Home

zilverbromide

Zilverbromide is the common name for silver bromide, a binary inorganic salt with the formula AgBr. It consists of silver cations (Ag+) and bromide anions (Br−). The compound is widely known for its historic role in photography and its characteristic light sensitivity.

Zilverbromide forms pale yellow to grayish crystalline solids. It crystallizes in the rock-salt (face-centered cubic) structure

Synthesis is typically by precipitating AgBr from solution, for example by mixing a soluble silver salt (such

In photochemistry and applications, exposure to light reduces Ag+ to metallic silver, forming a latent image

Safety and handling: silver bromide is of relatively low acute toxicity but can be hazardous if ingested

---

and
has
a
relatively
high
melting
point
with
very
low
solubility
in
water.
It
dissolves
in
certain
complexing
solutions,
such
as
concentrated
ammonia
or
cyanide,
forming
soluble
silver-ammine
or
silver-cyanide
complexes.
as
silver
nitrate,
AgNO3)
with
a
bromide
source
(such
as
potassium
bromide,
KBr):
AgNO3
+
KBr
→
AgBr
↓
+
KNO3.
The
solid
is
usually
washed
and
stored
in
darkness
to
preserve
its
light-sensitive
properties.
within
photographic
emulsions.
This
photoreactivity
made
silver
bromide
central
to
traditional
film
photography
and
paper
processes.
It
has
also
found
use
in
certain
photodetector
materials
and
as
a
reference
halide
in
laboratory
studies.
or
inhaled
as
dust.
It
should
be
handled
under
appropriate
safety
practices,
stored
in
dark,
dry
conditions
to
prevent
unintended
development,
and
disposed
of
according
to
local
environmental
regulations.