[go: up one dir, main page]

US3647439A - Photographic element, composition and process - Google Patents

Photographic element, composition and process Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3647439A
US3647439A US764330A US3647439DA US3647439A US 3647439 A US3647439 A US 3647439A US 764330 A US764330 A US 764330A US 3647439D A US3647439D A US 3647439DA US 3647439 A US3647439 A US 3647439A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
silver
carbon atoms
metal
complex
formula
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US764330A
Inventor
Jon Dolf Bass
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Eastman Kodak Co
Original Assignee
Eastman Kodak Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Eastman Kodak Co filed Critical Eastman Kodak Co
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3647439A publication Critical patent/US3647439A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C5/00Photographic processes or agents therefor; Regeneration of such processing agents
    • G03C5/58Processes for obtaining metallic images by vapour deposition or physical development
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C1/00Photosensitive materials
    • G03C1/005Silver halide emulsions; Preparation thereof; Physical treatment thereof; Incorporation of additives therein
    • G03C1/06Silver halide emulsions; Preparation thereof; Physical treatment thereof; Incorporation of additives therein with non-macromolecular additives
    • G03C1/34Fog-inhibitors; Stabilisers; Agents inhibiting latent image regression
    • G03C1/346Organic derivatives of bivalent sulfur, selenium or tellurium

Definitions

  • Silver-dye 5, 11/1964 Blake X complexes are especially suitable as a photosensitive material 3,155,519 11/1964 Blake 9 1 l X for use with these metal-organic complexes, typically silver- Weyde Ct X organic complexes 3,368,899 2/1968 Blake et a1. ..96/95 X 3,446,619 5/1969 Gilman et a1. ..96/63 23 Claims, No Drawings PHOTOGRAPHIC ELEMENT, COMPOSITION AND PROCESS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1.
  • This invention is directed to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing physical development in obtaining a desired image.
  • it relates to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing certain stable sources of metal for physical development including certain metal-organic complexes, especially certain silver-organic complexes.
  • it relates to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation in combination with the described silver-organic complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development.
  • a photographic silver halide emulsion which is mixed with such a silver-dye complex has its spectral sensitivity extended into the region of the absorption of the dye.
  • Such silver-dye complexes can be a photosensitive medium in the absence of silver halide, so that energy absorbed by the dye upon exposure is used directly to form sites for physical development. This is disclosed, for example, in French Patent 1,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966.
  • the sources of metal, especially silver, for such physical development have not been entirely satisfactory. In many cases they have either been too unstable, releasing the metal at an undesired time, or caused undesired fog and stain.
  • a silver-thiosulfate complex can be employed as a source of silver for physical development of an image in a photosensitive coating containing a silver-dye complex as the photosensitive material, as described, for example, in French Patent 1,453,635
  • a silver-thiosulfate complex can produce undesired fog and produce other undesired effects.
  • a silver complex of 4,5-(2,3-D-fructopyrano)-2-oxazolidinethione also has these disadvantages. Accordingly, while sources of silver have been employed for physical development in the described photographic systems, they have not produced desired results in many cases.
  • Another object is to provide a photographic element containing a silver-dye complex capable of forming sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and containing an improved stable source of metal, especially silver, for physical development of such sites, which is a stable metal-organic complex providing desired sensitometric properties.
  • Another object is to provide a photographic process for physical development of a latent image in a radiation sensitive metal salt employing an improved stable source of metal for the described physical development.
  • a further object is to provide a photographic composition, such as a photographic emulsion or developer composition, containing an improved stable source of metal for physical development as described.
  • improved elements, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions which are suitable for physical development, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions employing a photographic silver-dye complex and are resistant to undesired fog and/or stain by employing an improved stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of (a) a metal suitable for physical development with (b) a compound which is:
  • a thioamide including i. A thiazoline thione and/or thiazolidine thione,
  • a dithiocarbamate and/or v. A thiourea derivative, and/or b. a guanyl compound, including i. A pseudothiohydantoin,
  • iii An imidazoline, and/or iv. An isothiourea derivative, and/or c. a mercapto acid, including i. A mercaptocarboxylic acid, and/or ii. A mercaptoaxetyl amide, and/or d. an alkyne compound, and/or e. a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid and/or a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, and/or f. a thiaalkyl compound, including a dithiaalkyl and/or oligothiaalkyl compound, and/or g. oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid,
  • a stable complex of silver with the described polymers according to the invention can provide other desired properties, such as eliminating part of the binder in a photographic emulsion.
  • the described metal-organic complexes are especially advantageous in photographic elements, processes and compositions wherein the metal for physical development is silver and the described stable metal-organic complex is a stable silverorganic complex.
  • the described stable metal-organic complexes can be employed in a wide range of elements, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions. They can be employed in any photographic element, process or composition where it is desirable to employ a stable metal complex as a stable source of metal, especially silver, for physical development. Various types of photographic elements, processes and compositions, where it is desirable to have a stable source of metal for physical development, are known.
  • the described metalorganic complexes are especially suitable in a photographic element, process and/or composition employing, as a radiation sensitive component, a silver-dye complex which hasthe property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, as described in French Patent l,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966.
  • the following dyes are representative merocyanine dyes which can be used to form the described radiation sensitive silver-dye complexes:
  • dyes other than merocyanine dyes can be employed as the dye moiety in the described silver-dye complex, including known silver halide sensitizing dyes, such as cyanines, oxonols, hemicyanines, styryls, hemioxonols, benzylidenes, and the like, examples of which are set out in the described Mees reference, pages 198-232.
  • silver-dye complexes can be prepared typically by mixing the dyes with a water-soluble silver salt, such as silver nitrate, in a suitable solvent, e.g., water, or can be prepared in a radiation sensitive coating composition in situ without separation or recovery of the silver-dye complex from the coating composition, such as by mixing the desired components in the coating composition before application to a support using techniques well known in the photographic art.
  • a water-soluble silver salt such as silver nitrate
  • suitable solvent e.g., water
  • a radiation sensitive coating composition in situ without separation or recovery of the silver-dye complex from the coating composition, such as by mixing the desired components in the coating composition before application to a support using techniques well known in the photographic art.
  • One embodiment of the invention is an element, especially a photographic element comprising a photographic component which is the main photographic component of the desired element and a stable source of inetal for physical development, especially a stable source of silver, which is a stable metal-organic complex, preferably a silver-organic complex as described.
  • An especially useful embodiment is a photographic element comprising a support having thereon a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex, as described, which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, and a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex as described.
  • the described stable source of metal for physical development according to the invention can be in any location in and/or on the photographic element and/or in a processing composition which provides the desired physical development activity without undesired fog and stain. it can be, for example, in a radiation-sensitive coating and/or an overcoat and/or a coating between the support and a radiation-sensitive coating or some other coating or combination of coatings. It can be in one or more coatings of a receiver sheet employed in a diffusion transfer process and/or in a photographic element and/or processing composition employed in a diffusion transfer process.
  • silver is a preferred metal moiety of the described stable metal-organic complexes employed in the invention, other metals which are useful in physical development can be employed.
  • Metals which are members of the electromotive scale below hydrogen are those most commonly employed for this purpose, such as copper, mercury, palladium, platinum, gold, silver, and the like,
  • a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of (a) a metal suitable for physical development with (b) a thioamide according to the invention is represented by the following formula:
  • M is a metal suitable for physical development, such as silver, copper, mercury, palladium, platinum, gold, and the like;
  • R, and R are the same or different and each is hydrogen, alkyl, alkylene, acyl, or aryl;
  • R is alkyl, S-R,, or O-R wherein R and R are hydrogen, alkyl, alkylene, acyl or aryl; and corresponding tautomeric compounds, such as wherein R, is hydrogen:
  • Alkyl suitably contains one to about 20 carbon atoms, typically one to five carbon atoms, such as methyl, ethyl, propyl butyl, pentyl, decyl and eicosyl.
  • Alkylene suitably contains one to about five carbon atoms, such as methylene, ethylene, propylene, butylene and pentylene.
  • Acyl can be:
  • Aryl suitably contains six to about 30 carbon atoms, such as phenyl, tolyl, xylyl and naphthyl.
  • the described alkyl, alkylene, acyl and aryl can contain various substituent groups which do not adversely affect the stability and availability of metal for physical development of the described complexes and compounds. Suitable substituent groups include for example, carboxyl, hydroxyl and sulfonic acid groups. Such groups can provide advantages in cases in which it is desirable that the described compound have increased solubility in aqueous compositions and/or increased compatibility with, for example,-a binder, if one is used.
  • silver-thioamide complexes within Formula I which are stable sources of silver for physical development are silver complexes of the following compounds:
  • a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiazoline-thione or a thiazolidine thione is represented by the structure:
  • R and R are the same or different, and each is hydrogen, alkyl; especially alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms, such as methyl, ethyl, propyl, butyl and pentyl; aryl, as described; carboxyl; hydroxyl; sulfonic acid; and mercapto; R, is hydrogen, alkyl, as described, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl, especially containing six to 20 carbon atoms, carboxyl or sulfonic acid, as described. These are especially suitable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention.
  • Suitable silver thiazoline thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development are stable silver complexes of the following compounds:
  • boxyethyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-Z-thione 3-(3-carboxypropyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione, 3-(4-carboxybutyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione,
  • suitable silver-thiazolidine thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention are silver complexes of thiazolidine thione compounds corresponding to the described thiazoline thione compounds.
  • suitable silver-thiazolidine thione complexes include silver complexes of:
  • a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiopyrimidine is represented by the formula:
  • Suitable silver-oxazolidine-2-thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development .QBEL M s a, s ,7 3 is wherein M is as described, especially silver,
  • a further source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an imidazolidine, especially a 2- thioimidazolidine represented by the formula:
  • R is alkyl, aryl, as described, or carboxyaryl, or carboxyalkyl, e.g., containing six to carbon atoms, such as carboxybenzyl, carboxyxylyl or carboxyphenyl.
  • Suitable silver-dithiocarbamate complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development are stable silver complexes of:
  • a further stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiourea derivative represented by the fonnula:
  • R and R can, but need not, be joined to form a heterocyclic ring, represented by the broken line in Structure VI.
  • R and R when joined to form a heterocyclic ring can be, for example,
  • a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a guanyl-containing compound is represented by the formula:
  • a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development within structure Vll is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula:
  • Suitable stable silver-imidazolidine complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are com- 5 plexes of silver with:
  • a source of metal for physical development is a stable metalorganic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an imidazoline, especially a 2- t mi l iss rss by the mu a:
  • Suitable stable silver-imidazoline complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are com- 5 plexes of silver with:
  • a further source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an isothiourea derivative represented by the isarmu s s (XI) NH: 5 CS-Rr M 0 wherein R, and M are as described, with the exception that R,
  • R is not hydrogen, R, typically being carboxyalkyl or sulfoalkyl. This formula does not include thiourea.
  • Examples of suitable stable silver-isothiourea derivative complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are complexes of silver with:
  • a stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a mercapto acid, especially a mercapto carboxylic acid represented by the formula:
  • R is alkylene, such as alkylene containing one to 20 carbon atoms, typically alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms, such as methylene, ethylene, propylene, butylene, pentylene, decylene and eicosylene.
  • R" can contain substituent groups which do not adversely affect developing action of the described compounds such as alkyl, e.g., alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms as described, carboxy, sulfonic acid, mercapto and amino.
  • stable silver mercapto acid complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention are silver complexes of:
  • a stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a mercaptoacetyl amide represented by the formula:
  • XIII wherein M and R" are as described; R and R are the same or different and each selected from hydrogen; lower alkyl, as described; mercapto; carboxyl; sulfonic acid; hydroxyl and phenyl; at least one of R and R being phenyl.
  • the phenyl group can contain various substituent groups which do not adversely affect the stability and availability of metal for physical development, such as carboxyl, hydroxyl, sulfonic acid, and the like.
