anion is an oxidized derivative of thiosulfate anion. for sulfur, one of which is thiosulfate (+2) Thiosulfate ions reacts with acids to give
sulfur dioxide and various sulfur rings: : This reaction may be used to generate sulfur
colloids and demonstrate the
Rayleigh scattering of light. If white light is shone from below, blue light is seen from sideways and orange light from above, due to the same mechanisms that color the sky at midday and dusk. Thiosulfate ions react with
iodine to give
tetrathionate ions: : This reaction is key for
iodometry. With
bromine (X = Br) and
chlorine (X = Cl), thiosulfate ions are oxidized to sulfate ions: :
Reactions with metals and metal ions Thiosulfate ion extensively forms
diverse complexes with transition metals. Also reflecting its affinity for metals, thiosulfate ion rapidly corrodes metals in acidic conditions.
Steel and stainless steel are particularly sensitive to
pitting corrosion induced by thiosulfate ions.
Molybdenum improves the resistance of stainless steel toward pitting. In
alkaline aqueous conditions and medium temperature (), carbon steel and stainless steel are not attacked, even at high concentration of base (
potassium hydroxide), thiosulfate ion () and in the presence of fluoride ion (
potassium fluoride). In film photography, thiosulfate salts are consumed on a large scale as a
fixer reagent. This application exploits thiosulfate ion's ability to form coordination complexes with silver. Sodium thiosulfate, commonly called
hypo (from "hyposulfite"), was widely used in photography to fix black and white negatives and prints after the developing stage; modern "rapid" fixers use ammonium thiosulfate as a fixing salt because it acts three to four times faster. Thiosulfate salts have been used to extract or leach
gold and
silver from their ores as a less toxic alternative to
cyanide ion.
Reactions with other salts Inorganic nitrites detonate violently when heated with thiosulfates. This combination is notably used in emergency medicine in the cyanide antidote kit, though as separate medicines. ==Biochemistry==