, this is a completely ordinary phenidone-hydroquinone developer, concentrated on an anhydrous basis. Its fundamental difference from many other concentrates based on organic base and solvents - is the use of the sulfur complex (IV) of diethanolamine (DEA-SO2) ... Which acts as a source of sulfite ions (apparently not only this function, possibly more - silver solvent and part of pH regulator).
Naturally, this is the main problem in the preparation of such a concentrate at home, since it is not easy to obtain DEA-SO2. But it is quite possible. Bubbling DEA with sulfur dioxide, obtained from sulfite treated with concentrated acid (H2SO4), could probably give an acceptable result.
Naturally, it will be necessary to find out the equivalent ratios of replacing ordinary sodium sulfite with such a DEA complex, but this is apparently a matter of experimentation. As well as the regulation pH of solutions.
Unfortunately, in my country it is quite difficult to obtain DEA for personal experiments (and TEA is not suitable, since it has a much lower ability to form a complex with sulfur dioxide - almost three times) and I can't check these my assumptions.
Thanks for the informative post. Do you have any references on the solubility of SO2 in DEA and TEA? I am interested in reading more.
Also, I wonder if the solubility of SO2 in TEA might actually be high enough.