  • a metal-alkyne complex which is a stable source of metal for physical development according to the invention is represented by the formula:
  • M is a metal suitable for physical development, as described;
  • R is hydrogen, aryl, as described, alkyl, as described, or alkylene, also as described, forming a ring with R as represented by the broken lines in Structure XIV;
  • R is hydrogen, aryl, alkyl, as described, or alkylene, also as described, forming a ring with R R and R together may represent a keto oxygen;
  • R is OR, SR,
  • n is an integer, such as an integer from I to about 100 or more;
  • R R R and R are the same or different and each selected from hydrogen, acyl or alkyl, as described, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms.
  • [HOW-COOH] M xv wherein M is as described and W is alkylene, as described, or a heterocyclic group, typically a fiveor six-membered heterocyclic ring, e.g., a triazaindene or a tetraazaindene ring system.
  • the described alkylene and heterocyclic groups can contain various substituent groups, such as alkyl or aryl as described, carboxyl, hydroxyl, sulfonic acid, and the like.
  • Suitable silver-hydroxy alkyl carboxylic acid complexes according to the invention are silver complexes of:
  • benzilic acid I OH l2-hydroxystearic acid CH (CH CH(CH C O OH and 3,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid.
  • An example of suitable silver hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid complexes according to the invention is a silver complex with:
  • a stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiaalkyl compound of the formula:
  • X and Z are the same or different and each is heterocyclic, aryl, alkyl or acyl, as described; 2' is Z or hydrogen; n is a number, e.g., 1 to 10 inclusive typically l to 5; Y is alkylene, as described; and M is a metal suitable for physical development, as described, especially silver.
  • Heterocyclic includes any heterocyclic group which does not cause undesirable fog or stain and does not adversely affect desired physical development, for exam- P s yslisstsspsssprsset by t rmu
  • suitable silver-organic complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development within the described formulas are silver complexes with the following compounds. Some of these can be classified in one or more of the described formulas.
  • Ligand atom is suitable which provides the desired complex.
  • Ligand atoms are described in the book, Organic Complexing Reagents by D. D. Perrin, lnterscience Publishers, Division of Wiley and Co., 1964, especially the first three chapters.
  • Suitable polymers containing ligand atoms are described, for example, in the book Vinyl and Related Polymers" by C. D. Shildknecht, John Wiley and Sons, 1952.
  • Especially suitable polymers are those which provide the advantage of serving as a stable source of silver for physical development as well as serving as a binder to partially or totally replace other binders, such as gelatin, which are used in coatings for photographic elements.
  • Properties of the desired polymers can vary over wide ranges depending on other components of the photographic element with which they can be used, processing conditions, desired image, and the like, which can be determined by those skilled in the art.
  • average molecular weight and viscosity can vary, but are typically sufficiently high that the desired polymer is slid when in the form of a coating, e.g., about 1,000 to 1,000,000 or more.
  • a suitable stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a polymer containing a ligand atom is a metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development, especially silver, with a polymer containing thiaalkylacrylamide units and/or thiaalkylmethacrylamide units, such as represented by the formula:
  • M is as described; R is methyl or hydrogen; n is a number especially 1 to about l0; m is 0 to about 10; and x is a number of 2 or more, e.g., usually sufficiently high to provide an average molecular weight of about 1,000 to about 1,000,000.
  • Another suitable stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a polymer containing a ligand atom is a metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development, especially silver, with a polymer containing thiaalkylacrylate units and/or thiaalkylmethacrylate units such as represented by the formula:
  • These polymers have a wide range of average molecular weight, but usually have an average molecular weight of about 100,000 or more.
  • the described polymers can be prepared employing methods of polymerization known in the art, e.g., such as methods set out in the described Schildknecht reference.
  • the invention includes other equivalent suitable sources of silver for physical development such as stable silver-organic complexes which are complexes of silver with:
  • metal complexes can be employed according to the invention, such as combinations of silver complexes with gold, platinum or palladium complexes, or combinations of different organic complexing moieties, such as combinations of thiazoline thiones with alkynols or different thiazoline thiones with each other.
  • Metal and M as described herein with regard to metal-organic complexes refer to a metalic ion or the described metals in ionic form, such as a silver ion, mercury ion, platinum ion, gold ion, copper ion, and the like. In the described metal-organic complexes which are stable sources of metal for physical development according to the invention, it is believed the metal is in ionic fonn.
  • Whether a metal-organic complex employed according to the invention is suitably stable will depend on several factors,
  • Suitable stability is also related to keeping characteristics of a photographic element metal-organic complex in the element is considered as suitably stable.
  • the elements described employing a silver-dye complex as a radiation-sensitive component, for example, with the described silver complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development can produce good reflection densities and high resolving power, e.g., resolving power over 2,000 line pairs per millimeter and many of the described elements have good stability, e.g., do not lose photographic speed or density after two weeks at about 50 C. and about 50 percent relative humidity.
  • a metaborganic complex employed according to the invention is suitably stable depends heavily on the affinity for silver ion of the described organic moiety of the metal-0rganic complex used according to the invention. This can be measured as pAg.
  • a suitable pAg range can vary.
  • a suitable pAg range in a radiation sensitive element according to the invention is about 2.0 to about 10 and a range of about 3 to about 7 is typically employed. If a pAg above about 10 is employed the risk of inhibition of desired development is great. But, if a pAg below about 2.0 is employed there is a risk of background fog formation.
  • a concentration of about 0.01 mole to about 0.0001 mole of dye per mole of silver present and a concentration of about 0.2 mole to about 5.0 moles of organic moiety used to form the described silver-organic complexes of the invention per mole of silver in the element is suitable providing the desired pAg as described.
  • concentration of described metal complexes suitable according to the invention can vary depending on the desired image, processing conditions, components of the photographic element, the affinity of the organic moiety of the described metal complexes for metal, especially silver, and the like, which can be determined by those skilled in the art. If the described silver complexes are incorporated in a photographic element containing a photographic silver salt, especially a described silver dye complex, a suitable ratio of (a) moles of organic moiety employed to form the desired silver complex as a stable source of silver for physical development to (b) moles of total silver in the photographic element is about 0.2 to about 7, depending upon the affinity of the organic moiety of the silver complex for silver.
  • a processing composition such as a physical developer composition, e.g., a physical developer solution with which a photographic element is contacted
  • concentrations of silver complex can be desirable, depending on the image desired, processing conditions and other factors described.
  • a concentration of about 0.1 percent by weight to about 15 percent by weight of described metal complex of the total processing composition is usually suitable, but concentrations outside this range can be employed if desired.
  • a suitable concentration depends heavily on the affinity for silver ion of the described organic moiety, which can be measured as pAg.
  • Availability of silver ion can be measured using a pAg electrode. A low value indicates high silver ion activity or availability and vice versa.
  • the suitable concentration of total silver in coatings of photographic elements employing a silver-dye complex as a radiation-sensitive component and a described silver complex as a stable source of silver for physical development can vary over a wide range, but typically about 30 mg. per square foot to about 200 mg. per square foot of silver is suitable. It will be appreciated that this is a significantly higher concentration than employed in a coating containing only a silver-dye complex.
  • the described silver complexing agents of the invention can provide toning for the developed image.
  • the various layers of the photographic elements described herein can be hardened with any suitable hardener, including, for example, aldehyde hardeners, aziridine hardeners, hardeners which are derivatives of dioxane, oxypolysaccharides, such as oxystarch, oxy plant gums, and the like.
  • the layers of the photographic element can contain hardeners such as alkali soluble bisulfite-aldehyde addition products which harden hydrophilic colloids such as gelatin at a pH greater than about 7.
  • Such hardeners can conveniently be incorporated into photographic silver halide emulsion layers or other layers of an element particularly gelatin having layers, since such layers are generally coated under acid conditions, i.e., at a pH which is generally less than about 6.
  • Suitable alkali metal bisulfitealdehyde addition products include, for example, sodium formaldehyde bisulfite, glutaraldehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), betamethyl glutaraldehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), maleic dialdehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), and the like.
  • colloids can be used alone or in combination as vehicles or binding agents in the photographic emulsions and elements employed in the practice of this invention.
  • such materials are the natural and/or synthetic binding materials generally employed for this purpose including, for example, gelatin, colloidal albumin, water-soluble vinyl polymers as exemplified by monoand polysaccharides, cellulose derivatives, proteins, water-soluble polyacrylamides, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, and the like.
  • the vehicle or binding agents can contain dispersed polymerized vinyl compounds particularly those which increase the dirnensional stability of photographic materials.
  • Suitable synthetic polymers of this type include water-insoluble polymers of alkyl acrylates and methacrylates, acrylic acid, sulfoalkyl acrylates or methacrylates and the like.
  • a wide range of photographic components can be employed as the described main photographic component used in a photographic element, composition and/or process of the invention. While some of the described stable metal-organic complexes used as a source of metal for physical development do have some photosensitivity they are used according to the invention as a source of metal for physical development and not as a radiation-sensitive component, Le, a component which upon exposure to radiation forms latent image sites which can be physically developed.
  • a preferred main photographic component is a silver-dye complex as described.
  • silver halides can be employed in the photographic elements, processes and compositions of the invention, especially as the main photographic component, including any of the photographic silver halides as exemplified by silver bromide, silver iodide, silver chloride, mixed silver halides, such as silver chlorobromide, silver bromoiodide, and the like.
  • the silver halides can be those which form latent images predominantly on the surface of the silver halide grains or those which form latent images inside the silver halide crystals, as exemplified by Davey and Knott, U.S. Pat. No. 2,592,250 issued Apr. 8, 1952, as well as direct positive emulsions, such as those described in Kendall and Hill, U.S. Pat. No.
  • photographic silver salts can be employed, such as silver salts of sulfur-containing aliphatic carboxylic acids, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,330,663 of Weyde et al. issued July 11, 1967.
  • Typical flexible supports include those generally employed for photographic elements, such as cellulose nitrate film, cellulose acetate film, polyvinylacetal film, polystyrene film, polyethylene terephthalate film, and related films or resinous materials as well as glass, paper, metal and the like.
  • Supports such as papers which are partially acetylated or coated with baryta or an olefin polymer, particularly a polymer of an alpha-olefin containing two to 10 carbon atoms as exemplified by polyethylene, polypropylene, ethylene-butene copolymers, and the like, give good results.
  • the photographic emulsions and elements of this invention can also contain additional addenda, particularly those known to be beneficial in photographic materials of this nature.
  • they can contain stabilizers or antifoggants such as cadmium, lead, mercury, gold, or other noble metal salts, spectral sensitizers, such as the cyanines, merocyanines, complex (trinuclear) cyanines, complex (trinuclear) merocyanines, styryls, hemicyanines, speed-increasing materials, such as polyalkylene glycols, onium salts and thioethers, plasticizers, coating aids such as anionic, nonionic and amphoteric surface active compounds, and the like.
  • stabilizers or antifoggants such as cadmium, lead, mercury, gold, or other noble metal salts
  • spectral sensitizers such as the cyanines, merocyanines, complex (trinuclear) cyanines, complex (trinu
  • the photographic silver halide emulsions disclosed herein can also be chemically sensitized with compounds of the sulfur group, such as sulfur, selenium and tellurium sensitizers, noble metal salts, such as gold, or reduction sensitized with reducing agents or combinations of such materials.
  • the photographic elements can contain fluorescent brighteners such as stilbenes, coumarins, benzothiazoles, benzoxazoles, imidazoles, etc. Suitable fluorescent brighteners are described in McFall et al. U.S. Pat. No. 2,933,390, British Patent 786,235, U.S. Pat. No. 3,025,242 and German Patent 1,150,274.
  • a wide range of coating methods can be employed for preparing photographic elements according to the invention. In general, any of those methods commonly employed in preparing coatings for photographic elements are suitable.
  • a silver halide developing agent can be employed in providing physical development according to the invention.
