| Silver bromide | |
|---|---|
| General | |
| Other names | Bromyrite bromargyrite silver(I) bromide |
| Molecular formula | AgBr |
| Molar mass | 187.78 g/mol |
| Appearance | Pale yellow solid photosensitive |
| CAS number | * |
| Properties | |
| Density and phase | 6.473 g/cm3, solid |
| Solubility in water | 14 μg/100 ml (20 °C) |
| Melting point | 432 °C |
| Boiling point | >1502 °C decomp. |
| Refractive Index | 2.253 |
| Electrical Properties | |
| Reduction Potential E° | 0.07133 V |
| Band Gap | 2.5 eV |
| Dielectric Constant | 12.5 |
| Electron Mobility | 4000 cm2/V-s |
| Thermodynamic data | |
| Standard enthalpy of | formation]] ΔfH°solid
−99.5 kJ/mol |
| Standard molar entropy S°solid | 107.1 J.K−1.mol−1 |
| Specific Heat Capacity | 0.27 J/g-°C |
| Heat of Fusion | 49 J/g |
| Heat of Formation | 486 kJ/mol |
| Hazards | |
| EU classification | not listed |
| NFPA 704 | |
| Supplementary data page | |
| Structure and properties | n, εr, etc. |
| Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid, liquid, gas |
| Spectral data | UV, IR, NMR, MS |
| Regulatory data | Flash point, RTECS number, etc. |
| Related compounds | |
| Other anions | Silver(I) fluoride Silver chloride Silver iodide |
| Other cations | Copper(I) bromide Mercury(I) bromide |
| Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa) Chemical infobox | |
Silver bromide (AgBr), a soft, pale-yellow, insoluble salt well known (along with other silver halides) for its unusual sensitivity to light. This property has allowed silver halides to become the basis of modern photographic materials. Greenwood, N.N., Earnshaw, A. (1984) Chemistry of the Elements. New York: Permagon Press. pp. 1185–87. AgBr is widely used in black-and-white photography film and is believed by some to have been used for faking the Shroud of Turin. Due to these photosentive properties silver bromide is considered also an ionic semiconductor. The salt can be found naturally as the mineral bromyrite (bromargyrite).
Although less convenient, the salt can be also prepared directly from its elements
Modern preparation of a simple, light-sensitive surface involves forming an emulsion of silver halide crytals in a gelatine, which is then coated on a film or other support. The crystals are formed by precipitation in a controlled environment to produce small, uniform crystals (typically < 1 μm in diameter and containing ~1012 Ag atoms) called grains.
| Compound | Crystal | Structure | Lattice, a /Å | ||
| AgF | fcc | rock-salt, NaCl | 4.936 | ||
| AgCl, Chlorargyrite | fcc | rock-salt, NaCl | 5.5491 | ||
| AgBr, Bromargyrite | fcc | rock-salt, NaCl | 5.7745 | ||
| face-centered cubic | rock-salt structure |
The larger halide ions are arranged in a cubic close-packing, while the smaller silver ions fill the octahedral gaps between them, giving a 6-coordinate structure where a silver ion Ag+ is surrounded by 6 Br- ions and vice-versa. The coordination geometry for AgBr in the NaCl structure is unexpected for Ag(I) which typically forms linear, trigonal (3-coordinated Ag) or tetrahedral (4-coordinated Ag) complexes.
Unlike the other silver halides, iodargyrite (AgI) contains a hexagonal zincite lattice structure.
| Compound | Ksp (g / 100 g H2O) |
| AgF | 172 |
| AgCl | 0.00019 |
| AgBr | 0.000014 |
| AgI | 0.000003 |
Moreover, further research into this mechanism revealed that the photographic properties of silver halides (in particular AgBr) were a result of deviations from an ideal crystal structure. Factors such as crystal growth, impurities, and surface defects all contribute to affect concentrations of point ionic defects and electronic traps, which subsequently affect the sensitivity to light and allow for the formation of a latent image.
