nmp
Member
It is kind of ironic that the actual speed of the POP is greater than DOP if you define speed as the amount of amount of Silver metal formed per unit of exposure. However, since you need only a smidgen of exposure in DOP to form the latent image (the rest being finished in the developer,) the "effective" speed is greater. Kind of akin to a painter doing a Plein Air painting taking hours vs sketching the scene quickly and finishing the painting in the studio.If I'm understanding this correctly, increasing the speed of DOP paper is not achieved by increasing the silver halide (which explains those 'silver rich is a myth' threads here on APUG), but by keeping the ratio of silver to salt stoichiometric and rather by including ingredients in the emulsion that increase the sensitivity of the halide, such as active gelatin, ammonia, etc. Am I on the right track with that?
I am not familiar with the debate around the "silver-rich" myth. Perhaps you can point to a good thread or two on the subject.
I am also not well versed with the nitty-gritty of emulsion making as many on the thread/forum so I will leave to them to explain the minutia regarding the roles of ammonia, active gelatin etc. My best initial guess would be that all of these additives are used to affect the morphology (micro-structure) of the colloidal halide (size, shape, distribution etc) in the emulsion with the goal of making a more efficient use of the available photons during exposure. As a result, the emulsion becomes speedier overall. However, the halide itself does not become any more sensitive per se as it is governed only by the underlying photo-physics.
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