  • a wide range of silver halide developing agents are suitable. These include polyhydroxybenzene developing agents, such as hydroquinone developing agents, e.g., hydroquinone, alkyl substituted hydroquinone, such as t-butyl hydroquinone, methyl hydroquinone, dimethyl hydroquinone, catechol, and pyrogallol, chloro-substituted hydroquinones, such as chlorohydroquinone, alkoxy-substituted hydroquinones, such as methoxy or ethoxy hydroquinone, aminophenol developing agents, such as N-methyl-p-aminophenol and 2,4- diaminophenols, ascorbic acid developing agents, pyrazolidone developing agents, including those described in British Patent 958,678 and British Patent 930,572, acyl derivatives of p-aminophenol, and the like.
  • Such developing agents can be used alone or in combination
  • the desired silver complexes are suitable in layers of photographic elements used for color photography, such as emulsions containing color-forming couplers or emulsions developed by solutions containing couplers or other colorgenerating materials; emulsions of the mixed packet type, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,698,794 of Godowsky issued July 9, 1955; or emulsions of the mixed grain type, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,592,243 of Carroll and Hanson.
  • the described silver complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development can be employed in photographic elements processes and compositions intended for use in diffusion transfer processes which utilize undeveloped silver salts in the nonimage areas of the negative to fonn a positive by dissolving the undeveloped silver salts or complexes and precipitating them on a receiving layer in close proximity to the original silver salt emulsion layer.
  • Such processes are described, for example, in US. Pat. No. 3,020,155 to Yackel et a1. issued Feb. 6, 1962, U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,584,029 issued Jan. 29, 1952; 2,698,236 issued Dec. 28, 1954; and 2,543,181 issued Feb. 27, 1951 of E. 11. Land and US. Pat. No.
  • the invention can also be used in color transfer processes which utilize the diffusion transfer of developer, coupler or dye, from a light-sensitive layer to a second layer, such as described in US. Pat. No. 2,559,643 of Land, issued July 10, 1951; US. Pat. No. 2,698,798 issued Jan. 4, 1955; US. Pat. No. 2,756,142 of Yutzy issued July 14, 1956; US. Pat. No. 3,252,915 of Weyerts et al. issued May 31, 1966; and US. Pat. No. 3,227,550 of Whitman et al. issued Jan. 4, 1966.
  • the described silver complexes are useful in other elements and processes designed for color photography, such as described in US. Pat. No. 3,242,294 of Barr et a1. issued Mar. 29, 1966 and U.S. Pat. No. 2,252,718 of Mannes et al. issued Aug. 14,1961.
  • the invention can be employed with photographic elements and processes designed for use in lithography, preparation of direct prints, or in colloid transfer processed, as well as in elements designed for processing in monobath processes, such as in monobath processes described in US. Pat. No. 2,875,048 of Haist et al. issued Feb. 24, 1959, and web-type processing such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,179,517 of Tregillus et a1.
  • Another embodiment of the invention is a photographic process comprising physical development of a latent image in a radiation-sensitive metal salt employing a stable source of metal especially silver, for the described physical development which is a stable metal complex as described herein.
  • An especially suitable process comprises physically developing a latent image in a photographic element containing (a) a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and (b) a stable source of silver for physical development which is a stable metal complex, as described, wherein the metal is silver, with a silver halide developer solution.
  • processing is usually carried out under ambient conditions of temperature and pressure, e.g., a temperature of about C. to about 30 C., but higher temperatures can be employed if desired, such as temperatures above about 50 C., e.g., about 50 to about 150C.
  • the time required for processing can vary widely, such as from about 1 second to several minutes or more depending on processing conditions and desired image.
  • Development activators which can be used according to the invention include any of those which provide the desired activation of the described developing agents. These include alkaline activators such as inorganic alkalis, for example, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide and lithium hydroxide, alkali metal carbonates, such as sodium carbonate and potassium carbonate, and organic alkaline development activators such as quaternary ammonium bases and salts and similar alkaline materials and/or alkali releasing materials, and the like.
  • alkaline activators such as inorganic alkalis, for example, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide and lithium hydroxide
  • alkali metal carbonates such as sodium carbonate and potassium carbonate
  • organic alkaline development activators such as quaternary ammonium bases and salts and similar alkaline materials and/or alkali releasing materials, and the like.
  • Processing compositions such as developer solutions and/or stabilizersolutions and/or activator solutions, can be applied to or otherwise contacted with the described photographic elements in any suitable manner, including for instance, dipping, spraying and/or suitable surface applications, such as with rollers or other mechanical means.
  • This silver halide developer can be a physical developer if desired, e.g., one containing a source of silver for physical development, such as a water-soluble silver salt, e.g., silver nitrate, and/or one of the described silver complexes.
  • a further embodiment of the invention is a photographic composition
  • a photographic composition comprising (a) a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal complex, as described herein, and (b) a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physicaldevelopment upon exposure to radiation.
  • This photographic composition can be a photographic emulsion.
  • This physical developer is typically an alkaline solution, such as an alkaline solution containing a polar solvent including, for example, water, ethylene glycol, alcohol, and the like.
  • a suitable hardener as described herein, in the physical developer.
  • concentrations can be employed, depending on the element processed, processing conditions, components of the physical developer, and the like.
  • a concentration of about 0.1 to about 1.5 percent by weight of hardener of the total physical developer composition is usually sufficient.
  • One or more components of the described physical developer can be stored in separate containers, such as in separate packets or bottles as part of a kit before use. At the time of or shortly before use, the component or components can be mixed together and/or diluted with a suitable solvent, such as water, to the desired concentration.
  • a suitable solvent such as water
  • Suitable antifoggants include organic antifoggants, such as benzotriazole, benzimidazole, Z-mercaptobenzimidazole, and mercaptoazole antifoggants.
  • An inorganic antifoggant such as potassium bromide, potassium iodide and/or sodium bromide can be employed if desired.
  • Example 1 A photographic element is prepared in Example 1 employing a coating of the following mixture on a film support:
  • EXAMPLE 101 The procedure set out in Example 1 is repeated with a silver-organic complex using organic moieties within the scope of the following formula in place of the designated organic moiety of Examples 1-100:
  • the paper receiver sheet is then laminated to the exposed coating for 30 seconds.
  • a positive image is formed on the receiver sheet and has a clean background.
  • the positive image has a maximum density of 1.2.
  • EXAMPLE I27 This illustrates color processing according to the invention.
  • a photographic element is prepared as set out in Example 101. After drying, the resulting coating is exposed sensitometrically. It is then immersed in a color developer containing a cyan coupler as described in US. Pat. No. 2,252,7[8 of Meatless .sl tist aatimmsrss successively in a p- TABLE II Column A, R30 n Column B, R3 Column 0, R32 Cockle D (CHQ COOH 1 CH H 1.5-1.8 (CHz) COOH 2 CH3 H 1.6-2.0 (CH- )nCOOH 3 CH3 H 1.8-2.0 (CHQDCOOH 5 CH3 H 1.8-2.0 (CHQDC OOH 1 CH3 COOH 0.8-2.0 (CHflnCOOH 2 CH3 COOH 1.5-2.0 (CHQ COOH 3 CH COOH 1.6-1.8 (CHQDCOOH 1 CH3 COOEt 0.76-2.5 (CHQ COOH 2 CH3 COOEt 1.0-2.0 (CH2)DCOOH 3 CH COOEt 1.6-2.0
  • EXAMPLE 126 bath a bleach bath, and a fix bath as described in this US.
  • a photographic element is prepared by coating the following mixture on a film support:
  • Component Millilitcrs a. aqueous solution containing l5% by weight of saponin b. 0.0l6 molar aqueous solution of l-carboxyrnethyl-S-I (3-ethyl-2- benzoxazolinylidene)-ethylidene]- lphenyl-Lthiohydantoin (dye) c. 0.2 molar aqueous solution of silver-p-toluene sulfonatc d. aqueous solution containing [5% by weight of photographic gelatin e.
  • EXAMPLE 128 Good results are obtained when an element and process is employed according to U.S. Pat. No. 2,113,329 of Mannes issued Apr. 5, 1938 employing a silver complex of S-carbethoxy-3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-4-thiazolidone-Z-thione as a sta ble source of silver for physical development, as set out in Example l, in the initial development step of this color process.
  • EXAMPLE 129 The procedure set out in the immediate preceding example is repeated employing l-ethynylcyclopentanol in place of the described thiazoline-Z-thione compound.
  • EXAMPLE 130 The procedure set out in the immediate preceding example is repeated employing l-ethynylcyclopentanol in place of the described thiazo1ine-2-thione compound.
  • EXAMPLE 132 A good color image is also obtained employing an element and process described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,304,940 of Mannes et a1. using a blue sensitive silver-dye complex and a yellow coupler in a first layer, a green sensitive silver-dye complex and a magenta coupler in a second layer and a red sensitive silverdye complex and a cyan coupler in a third layer.
  • the red sensitive silver-dye complex, green sensitive silver-dye complex and blue sensitive silver-dye complex are as described in French Patent 1,453,635 of Gilman, Goffe and Jones issued Aug.
  • the elements, processes and compositions of the invention are useful in physical development of a latent image in an exposed radiation-sensitive titanium compound, such as titanium dioxide or a titanium dioxide dye complex, such as described in French Patent 1,437,765.
  • an exposed radiation-sensitive titanium compound such as titanium dioxide or a titanium dioxide dye complex, such as described in French Patent 1,437,765.
  • a dye-sensitized titanium dioxide is employed with a described silver-dye complex in combination with a described silver-organic complex of the invention as a stable source of silver for physical development a bifunctional radiation-sensitive coating is provided. That is, two different types of radiation-sensitive compounds are provided which can be P @Eli l F 'L@QY@EL9 st i ferent types of images.
  • a radiation-sensitive element can be exposed 'with a high-intensity exposure.
  • the resulting image is developed as described in Example 1 to provide only an image from the silver-dye complex.
  • an exposure of about 10 to about 50 times less than the intense exposure followed by physical development after immersing in a solution containing a water-soluble silver salt provides an image resulting from the titanium dioxide.
  • EXAMPLE 134 This illustrates the invention employing titanium dioxide, which is dye sensitized as a radiation-sensitive component.
  • a photographic element is prepared by mixing and coating the following components at 40 C. under red safe-light conditions:
  • composition is coated on a paper support at a rate of 0.009 inch wet thickness.
  • the coating is dried and exposed sensitometrically using a l00-watt tungsten light source.
  • the resulting coating is developed as set out in Example 1. Only an image characteristic of the exposed silver-dye complex is visible.
  • the element is exposed sensitometrically a second time, for 10 seconds, on a portion of the element which contains no developed image.
  • the element is then immersed in a 1 percent aqueous silver nitrate solution for 10 seconds followed by rinsing in water for 10 seconds and developing as set out in Example 1.
  • a second image, of lower density than the silver-dye image and characteristic of a titanium dioxide sensitized with dye image, is 9929 29
  • the metal-organic complexes, described herein, can be employed in a physical development process as set out in U.S. Pat. No. 2,735,773 of Dippel and Houtman issued Feb. 21, 1956 or U.S. Pat. No. 2,764,484 of Jonge et a1. issued Sept. 25, 1956.
  • a radiationsensitive material such as a photographic element containing a silver-dye complex
  • mercurous ions for example, in 0.01 N mercurous nitrate or a mercurous salt of one of the described compounds of the invention, and then is contacted in a suitable manner with a physical developer containing a metal-organic complex according to the invention, such as a silverthiazolinc;Z-thione or silver thiagolidine-Z-thione complex.
  • the described 2-furyl thioethers can be prepared by a one step method by reacting (a) an aliphatic or aromatic monoor dithiol with (b) a 2,5-diloweracyloxy-2, 5- dihydrofuran; 2,5-dihydro-2,5-diloweralkoxyfuran; 2,5- dihydro-2,5-diloweralkoxy-Z-methylfuran; or fumaric dialdehyde.
  • This preparation is described in copending application Ser. No. 764,331 now US. Pat. No.