The cause of the low activation energy in silver bromide can be attributed the silver ions’ high quadrupolar polarizability; that is, it can easily deform from a sphere into an ellipsoid. This property, a result of the d9 electronic configuration of the silver ion, facilitates migration in both the silver ion and in silver ion vacancies, thus giving the unusually low migration energy (for Agv+: 0.29-0.33 eV, compared to 0.65 eV for NaCl).
Studies have demonstrated that the defect concentrations are strongly affected (up to several powers of 10) by crystal size. Most defects, such as interstitial silver ion concentration and surface kinks are inversely proportional to crystal size, although vacancy defects are directly proportional. This phenomenon is attributed to changes in the surface chemistry equilibrium, and thus affects each defect concentration differently.
Impurity concentrations can be controlled by crystal growth or direct addition of impurities to the crystal solutions. Although impurities in the silver bromide lattice are necessary to encourage Frenkel defect formation, studies by Hamilton have shown that after a particular concentration of impurities, the number of defects of interstitial silver ions and positive kinks reduce sharply by several orders of 10. After this point only silver ion vacancy defects, which actually increase in several orders of magnitude, are prominent.
After the electron is released, it will combine with an interstitial Agi+ to create a silver metal atom Agi0:
Through the defects in the crystal the electron is able to reduce its energy and become trapped in the atom. The extent of grain boundaries and defects in the crystal affect the lifetime of the photoelectron, where crystals with a large concentration of defects will trap an electron much faster than a purer crystal.
When a photoelectron is mobilized a photohole h• is also formed, which, too, needs to be neutralized. The lifetime of a photohole, however, does not correlate with that of a photoelectron. This detail suggests a different trapping mechanism; Malinowski suggests that the hole traps may be related to defects as a result of impurities. Once trapped, the holes attract mobile, negatively-charged defects in the lattice: the interstitial silver vacancy Agv-:
The formation of the h.Agv lowers its energy sufficiently to stabilize the complex and reduce the probably of ejection of the hole back into the valance band (the equilibrium constant for hole-complex in the interior of the crystal is estimated at 10-4.
Additional investigations on electron- and hole-trapping demonstrated that impurities also can be a significant trapping system. Consequently, interstitial silver ions may not be reduced. Therefore, these traps are actually oss mechanisms and are considered trapping inefficiencies. For example, atmospheric oxygen can interact with photoelectrons to form an O2- species, which can interact with a hole to reverse the complex and undergo recombination. Metal ion impurities such as copper(I), iron(II), and cadmium(II) have demonstrated hole-trapping in silver bromide.
By this reaction equilibrium, the hole-complexes are constantly consumed at the surface, which acts as a sink, until removed from the crystal. This mechanism provides the counterpart to the reduction of the interstitial Agi+ to Agi0, giving an overall equation of:
During film development the latent image is intensified by addition of a chemical, typically hydroquinone, that selectivity reduces those grains which contain atoms of silver. The process, which is sensitive to temperature and concentration, will completely reduce grains to silver metal, intensifying the latent image on the order of 1010 to 1011. This step demonstrates the advantage and superiority of silver halides over other systems: the latent image, which takes only milliseconds to form and is invisible, is sufficient to produce a full image from it.
After development, the film is "fixed," during which the remaining silver salts are removed to prevent further reduction, leaving the "negative" of the film. The agent used is sodium thiosuphate, and reactions according to the following equation:
An indefinite number of positive prints can be generated from the negative by passing light through it and undergoing the same steps outlined above.
AgBr + nNH3 Ag(NH3)21+
Silver bromide reacts with triphenylphosphine to give a tris(triphenylphosphine) product:Engelhardt L.M., Healy P.C., Patrick, V.A., and White, A.H. (1987). "Lewis-Base Adducts of Group-11 Metal(I) Compounds. XXX. 3:1 Complexes of Triphenylphosphine With Silver(I) Halides." Aust. J. Chem. 40 (11). 1873-1880.
Metal halides | Bromides | Silver compounds | Photographic chemicals
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"Silver bromide".
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