  • (2-furylthio)-propionic acid can be prepared by refluxing thiopropionic acid with 2,5-dihydro-2,S-dimethoxyfuran in about stoichiometric concentrations in a suitable solvent such as acetonitrile or acetic acid.
  • reaction product of the described organic moieties and metal suitable for physical development as described is not fully understood.
  • reaction products such as the reaction product of a thiazoline-Z-thione compound with a water-soluble silver salt, such as silver nitrate, are designated as metal-organic complexes.
  • metal-organic complexes can include bonding which is covalent, ionic, or some other type.
  • a described metal-organic complex can be a so-called metal-organic salt, e.g., a silver salt, containing bonding which is characteristic of metal salts.
  • a photographic element comprising a support, a radiation-sensitive silvendye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
  • thiazoline thione a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine
  • R R R, and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl con taining six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a fiveor six-member heterocyclic ring;
  • R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16;
  • R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or
  • R is P:R1s
  • R,,,, R,,,, R and R are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a fiveor sixmember heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10.
  • metal-organic complex is a stable silver-5-carbethoxy-3-carboxymethyl-4- methyl-4-thiazoline-2-thione complex.
  • metal-organic complex is a stable silver-organic complex of silver with a polymer containing sulfur as a ligand atom.
  • An element as in claim 1 which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
  • An element as in claim I which additionally contains a binder and a hardener for said binder.
  • An element as in claim 1 which additionally contains a photographic silver halide.
  • a shaogmpmc ei'miiFZs in claim 1 were... said metal is silver, said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10 and the molar ratio of the organic moiety to said metal in said metal-organic complex is about 0.2 to about 7.
  • a photographic process comprising physical development of a latent image in a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, employing a source of metal for said physical development, the improvement comprising employing a stable source of metal for said physical development which is a stable metal complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
  • a thiazoline thione a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a o...,q ttiissst amstsissr ss t qkxths tqrmyl t0 1.
  • a photographic process as in claim 12 comprising physical development of a latent image in an element which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum, and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
  • a photographic composition comprising a radiationsensitive silver-dye complex and a stable source of metal for physical development of a latent image in said silver-dye complex, said stable source of metal being a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
  • thiazoline thione a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a
  • a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: [(Vlll)] an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: [(Xl)] VIIl)] X S1.
  • Z oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development wherein R R R R and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five or sixmember heterocyclic ring; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to
  • a photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal-organic complex is a silver complex.
  • a photographic composition as in claim 16 whiiri'siiili i metal-organic complex is a complex of silver with a 4- thiazq insr ihipne V, ,7 n 19.
  • a physical developer composition comprising (a) a silver halide developing agent, and (b) a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
  • thiazoline thione a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a
  • R R R and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a fiveor six-member heterocyclic ring;
  • R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with
  • R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R
  • R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R wherein R R R and R are each hydrogen,

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Spectroscopy & Molecular Physics (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Non-Silver Salt Photosensitive Materials And Non-Silver Salt Photography (AREA)
  • Plural Heterocyclic Compounds (AREA)
  • Nitrogen- Or Sulfur-Containing Heterocyclic Ring Compounds With Rings Of Six Or More Members (AREA)
  • Silver Salt Photography Or Processing Solution Therefor (AREA)

Abstract

Photographic elements, compositions and processes employing certain stable sources of metal for physical development, including certain metal-organic complexes, such as metalthiazoline thione or metal-thiazolidine thione complexes or metal-alkyne complexes, provide good images. Silver-dye complexes are especially suitable as a photosensitive material for use with these metal-organic complexes, typically silver-organic complexes.

Description

United States Patent Bass 1 Mar. 7, 1972 [54] PHOTOGRAPH: ELEMENT, FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS COMPOSITION AND PROCESS 920,277 3/1963 Great Britain ..96/48 [72] Inventor: Jon Doli Bass, Rochester, NY. 936.609 9/ 9 Great Britain-m ----96/ I 4 [73] Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, igg; ggzzf N Y 22 O 1 19 OTHER PUBLICATIONS [21] APPL 7 330 Van Veelan et al., Photographische Korr Espondenz, Vol. 99,
No.9 pps. 139-145, Sept., 1963 [52] US. Cl. ..96/29 R, 96/48 PD, 96/61 R, Primary Examiner Mu"ay Katz 5 l I Cl G03c 2 1 Assistant Examiner-Harry J. Gwinnell I 1 i c c Att0rney--W. H. J. Kline, R. E. Knapp and B. D. Wiese [58] Field of Search ..96/48 PD, 95, 61, 114.6, 76,
' 96/29 R [57] ABSTRACT Refemnces Cited Photographic elements, compositions and processes employing certain stable sources of metal for physical development, UNITED STATES PATENTS including certain metal-organic complexes, such as metal- 2,084,42O 6/1937 Weyde ..96/l 14.6 X thiazoline thione or metal-thiazolidine thione complexes or 3,155,516 11/1964 Blake ..96/61 X metal-alkyne complexes, provide good images. Silver-dye 5, 11/1964 Blake X complexes are especially suitable as a photosensitive material 3,155,519 11/1964 Blake 9 1 l X for use with these metal-organic complexes, typically silver- Weyde Ct X organic complexes 3,368,899 2/1968 Blake et a1. ..96/95 X 3,446,619 5/1969 Gilman et a1. ..96/63 23 Claims, No Drawings PHOTOGRAPHIC ELEMENT, COMPOSITION AND PROCESS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention is directed to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing physical development in obtaining a desired image. In one of its aspects, it relates to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing certain stable sources of metal for physical development including certain metal-organic complexes, especially certain silver-organic complexes. In another of its aspects, it relates to photographic elements, compositions and processes employing a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation in combination with the described silver-organic complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development.
2. Description of the Prior Art Radiation-sensitive coatings based on silver, especially photographic silver halides, and physical development of such coatings, are well known, as described, for example, in Mees, The Theory of the Photographic Process, Third Edition, (1966) and British Patent 936,609 issued Sept. 11, 1963. Spectral sensitization of photographic silver halides by addition thereto of a sensitizing dye is also well known. Further, a reaction product, identified as a silver-dye complex of a dye and a water-soluble silver salt, e.g., silver nitrate, which complex is photosensitive is described in French Patent 1,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966. A photographic silver halide emulsion which is mixed with such a silver-dye complex has its spectral sensitivity extended into the region of the absorption of the dye. Such silver-dye complexes can be a photosensitive medium in the absence of silver halide, so that energy absorbed by the dye upon exposure is used directly to form sites for physical development. This is disclosed, for example, in French Patent 1,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966.
However, the sources of metal, especially silver, for such physical development have not been entirely satisfactory. In many cases they have either been too unstable, releasing the metal at an undesired time, or caused undesired fog and stain. For example, while a silver-thiosulfate complex can be employed as a source of silver for physical development of an image in a photosensitive coating containing a silver-dye complex as the photosensitive material, as described, for example, in French Patent 1,453,635, a silver-thiosulfate complex can produce undesired fog and produce other undesired effects. A silver complex of 4,5-(2,3-D-fructopyrano)-2-oxazolidinethione also has these disadvantages. Accordingly, while sources of silver have been employed for physical development in the described photographic systems, they have not produced desired results in many cases.
Further, there has been a need for sources of silver for physical development which provide desired concentrations of silver ion in particular photographic systems, especially systems employing a silver-dye complex as a photographic component, i.e., desired pAg levels, while providing desired sensitometric properties.
It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide a photographic element, composition and process, employing an improved stable source of metal, especially silver, for physical development providing desired sensitometric properties.
Another object is to provide a photographic element containing a silver-dye complex capable of forming sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and containing an improved stable source of metal, especially silver, for physical development of such sites, which is a stable metal-organic complex providing desired sensitometric properties.
Another object is to provide a photographic process for physical development of a latent image in a radiation sensitive metal salt employing an improved stable source of metal for the described physical development.
A further object is to provide a photographic composition, such as a photographic emulsion or developer composition, containing an improved stable source of metal for physical development as described.
Additional objects and advantages will be apparent from the following description and claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION According to the invention improved elements, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions are provided which are suitable for physical development, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions employing a photographic silver-dye complex and are resistant to undesired fog and/or stain by employing an improved stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of (a) a metal suitable for physical development with (b) a compound which is:
a. a thioamide, including i. A thiazoline thione and/or thiazolidine thione,
ii. A thiopyrimidine,
iii. An oxazolidine-Z-thione,
iv. A dithiocarbamate, and/or v. A thiourea derivative, and/or b. a guanyl compound, including i. A pseudothiohydantoin,
ii. An imidazolidine,
iii. An imidazoline, and/or iv. An isothiourea derivative, and/or c. a mercapto acid, including i. A mercaptocarboxylic acid, and/or ii. A mercaptoaxetyl amide, and/or d. an alkyne compound, and/or e. a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid and/or a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, and/or f. a thiaalkyl compound, including a dithiaalkyl and/or oligothiaalkyl compound, and/or g. oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid,
and/or succinic acid, and/or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development including i. Polymers wherein the described ligand atom is sulfur,
such as l. Polymers containing thiaalkyl acrylamide units and/or methacrylamide units, and/or 2. Polymers containing thiaalkyl acrylate units and/or methacrylate units.
Also, a stable complex of silver with the described polymers according to the invention can provide other desired properties, such as eliminating part of the binder in a photographic emulsion.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS The described metal-organic complexes are especially advantageous in photographic elements, processes and compositions wherein the metal for physical development is silver and the described stable metal-organic complex is a stable silverorganic complex.
The described stable metal-organic complexes can be employed in a wide range of elements, especially photographic elements, processes and compositions. They can be employed in any photographic element, process or composition where it is desirable to employ a stable metal complex as a stable source of metal, especially silver, for physical development. Various types of photographic elements, processes and compositions, where it is desirable to have a stable source of metal for physical development, are known.
These are described, for example in Mees, The Theory of the Photographic Process, Third Edition (1966), Pages 324-331, in British Patent 936,609 issued Sept. 1 1, 1963 and in French Patent 1,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966. The described metalorganic complexes are especially suitable in a photographic element, process and/or composition employing, as a radiation sensitive component, a silver-dye complex which hasthe property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, as described in French Patent l,453,635 issued Aug. 16, 1966. The following dyes are representative merocyanine dyes which can be used to form the described radiation sensitive silver-dye complexes:
a. 3-carboxymethyl-5 [(3-methyl-2-thiazolidinylidene ethylidene1rhodanine 420- 60 m b. 5-[(3-methyl-2-thiazolidinylidene)ethylidene]rhodanine c. 5 3-methyl-2-thiazolidinylidene )ethylidene ]-2-thio- 2,4-oxazolidinedione 400-5 60 mp;
d. 3-ethyl-5-[(3-methyl-2-thiazolidinylidene)ethylidene1-2- thio-2,4-oxazolidinedione 430-540 mu;
e. l -methyl-5 (3-methyl-2-thiazolidinylidene )ethylidene1- 2-thiobarbituric acid 430-530 mu;
f. 3-carboxymethyl-5-[(3-ethyl-2-benzoxazolinylidene)- ethylidene1rhodanine 420-580 mu;
g. 5-(3-ethyl-2-benzoxazolinylidene 370-460 mp;
h. 5-[(3-ethyl-2-benzoxazolinylidene)ethylidene1rhodanine i. 3-ethyl-5-[(3-ethyl-2-benzoxazolinylidene)ethylidene]-lphenyl-2-thiohydantoin 520-5 60 my; and
j. l-carboxymethyl-5-[(3-ethyl-2-benzoxazolinylidene)- ethylidene]-3-phenyl-2-thiohydantoin 520-5 60 mp" Various dyes, other than merocyanine dyes can be employed as the dye moiety in the described silver-dye complex, including known silver halide sensitizing dyes, such as cyanines, oxonols, hemicyanines, styryls, hemioxonols, benzylidenes, and the like, examples of which are set out in the described Mees reference, pages 198-232.
These silver-dye complexes can be prepared typically by mixing the dyes with a water-soluble silver salt, such as silver nitrate, in a suitable solvent, e.g., water, or can be prepared in a radiation sensitive coating composition in situ without separation or recovery of the silver-dye complex from the coating composition, such as by mixing the desired components in the coating composition before application to a support using techniques well known in the photographic art.
One embodiment of the invention is an element, especially a photographic element comprising a photographic component which is the main photographic component of the desired element and a stable source of inetal for physical development, especially a stable source of silver, which is a stable metal-organic complex, preferably a silver-organic complex as described.
An especially useful embodiment is a photographic element comprising a support having thereon a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex, as described, which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, and a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex as described.
The described stable source of metal for physical development according to the invention can be in any location in and/or on the photographic element and/or in a processing composition which provides the desired physical development activity without undesired fog and stain. it can be, for example, in a radiation-sensitive coating and/or an overcoat and/or a coating between the support and a radiation-sensitive coating or some other coating or combination of coatings. It can be in one or more coatings of a receiver sheet employed in a diffusion transfer process and/or in a photographic element and/or processing composition employed in a diffusion transfer process.
While silver is a preferred metal moiety of the described stable metal-organic complexes employed in the invention, other metals which are useful in physical development can be employed. Metals which are members of the electromotive scale below hydrogen are those most commonly employed for this purpose, such as copper, mercury, palladium, platinum, gold, silver, and the like,
A stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of (a) a metal suitable for physical development with (b) a thioamide according to the invention is represented by the following formula:
wherein M is a metal suitable for physical development, such as silver, copper, mercury, palladium, platinum, gold, and the like; R, and R are the same or different and each is hydrogen, alkyl, alkylene, acyl, or aryl; R is alkyl, S-R,, or O-R wherein R and R are hydrogen, alkyl, alkylene, acyl or aryl; and corresponding tautomeric compounds, such as wherein R, is hydrogen:
S H Rz-N=(B-Ra any two R groups can, but need not, be joined to form a heterocyclic ring as represented by the broken lines in structure I.
Alkyl suitably contains one to about 20 carbon atoms, typically one to five carbon atoms, such as methyl, ethyl, propyl butyl, pentyl, decyl and eicosyl. Alkylene suitably contains one to about five carbon atoms, such as methylene, ethylene, propylene, butylene and pentylene. Acyl can be:
0 alkyli!)- wherein alkyl is as described, especially alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms.
Aryl suitably contains six to about 30 carbon atoms, such as phenyl, tolyl, xylyl and naphthyl. The described alkyl, alkylene, acyl and aryl can contain various substituent groups which do not adversely affect the stability and availability of metal for physical development of the described complexes and compounds. Suitable substituent groups include for example, carboxyl, hydroxyl and sulfonic acid groups. Such groups can provide advantages in cases in which it is desirable that the described compound have increased solubility in aqueous compositions and/or increased compatibility with, for example,-a binder, if one is used.
Examples of silver-thioamide complexes within Formula I which are stable sources of silver for physical development are silver complexes of the following compounds:
2-thiobarbituric acid,
l,3-diethyl-2-thiobarbituric acid,
2-thiouracil,
imidazolidine-Z-thione,
l,3-bis(4-carboxyphenyl)-l ,3-dimethylthiourea,
l ,3-bis( 2-carboxyethyl)-benzimidazole-2-thione, and
4-carboxybenzyl dimethyl dithiocarbamate:
S-carboxy-2-phenyl-4-thiopyrimidine:
S-carbethoxyl -methyl-2-phenyl-4-thiopyrimidine:
5-rnethyloxazolidine-2-thione:
l-( 3 ,S-dicarboxyphenyl )-5-mercaptotetrazole A stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiazoline-thione or a thiazolidine thione is represented by the structure:
wherein R and R are the same or different, and each is hydrogen, alkyl; especially alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms, such as methyl, ethyl, propyl, butyl and pentyl; aryl, as described; carboxyl; hydroxyl; sulfonic acid; and mercapto; R, is hydrogen, alkyl, as described, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl, especially containing six to 20 carbon atoms, carboxyl or sulfonic acid, as described. These are especially suitable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention.
Examples of suitable silver thiazoline thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development are stable silver complexes of the following compounds:
3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione,
boxyethyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-Z-thione, 3-(3-carboxypropyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione, 3-(4-carboxybutyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione,
v 3-( S-carboxypentyl )-4-methyl-thiazoline-Z-thione,
3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-5-carboxy-thiazoline-2-thione, 3-(2-carboxyethyl)-4-methyl-5-carboxy-thiazoline-2- thione, 3-(3-carboxypropyl)-4-methyl-5-carboxy-thiazoline-2- thione, 3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-5-carbethoxy-thiazoline-2- thione,
3-(2-car- 6 3-(2-carboxyethyl)-4-methyl-5-carbethoxy-thiazoline-2- thione, 3-( 3-carboxypropyl )-4-methyl-5-carbethoxy-thiazoline-2- thione, 5 3-carboxymethyl-4-carboxymethyl-thiazoline-Z-thione,
3-( 3-carboxypropyl)-4-carboxymethyl-thiazoline-Z-thione,
3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-5-acetyl-thiazoline-Z-thione,
3-(2-carboxyethyl)-4-methyl-5-acetyl-thiazoline-Z-thione, 3-sulfoethyl-4-methyl-thiazoline-2-thione, 3-(m-carboxyphenyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-Z-thione,
3-( l-carboxyethyl)-4-carboxythiazoline-2-thione,
3-( l-carboxyethyl)4-carbeth0xy-thiazoline-2-thione,
3-( 1-carboxyethyl)-4-(carbethoxymethyl)-thiazoline-2- I thione, 3-(2-carboxyethyl)-4-(carbethoxymethyl)-thiazoline-2- thione, 3-(Z-carboxyethyl)-4-(n-butylsulfonymethyl)-thia-zoline-2- thione,
3-( 1,Z-dicarboxyethyl)-4-methyl-thiazoline-Z-thione, or
4-carboxy-thiazoline-Z-thione.
Examples of suitable silver-thiazolidine thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention are silver complexes of thiazolidine thione compounds corresponding to the described thiazoline thione compounds. For instance, suitable silver-thiazolidine thione complexes include silver complexes of:
3-carboxymethyl-thiazolidine-Z-thione, and
3-carboxyethyl-thiazolidine-2-thione.
A stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiopyrimidine is represented by the formula:
III S A IF N Li M Rio N =5 Re N/ M sol wherein M, R R and R are as described.
Examples of suitable silver-oxazolidine-2-thione complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development .QBEL M s a, s ,7 3 is wherein M is as described, especially silver,
A further source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an imidazolidine, especially a 2- thioimidazolidine represented by the formula:
wherein M, R, and R are as described; and R is alkyl, aryl, as described, or carboxyaryl, or carboxyalkyl, e.g., containing six to carbon atoms, such as carboxybenzyl, carboxyxylyl or carboxyphenyl.
Examples of suitable silver-dithiocarbamate complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development are stable silver complexes of:
4-carboxybenzyl-dimethyl dithiocarbamate 4-carboxyphenyl-dimethyldithiocarbamate.
A further stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiourea derivative represented by the fonnula:
wherein M, R,, R R and R are as described; and R and R can, but need not, be joined to form a heterocyclic ring, represented by the broken line in Structure VI. R and R when joined to form a heterocyclic ring can be, for example,
thiobarbituric acid,
imidazolidine-Z-thione,
l ,3-diethyl-2-thiobarbituric acid,
l,3-bis(2-carboxyphenyl)-l ,3-dimethylthiourea.
A stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a guanyl-containing compound is represented by the formula:
(VII) wherein M, R R and R are as described; R is hydrogen, alkyl or alkylene as described; and any two of the described R groups can be, but need not be, joined to form a heterocyclic ring.
An example of a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development within structure Vll is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula:
(VIII) wherein M, R,, and R are as described; R is hydrogen or 20 atoms completing a hydrocarbon ring, e.g., alkylene containing four to eight carbon atoms completing a benzene or naphthylene ring, and their corresponding tautomers.
Examples of suitable stable silver-imidazolidine complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are com- 5 plexes of silver with:
imidazolidine-Z-thione, or
1 ,3-bis( 2-carboxyethyl )-benzimida2ole-2-thione.
A source of metal for physical development is a stable metalorganic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an imidazoline, especially a 2- t mi l iss rss by the mu a:
wherein M, R,, R and R are as described, and their corresponding tautomers.
Examples of suitable stable silver-imidazoline complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are com- 5 plexes of silver with:
2(2-carboxyethylthio)-A -imidazoline 2(2-carboxypropylthio)-A -imidamline.
A further source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with an isothiourea derivative represented by the isarmu s s (XI) NH: 5 CS-Rr M 0 wherein R, and M are as described, with the exception that R,
is not hydrogen, R, typically being carboxyalkyl or sulfoalkyl. This formula does not include thiourea.
Examples of suitable stable silver-isothiourea derivative complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development are complexes of silver with:
S-(carboxymethyl)isothiourea S-( 2-carboxyethyl)isothiourea S-( 3-carboxypropyl)isothiourea S-( 2-carboxyisopropyl )isothiourea S-( 3-sulfopropyl)isothiourea.
A stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a mercapto acid, especially a mercapto carboxylic acid represented by the formula:
wherein M is as described and R is alkylene, such as alkylene containing one to 20 carbon atoms, typically alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms, such as methylene, ethylene, propylene, butylene, pentylene, decylene and eicosylene. R" can contain substituent groups which do not adversely affect developing action of the described compounds such as alkyl, e.g., alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms as described, carboxy, sulfonic acid, mercapto and amino.
Examples of stable silver mercapto acid complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development according to the invention are silver complexes of:
mercaptoacetic acid,
mercaptopropionic acid,
mercaptoisobutyric acid,
mercaptosuccinic acid,
alpha-mercaptoadipic acid, and
L-cysteine.
A stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a mercaptoacetyl amide represented by the formula:
(XIII) wherein M and R" are as described; R and R are the same or different and each selected from hydrogen; lower alkyl, as described; mercapto; carboxyl; sulfonic acid; hydroxyl and phenyl; at least one of R and R being phenyl. The phenyl group can contain various substituent groups which do not adversely affect the stability and availability of metal for physical development, such as carboxyl, hydroxyl, sulfonic acid, and the like.
Examples of silver-mercaptoacetanilide complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development include silver complexes of:
mercaptoacetanilide,
mercaptomethylacetanilide, and
mercapto aceto-p-toluidide.
A metal-alkyne complex which is a stable source of metal for physical development according to the invention is represented by the formula:
wherein M is a metal suitable for physical development, as described; R is hydrogen, aryl, as described, alkyl, as described, or alkylene, also as described, forming a ring with R as represented by the broken lines in Structure XIV; R is hydrogen, aryl, alkyl, as described, or alkylene, also as described, forming a ring with R R and R together may represent a keto oxygen; R is OR, SR,
or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct represented by the formula:
O(CH CH O),,H wherein n is an integer, such as an integer from I to about 100 or more; R R R and R are the same or different and each selected from hydrogen, acyl or alkyl, as described, typically alkyl containing one to five carbon atoms.
all!
B-methyll -pentyn-3-ol ethylene oxide adduct of 3-methyl-l-pentyn-3-ol l-hexyn-3 -ol l-ethynylcyclopentanol CECH l-ethynylcyclohexanol C-ECH ethylene oxide adduct of l-ethynyl-cyclohexanol C CE 2-propynyl cyclohexylcarboxylate 4-t-butyll -ethynylcyclohexanol 3-(diethylamino l -butyne OH; omoHmNcH-ozoH methyl propiolate II 01130 C-G CH 3,5-dimethyl-l-hexyn-3-0l 4-( l-hydroxy-2-propynyl)cyclohexene CHO CH H 3-phenyll -propyn-3 -ol CH3(CH2) -C-C CH O(CH:CH2 )l-20 A metal-hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid complex or metalhydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid complex which is a stable source of metal for physical development according to the invention is represented by the formula:
[HOW-COOH] M xv wherein M is as described and W is alkylene, as described, or a heterocyclic group, typically a fiveor six-membered heterocyclic ring, e.g., a triazaindene or a tetraazaindene ring system. The described alkylene and heterocyclic groups can contain various substituent groups, such as alkyl or aryl as described, carboxyl, hydroxyl, sulfonic acid, and the like.
Examples of suitable silver-hydroxy alkyl carboxylic acid complexes according to the invention are silver complexes of:
benzilic acid I OH l2-hydroxystearic acid CH (CH CH(CH C O OH and 3,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid.
An example of suitable silver hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid complexes according to the invention is a silver complex with:
6-carboxy-7-hydroxy-l ,3a,4-triazaindene HO O C -N N a \N{ A stable source of metal for physical development is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a thiaalkyl compound of the formula:
[X-S-Z] M (XVI) including a dithiaalkyl compound of the formula:
[XS-SZ] M (XVll) and/or an oligothiaalkyl compound of the formula:
(XVIII) wherein X and Z are the same or different and each is heterocyclic, aryl, alkyl or acyl, as described; 2' is Z or hydrogen; n is a number, e.g., 1 to 10 inclusive typically l to 5; Y is alkylene, as described; and M is a metal suitable for physical development, as described, especially silver.
Heterocyclic, as described herein, includes any heterocyclic group which does not cause undesirable fog or stain and does not adversely affect desired physical development, for exam- P s yslisstsspsssprsset by t rmu Examples of other suitable silver-organic complexes which are stable sources of silver for physical development within the described formulas are silver complexes with the following compounds. Some of these can be classified in one or more of the described formulas.
.. ,1-525rdiss bqwl!srtmmsxssptsrs HOOO N=N BL LL t HOOC 1 l, l 4, l 7,20-tetrakis( hydroxymethyl l 3 ,16, l9-trioxat. 1 1.Q-t iEl s-l 2122:dsvszswstri !v HOCHzCHCHgS(CHzCH Sh-(CHOH OhH 2-hydroxyethylamino oligoethylene sulfide HOCH CH NH(CH CH,S), H 4-( hydroxymethyl)cyclohexylmethyl-amino v 7 oligoethylenesulfide 2-(carboxymethylthio)-5-phenyl-1,3,Loxadiazole mil-5011200011 ,S '-thiodisalicylic acid GOOH HOOC 4-( 1,2-dicarboxyethylthio)-5phenylcatechol I 011200011 s-i mooon S-(o-carboxyphenyl)thioglycolic acid 0 O OH SOH2C OOH 4-(methylthio)phenol phenylthioacetic acid S CHzCO OH 4-( carboxymethylthio)aniline S CHzC 0 OH 3-thiavaleric acid CH -,CH SCH COOH 2-( 2-furylthio)benzoic acid 0 a POOH (2-furylthio) acetic acid The described polymer includes any polymer which provides the desired complex, does not cause undesired fog or stain and releases the described metal for physical development. Theseinclude homopolymers and copolymers, which include interpolymers of various monomeric and polymeric units. These can contain one or more of the same ligand atom or different ligand atoms.
Any ligand atom is suitable which provides the desired complex. Ligand atoms are described in the book, Organic Complexing Reagents by D. D. Perrin, lnterscience Publishers, Division of Wiley and Co., 1964, especially the first three chapters.
Suitable polymers containing ligand atoms are described, for example, in the book Vinyl and Related Polymers" by C. D. Shildknecht, John Wiley and Sons, 1952. Especially suitable polymers are those which provide the advantage of serving as a stable source of silver for physical development as well as serving as a binder to partially or totally replace other binders, such as gelatin, which are used in coatings for photographic elements.
Properties of the desired polymers can vary over wide ranges depending on other components of the photographic element with which they can be used, processing conditions, desired image, and the like, which can be determined by those skilled in the art. For example, average molecular weight and viscosity can vary, but are typically sufficiently high that the desired polymer is slid when in the form of a coating, e.g., about 1,000 to 1,000,000 or more.
A suitable stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a polymer containing a ligand atom is a metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development, especially silver, with a polymer containing thiaalkylacrylamide units and/or thiaalkylmethacrylamide units, such as represented by the formula:
wherein M is as described; R is methyl or hydrogen; n is a number especially 1 to about l0; m is 0 to about 10; and x is a number of 2 or more, e.g., usually sufficiently high to provide an average molecular weight of about 1,000 to about 1,000,000.
Another suitable stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a polymer containing a ligand atom is a metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development, especially silver, with a polymer containing thiaalkylacrylate units and/or thiaalkylmethacrylate units such as represented by the formula:
These polymers have a wide range of average molecular weight, but usually have an average molecular weight of about 100,000 or more.
The described polymers can be prepared employing methods of polymerization known in the art, e.g., such as methods set out in the described Schildknecht reference.
The invention includes other equivalent suitable sources of silver for physical development such as stable silver-organic complexes which are complexes of silver with:
1,10-phenanthroline 1(4-carboxyphenyl )-3 g5-dimethyl-4-phenylpyrazole 8-hydroxyquinoline sulfate saccharin 2,4-thiazolidihedione Combinations of metal complexes can be employed according to the invention, such as combinations of silver complexes with gold, platinum or palladium complexes, or combinations of different organic complexing moieties, such as combinations of thiazoline thiones with alkynols or different thiazoline thiones with each other.
Metal and M as described herein with regard to metal-organic complexes refer to a metalic ion or the described metals in ionic form, such as a silver ion, mercury ion, platinum ion, gold ion, copper ion, and the like. In the described metal-organic complexes which are stable sources of metal for physical development according to the invention, it is believed the metal is in ionic fonn.
Whether a metal-organic complex employed according to the invention is suitably stable will depend on several factors,
such as the specific organic moiety, the components of the photographic element used, the affinity of the metal used for physical development, especially silver, to the organic moiety, the processing conditions and the like. Suitable stability is also related to keeping characteristics of a photographic element metal-organic complex in the element is considered as suitably stable.
The elements described employing a silver-dye complex as a radiation-sensitive component, for example, with the described silver complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development can produce good reflection densities and high resolving power, e.g., resolving power over 2,000 line pairs per millimeter and many of the described elements have good stability, e.g., do not lose photographic speed or density after two weeks at about 50 C. and about 50 percent relative humidity.
Whether a metaborganic complex employed according to the invention is suitably stable depends heavily on the affinity for silver ion of the described organic moiety of the metal-0rganic complex used according to the invention. This can be measured as pAg. A suitable pAg range can vary.
A suitable pAg range in a radiation sensitive element according to the invention is about 2.0 to about 10 and a range of about 3 to about 7 is typically employed. If a pAg above about 10 is employed the risk of inhibition of desired development is great. But, if a pAg below about 2.0 is employed there is a risk of background fog formation. In the case of a photographic element containing a silver-dye complex as a radiation sensitive component, and a described silver-organic complex according to the invention as a stable source of silver for physical development, a concentration of about 0.01 mole to about 0.0001 mole of dye per mole of silver present and a concentration of about 0.2 mole to about 5.0 moles of organic moiety used to form the described silver-organic complexes of the invention per mole of silver in the element is suitable providing the desired pAg as described.
The concentration of described metal complexes suitable according to the invention can vary depending on the desired image, processing conditions, components of the photographic element, the affinity of the organic moiety of the described metal complexes for metal, especially silver, and the like, which can be determined by those skilled in the art. If the described silver complexes are incorporated in a photographic element containing a photographic silver salt, especially a described silver dye complex, a suitable ratio of (a) moles of organic moiety employed to form the desired silver complex as a stable source of silver for physical development to (b) moles of total silver in the photographic element is about 0.2 to about 7, depending upon the affinity of the organic moiety of the silver complex for silver. Especially suitable ratios of (a) moles or organic moiety employed to form the desired silver complex employed as a stable source for physical development to (b) moles of silver in an element containing the described silver complex are set out in the following examples. 1f the described silver complexes are employed in a processing composition, such as a physical developer composition, e.g., a physical developer solution with which a photographic element is contacted, higher concentrations of silver complex can be desirable, depending on the image desired, processing conditions and other factors described. A concentration of about 0.1 percent by weight to about 15 percent by weight of described metal complex of the total processing composition is usually suitable, but concentrations outside this range can be employed if desired.
While a wide range of ratios of concentration of described organic moiety to concentration of silver in a system according to the invention can be employed, a suitable concentration depends heavily on the affinity for silver ion of the described organic moiety, which can be measured as pAg. Availability of silver ion can be measured using a pAg electrode. A low value indicates high silver ion activity or availability and vice versa.
The suitable concentration of total silver in coatings of photographic elements employing a silver-dye complex as a radiation-sensitive component and a described silver complex as a stable source of silver for physical development can vary over a wide range, but typically about 30 mg. per square foot to about 200 mg. per square foot of silver is suitable. It will be appreciated that this is a significantly higher concentration than employed in a coating containing only a silver-dye complex.
The described silver complexing agents of the invention, especially the described thiazoline-2-thiones and thiazolidine- 2-thiones, can provide toning for the developed image.
The various layers of the photographic elements described herein can be hardened with any suitable hardener, including, for example, aldehyde hardeners, aziridine hardeners, hardeners which are derivatives of dioxane, oxypolysaccharides, such as oxystarch, oxy plant gums, and the like. The layers of the photographic element can contain hardeners such as alkali soluble bisulfite-aldehyde addition products which harden hydrophilic colloids such as gelatin at a pH greater than about 7. Such hardeners can conveniently be incorporated into photographic silver halide emulsion layers or other layers of an element particularly gelatin having layers, since such layers are generally coated under acid conditions, i.e., at a pH which is generally less than about 6. Suitable alkali metal bisulfitealdehyde addition products include, for example, sodium formaldehyde bisulfite, glutaraldehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), betamethyl glutaraldehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), maleic dialdehyde bis(sodium bisulfite), and the like.
Various colloids can be used alone or in combination as vehicles or binding agents in the photographic emulsions and elements employed in the practice of this invention. Among such materials are the natural and/or synthetic binding materials generally employed for this purpose including, for example, gelatin, colloidal albumin, water-soluble vinyl polymers as exemplified by monoand polysaccharides, cellulose derivatives, proteins, water-soluble polyacrylamides, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, and the like. in addition to the hydrophilic colloids, the vehicle or binding agents can contain dispersed polymerized vinyl compounds particularly those which increase the dirnensional stability of photographic materials. Suitable synthetic polymers of this type include water-insoluble polymers of alkyl acrylates and methacrylates, acrylic acid, sulfoalkyl acrylates or methacrylates and the like.
A wide range of photographic components can be employed as the described main photographic component used in a photographic element, composition and/or process of the invention. While some of the described stable metal-organic complexes used as a source of metal for physical development do have some photosensitivity they are used according to the invention as a source of metal for physical development and not as a radiation-sensitive component, Le, a component which upon exposure to radiation forms latent image sites which can be physically developed. A preferred main photographic component is a silver-dye complex as described. If desired, silver halides can be employed in the photographic elements, processes and compositions of the invention, especially as the main photographic component, including any of the photographic silver halides as exemplified by silver bromide, silver iodide, silver chloride, mixed silver halides, such as silver chlorobromide, silver bromoiodide, and the like. The silver halides can be those which form latent images predominantly on the surface of the silver halide grains or those which form latent images inside the silver halide crystals, as exemplified by Davey and Knott, U.S. Pat. No. 2,592,250 issued Apr. 8, 1952, as well as direct positive emulsions, such as those described in Kendall and Hill, U.S. Pat. No. 2,541,472 issued Feb. 13, 1951. Other photographic silver salts can be employed, such as silver salts of sulfur-containing aliphatic carboxylic acids, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,330,663 of Weyde et al. issued July 11, 1967.
The photographic layers described herein can be coated on a wide variety of supports. Typical flexible supports include those generally employed for photographic elements, such as cellulose nitrate film, cellulose acetate film, polyvinylacetal film, polystyrene film, polyethylene terephthalate film, and related films or resinous materials as well as glass, paper, metal and the like. Supports such as papers which are partially acetylated or coated with baryta or an olefin polymer, particularly a polymer of an alpha-olefin containing two to 10 carbon atoms as exemplified by polyethylene, polypropylene, ethylene-butene copolymers, and the like, give good results.
The photographic emulsions and elements of this invention can also contain additional addenda, particularly those known to be beneficial in photographic materials of this nature. For example, they can contain stabilizers or antifoggants such as cadmium, lead, mercury, gold, or other noble metal salts, spectral sensitizers, such as the cyanines, merocyanines, complex (trinuclear) cyanines, complex (trinuclear) merocyanines, styryls, hemicyanines, speed-increasing materials, such as polyalkylene glycols, onium salts and thioethers, plasticizers, coating aids such as anionic, nonionic and amphoteric surface active compounds, and the like. The photographic silver halide emulsions disclosed herein can also be chemically sensitized with compounds of the sulfur group, such as sulfur, selenium and tellurium sensitizers, noble metal salts, such as gold, or reduction sensitized with reducing agents or combinations of such materials. The photographic elements can contain fluorescent brighteners such as stilbenes, coumarins, benzothiazoles, benzoxazoles, imidazoles, etc. Suitable fluorescent brighteners are described in McFall et al. U.S. Pat. No. 2,933,390, British Patent 786,235, U.S. Pat. No. 3,025,242 and German Patent 1,150,274.
A wide range of coating methods can be employed for preparing photographic elements according to the invention. In general, any of those methods commonly employed in preparing coatings for photographic elements are suitable.
A silver halide developing agent can be employed in providing physical development according to the invention. A wide range of silver halide developing agents are suitable. These include polyhydroxybenzene developing agents, such as hydroquinone developing agents, e.g., hydroquinone, alkyl substituted hydroquinone, such as t-butyl hydroquinone, methyl hydroquinone, dimethyl hydroquinone, catechol, and pyrogallol, chloro-substituted hydroquinones, such as chlorohydroquinone, alkoxy-substituted hydroquinones, such as methoxy or ethoxy hydroquinone, aminophenol developing agents, such as N-methyl-p-aminophenol and 2,4- diaminophenols, ascorbic acid developing agents, pyrazolidone developing agents, including those described in British Patent 958,678 and British Patent 930,572, acyl derivatives of p-aminophenol, and the like. Such developing agents can be used alone or in combination. It is usually desirable that the developing agent employed be soluble in water. The suitable concentration can vary over wide ranges depending on the desired image, the components of the photographic element, processing conditions, and the like.
The desired silver complexes are suitable in layers of photographic elements used for color photography, such as emulsions containing color-forming couplers or emulsions developed by solutions containing couplers or other colorgenerating materials; emulsions of the mixed packet type, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,698,794 of Godowsky issued July 9, 1955; or emulsions of the mixed grain type, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,592,243 of Carroll and Hanson.
The described silver complexes as stable sources of silver for physical development can be employed in photographic elements processes and compositions intended for use in diffusion transfer processes which utilize undeveloped silver salts in the nonimage areas of the negative to fonn a positive by dissolving the undeveloped silver salts or complexes and precipitating them on a receiving layer in close proximity to the original silver salt emulsion layer. Such processes are described, for example, in US. Pat. No. 3,020,155 to Yackel et a1. issued Feb. 6, 1962, U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,584,029 issued Jan. 29, 1952; 2,698,236 issued Dec. 28, 1954; and 2,543,181 issued Feb. 27, 1951 of E. 11. Land and US. Pat. No. 2,352,014 of Rott issued June .20, 1944. The invention can also be used in color transfer processes which utilize the diffusion transfer of developer, coupler or dye, from a light-sensitive layer to a second layer, such as described in US. Pat. No. 2,559,643 of Land, issued July 10, 1951; US. Pat. No. 2,698,798 issued Jan. 4, 1955; US. Pat. No. 2,756,142 of Yutzy issued July 14, 1956; US. Pat. No. 3,252,915 of Weyerts et al. issued May 31, 1966; and US. Pat. No. 3,227,550 of Whitman et al. issued Jan. 4, 1966. The described silver complexes are useful in other elements and processes designed for color photography, such as described in US. Pat. No. 3,242,294 of Barr et a1. issued Mar. 29, 1966 and U.S. Pat. No. 2,252,718 of Mannes et al. issued Aug. 14,1961.
The invention can be employed with photographic elements and processes designed for use in lithography, preparation of direct prints, or in colloid transfer processed, as well as in elements designed for processing in monobath processes, such as in monobath processes described in US. Pat. No. 2,875,048 of Haist et al. issued Feb. 24, 1959, and web-type processing such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,179,517 of Tregillus et a1.
Another embodiment of the invention is a photographic process comprising physical development of a latent image in a radiation-sensitive metal salt employing a stable source of metal especially silver, for the described physical development which is a stable metal complex as described herein.
An especially suitable process, however, comprises physically developing a latent image in a photographic element containing (a) a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and (b) a stable source of silver for physical development which is a stable metal complex, as described, wherein the metal is silver, with a silver halide developer solution.
A wide range of processing conditions can be employed depending on the desired image, photographic element processed, developer employed and the like. Processing is usually carried out under ambient conditions of temperature and pressure, e.g., a temperature of about C. to about 30 C., but higher temperatures can be employed if desired, such as temperatures above about 50 C., e.g., about 50 to about 150C.
The time required for processing can vary widely, such as from about 1 second to several minutes or more depending on processing conditions and desired image. Employing an element containing a described silver-dye complex and a described stable source of silver for physical development, a good image can be produced in about 2 to about 60 seconds when a silver halide developer solution is employed for processing.
Development activators which can be used according to the invention include any of those which provide the desired activation of the described developing agents. These include alkaline activators such as inorganic alkalis, for example, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide and lithium hydroxide, alkali metal carbonates, such as sodium carbonate and potassium carbonate, and organic alkaline development activators such as quaternary ammonium bases and salts and similar alkaline materials and/or alkali releasing materials, and the like.
Processing compositions, such as developer solutions and/or stabilizersolutions and/or activator solutions, can be applied to or otherwise contacted with the described photographic elements in any suitable manner, including for instance, dipping, spraying and/or suitable surface applications, such as with rollers or other mechanical means.
A useful process according to the invention of effecting development of a photographic element containing a silverdye complex, as described, and a silver-organic complex, as
described, which is a stable source of silver for physical development comprises contacting the photographic element with a silver halide developing agent in the presence of a development activator, such as contacting the photographic element with an aqueous alkaline developer solution. This silver halide developer can be a physical developer if desired, e.g., one containing a source of silver for physical development, such as a water-soluble silver salt, e.g., silver nitrate, and/or one of the described silver complexes.
A further embodiment of the invention is a photographic composition comprising (a) a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal complex, as described herein, and (b) a silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physicaldevelopment upon exposure to radiation. This photographic composition can be a photographic emulsion.
Another embodiment of the invention is a physical developer composition comprising:
A. a silver halide developing agent and/or other suitable reducing agent, and
B. a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal complex as described. This physical developer is typically an alkaline solution, such as an alkaline solution containing a polar solvent including, for example, water, ethylene glycol, alcohol, and the like.
It is often desirable to include a suitable hardener, as described herein, in the physical developer. A wide range of concentrations can be employed, depending on the element processed, processing conditions, components of the physical developer, and the like. A concentration of about 0.1 to about 1.5 percent by weight of hardener of the total physical developer composition is usually sufficient.
One or more components of the described physical developer can be stored in separate containers, such as in separate packets or bottles as part of a kit before use. At the time of or shortly before use, the component or components can be mixed together and/or diluted with a suitable solvent, such as water, to the desired concentration.
It can be advantageous in some cases to have an antifoggant present in a processing composition according to the invention and/or in the photographic element processed. Suitable antifoggants include organic antifoggants, such as benzotriazole, benzimidazole, Z-mercaptobenzimidazole, and mercaptoazole antifoggants. An inorganic antifoggant, such as potassium bromide, potassium iodide and/or sodium bromide can be employed if desired. One of the advantages of the invention is that some of the organic complexing moieties can provide toning of the developed image. Some of the organic complexing moieties are also antifoggants.
The following examples are included for a further understanding of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1 A photographic element is prepared in Example 1 employing a coating of the following mixture on a film support:
One milliliter of solution of the organic moiety set out in following Table l on column A is added to the resulting mixture before coating and the volume brought to about l2 ml. with water. This solution contains a concentration of described organic moiety sufficient to provide a preferred ratio of moles of Sodium sulfite Hydroquinone Sodium hydroxide Potassium bromide Water to 90.0 g. 45.0 g. 37.5 g. 30.0 g. l |v and fixed by immersing for 2 minutes in the following solution:
Sodium thiosulfate Sodium sulfite Acetic acid (28%) Boric acid Potassium alum Water 240.0 g. l5.0 g. 48.0 cc.
A high-resolution neutral image having high covering power (covering power=density/silver coverage in grams per square foot) and good reflection density is produced in each instance.
TABLE I Column A: Column 8:
moiety complexed ratio of moles with silver as of organic stable source of moiety to total silver for physical moles of silver Example development in coating l Mercaptoacetic acid 0.35-0.50 2 Mcrcaptopropionic acid 0.25-0.35 3 Mercaptoisobutyric acid 0.35-0.50 4 Mercaptosuccinic acid 0.3-0.65 5 alpha-Mercaptoadipic acid 0.5-0.7 6 L-cysteine 01-05 7 Mercaptoacetanilide 06-09 8 Thiobarbituric acid 0.3-0.4 9 l,3-diethyl-Z-thiobarbituric acid 1.5-3.0 l Z-Thiouracil 0r5-0.7 ll lmidazolidine-Z-thione 06-09 12 l,3-bis(4-carboxyphenyl)- l,3dimethylthiourea 0.8-l .2 l3 l,3-bis(2-carboxyethyl)- bcnzimidazole-2-thione 1r2-l.5 I4 I-( 3,5-dicarboxyphenyl)- S-mercaptotetrazole 0r55-0.8 l D-xylose diethyl mercaptal l.2-2.0+ l6 S,5-dithiobis( lphenyltetra zole) 0.6 I? 4-carboxybenzyl dimethyldithio-carbamate L36 l8 ll,l4,l7,20-tetrakis(hydroxymethyl)- l3. l 6,l 9-trioxa-4,7,l O-trithial.2,22-docosanetriol l.8-2.0+ l9 2-hydroxyethylamino-oligoethylenesulfide 06-08 20 4-(hydroxymethyl)cyclohexylmethylaminooligoethylenesulfide 0.6-0.9 2| S-carbexy-Z-phenyl-d-thiopyridine 4-0.7 22 S-carbethoxy-l-methyl-2-phenyl-4- thiopyrimidine l.0-l.3 23 S-methyloxazolidine-Z-thionc 0.6-0.7 24 Z-(carboxymethylthio)-5-phenyl- 1,3,4-oxadiazole l.0-3.0+ 25 4-( l,2-dicarboxyethylthio)- S-phenylcatechol l2-2.7 26 S-(o-carboxyphenyl)thioglycolic acid l.5-3.0+ 27 4-(methylthio)phenol 4.0+ 2B Phenylthioacetic acid l.03.0+ 29 4-(carboxymethylthio)aniline 1.0-3.0 30 3-thiavaleric acid l.22.0+ 3| S-(carboxymethyl)isothiourca 0.8-2.l 32 S-(2-carboxymethyl)isothiourea 0.2-2.0
S-(J-carboxypropyl)isothiourea S-(2-carboxyisopropyl)isothioureu S-(3-aulfopropyl)isothiourea 2(2-carboxyethylthio)-A- imidazoline 2-(2-furylthio)benzoic acid (2-furylthio)acetic acid 2(2-furylthio)propionic acid 3-(2-t'urylthi0)propionic acid (2-turylthio)succinic acid J-Ihiaglutarie acid S-thiaadipic acid 4-thiapimelic acid 4-carboxy-3-thiadipic acid 2.2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-thiapimelic acid 5,S-dicarbethoxy-Z,Z-dimethyl- 3-thiavaleric acid 4-oxo-3-thiavaleric acid 3,3-dithiodipropionic acid S-thioctic acid 2,2-dithiodibenzoic acid 3 5-dithiapimelic acid 4-mcthyl-3,S-dithiapimelic acid (Cyclohcxylidenedithio)diacetic acid Acetylenetetrathiotetraacetic acid 3,6-dithiasuberic acid 4,5-dimethyl-3.o-dithiasuberic acid 2,7-dimethyl-3,o-dithiasuberic acid Z,8-dimcthyl-3,7-dithiasehacic acid 3,9-dithiahendecane-l ,l l-dioic acid Copoly(N-S-thiahutylacrylamide) (3-acryloyloxypropane-l-sulfonic acid sodium salt) l:| or 1:3 mole ratio 3-methyl-l-butyn-3-ol 1,8 mole ethylene oxide adduct of 3-methyl-l-butyn-3-ol 5 mole ethylene oxide adduct of 3-methyl-l-butyn-3-ol 3-methyl-l-peniyn-3-ol 2.2 mole ethylene oxide adduct of S-methyl-l-pentyn-Ll-ol l-hexyn-J-ol l-ethynylcyclopentanol l-ethynylcyclohexanol 2.2 mole ethylene oxide adduct of l-cthylnylcyclohexanol Z-propynyl cyclohexylcarboxylatc 4-t-butyll -ethynylcyclohexan0l 3 (diethylamino)-lbutyne Methyl prupiolate 3,5-dimethyl-l-hexyn-3-ol 4-( l -hydroxy-2-propynyl) cyclohexcne 3-cyclopropyll -butyn-3-ol 3-phenyl'l-propyn3-ol 3-(p-chlorophenyl)-l-butyn-3-ol 3-methyl-l nonyn-3-ol, 10 mole ethylene oxide adduct 1,]0-phenanthroline l-(4-carboxyphenyl)-3,5-dimethyl 4-phenylpyrazole Sodium dicyanamide (NaN(CN),) 6-carboxy-7-hydroxyl ,3a,4
triazaindene S-hydroxyquinoline B-hydroxyquinoline sulfate Saccharin Pseudolhiohydantoin 2,4-thiazolidinedione S-suliobenzotriazole (m-phenyleriedioxy)diacetic acid Glycolic acid Lactic acid Melhyllactic acid Malic acid Tartaric acid Citric acid Tetrahydroxysuccinic acid ll-hydroxystearic acid Oxalic acid l.23.0+ l.5-3.0+ l .4-3.0+
o.2-2ro+ Oil-2.0+
up to L0 l.5-4.0+
Gib-3.0+ 0.3-3 .0+
EXAMPLE 101 The procedure set out in Example 1 is repeated with a silver-organic complex using organic moieties within the scope of the following formula in place of the designated organic moiety of Examples 1-100:
Bar S 8 at i g g 7 R30 S odium thiosult'ate pentahydrate l6 Sodium hydroxide l5 3. 4-rnethyl-l-phenyl-3-pyrazolidone 4.5 g.
The paper receiver sheet is then laminated to the exposed coating for 30 seconds. A positive image is formed on the receiver sheet and has a clean background. The positive image has a maximum density of 1.2.
EXAMPLE I27 This illustrates color processing according to the invention.
A photographic element is prepared as set out in Example 101. After drying, the resulting coating is exposed sensitometrically. It is then immersed in a color developer containing a cyan coupler as described in US. Pat. No. 2,252,7[8 of Meatless .sl tist aatimmsrss successively in a p- TABLE II Column A, R30 n Column B, R3 Column 0, R32 Colujn D (CHQ COOH 1 CH H 1.5-1.8 (CHz) COOH 2 CH3 H 1.6-2.0 (CH- )nCOOH 3 CH3 H 1.8-2.0 (CHQDCOOH 5 CH3 H 1.8-2.0 (CHQDC OOH 1 CH3 COOH 0.8-2.0 (CHflnCOOH 2 CH3 COOH 1.5-2.0 (CHQ COOH 3 CH COOH 1.6-1.8 (CHQDCOOH 1 CH3 COOEt 0.76-2.5 (CHQ COOH 2 CH3 COOEt 1.0-2.0 (CH2)DCOOH 3 CH COOEt 1.6-2.0 (CHQBCOOH 1 OHQOOOH H 1.0-2.0 (CHQ COOH 3 CH COOH H 1.0-2.0 (OH2)BCOOH 1 CH COOHa 0.9-1.4 (CHQ COOH 2 CH COOH3 0.9-1.4: (CH2)nSOaH 2 CH3 H 0.4-1.4 III-061140 OH CH3 H 0.9-1.4 (CHQ COOH 1 CsHs H 0.6-1.4 I O0 CH3 H 0.8-1.4 CH3 COOH H 1.0-1.6 COOEt H 1.2-2.0 OHgCOOEt H 1.4-2.0 CH COOEt H 1.4-2.0 CH2SO2(CH2)3CH3 H 0.8-1.4 I CH H 1.0-2.0 CHgC OOH 125 H COOH H 0.1-0.4
EXAMPLE 126 bath, a bleach bath, and a fix bath as described in this US.
This illustrates a diffusion transfer process according to the invention.
A photographic element is prepared by coating the following mixture on a film support:
Component Millilitcrs a. aqueous solution containing l5% by weight of saponin b. 0.0l6 molar aqueous solution of l-carboxyrnethyl-S-I (3-ethyl-2- benzoxazolinylidene)-ethylidene]- lphenyl-Lthiohydantoin (dye) c. 0.2 molar aqueous solution of silver-p-toluene sulfonatc d. aqueous solution containing [5% by weight of photographic gelatin e. 0.25 molar solution of 5- carboxy-li- (carboxymelhyl)-4-methyl-4-thiazoline- Z-thione (forms silver complex in situ) in ethanol f. 7 N Sulfuric acid g. 0.l6 molar aqueous ethanol solution of mucochloric acid h. 0.l N aqueous sodium hydroxide solution This is coated on a film support at the rate of 60 mg. per square foot of silver. After drying, it is exposed sensitometrically. A paper receiver sheet containing colloidal silver development nuclei is soaked for 2 minutes in a monobath having the following composition:
ll g.
Z-methylaminoethanol (l7.2% SO, adduct) I H ydroquinone patent to provide the desired colored image. The resulting 5 cyan image has good sharpness of detail over a range of densities.
Other color couplers which are suitable are set out in US. Pat. No. 3,113,864 of Yager et al.
EXAMPLE 128 Good results are obtained when an element and process is employed according to U.S. Pat. No. 2,113,329 of Mannes issued Apr. 5, 1938 employing a silver complex of S-carbethoxy-3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-4-thiazolidone-Z-thione as a sta ble source of silver for physical development, as set out in Example l, in the initial development step of this color process.
EXAMPLE 129 The procedure set out in the immediate preceding example is repeated employing l-ethynylcyclopentanol in place of the described thiazoline-Z-thione compound.
Agood image is obtained.
7 EXAMPLE 130 EXAMPLE131 The procedure set out in the immediate preceding example is repeated employing l-ethynylcyclopentanol in place of the described thiazo1ine-2-thione compound.
A good image is obtained.
EXAMPLE 132 A good color image is also obtained employing an element and process described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,304,940 of Mannes et a1. using a blue sensitive silver-dye complex and a yellow coupler in a first layer, a green sensitive silver-dye complex and a magenta coupler in a second layer and a red sensitive silverdye complex and a cyan coupler in a third layer. The red sensitive silver-dye complex, green sensitive silver-dye complex and blue sensitive silver-dye complex are as described in French Patent 1,453,635 of Gilman, Goffe and Jones issued Aug. 16, 1966, and the described couplers are set out in Mees, The Theory of the Photographic Process," Third Edition, (1966), page 394. A complex of silver with -carbethoxy-3- carboxymethyl-4-methyl-4-thiazolidine-2-thione is employed in each layer of the photographic element, as set out in Example l, as a stable source of silver for physical development in the initial development step of the process.
The results of the preceding examples indicate that coatings are obtained designed for color processing which are less turbid than photographic silver halide coatings, provide high resolution and sharpness, provide advantageous spectral sensitivity, eliminate the necessity of a yellow filter layer to account for inherent blue sensitivity of silver halide and eliminate many complicated ripening holding, noodling and/or washing steps necessary in the preparation of photographic silver halide coatings.
EXAMPLE 133 Photographic Coating Dmax Dmin Speed Tone A 2.l 0.20 1.0 Neutral Black B brown fog, no image C 1.4 0.25 0.4-0.5 Blue-gray The results demonstrate that a combination of increased maximum density, better neutral black tone, and reduction of fog or stain, in addition to increased photographic speed can be obtained according to the invention as compared to use of related known sources of silver for physical development.
The elements, processes and compositions of the invention are useful in physical development of a latent image in an exposed radiation-sensitive titanium compound, such as titanium dioxide or a titanium dioxide dye complex, such as described in French Patent 1,437,765. Although the exact mechanism of reaction which takes place is not fully understood, it is believed that when a dye-sensitized titanium dioxide is employed with a described silver-dye complex in combination with a described silver-organic complex of the invention as a stable source of silver for physical development a bifunctional radiation-sensitive coating is provided. That is, two different types of radiation-sensitive compounds are provided which can be P @Eli l F 'L@QY@EL9 st i ferent types of images. For example, employing a mixture of (a) silver-dye complex, as described herein, (b) a dye-sensitized titanium dioxide compound, as described in French Patent 1,437,765 and (c) a silver-organic complex, as described herein, as a stable source of silver for physical development, a radiation-sensitive element can be exposed 'with a high-intensity exposure. The resulting image is developed as described in Example 1 to provide only an image from the silver-dye complex. However, an exposure of about 10 to about 50 times less than the intense exposure followed by physical development after immersing in a solution containing a water-soluble silver salt, provides an image resulting from the titanium dioxide. This provides the advantage that a permanent silver image, which can be developed or not as desired, can be produced with the option of adding information later by means of the latent image in the titanium dioxide. Both the titanium dioxide and silver-dye complex, as described, provide sites for physical development using the stable sources of metal for physical development according to the invention.
EXAMPLE 134 This illustrates the invention employing titanium dioxide, which is dye sensitized as a radiation-sensitive component.
A photographic element is prepared by mixing and coating the following components at 40 C. under red safe-light conditions:
Component Concentration This composition is coated on a paper support at a rate of 0.009 inch wet thickness. The coating is dried and exposed sensitometrically using a l00-watt tungsten light source. The resulting coating is developed as set out in Example 1. Only an image characteristic of the exposed silver-dye complex is visible. After minutes storage in the dark, the element is exposed sensitometrically a second time, for 10 seconds, on a portion of the element which contains no developed image. The element is then immersed in a 1 percent aqueous silver nitrate solution for 10 seconds followed by rinsing in water for 10 seconds and developing as set out in Example 1. A second image, of lower density than the silver-dye image and characteristic of a titanium dioxide sensitized with dye image, is 9929 29 The metal-organic complexes, described herein, can be employed in a physical development process as set out in U.S. Pat. No. 2,735,773 of Dippel and Houtman issued Feb. 21, 1956 or U.S. Pat. No. 2,764,484 of Jonge et a1. issued Sept. 25, 1956. For example, according to the invention a radiationsensitive material, such as a photographic element containing a silver-dye complex, subsequent to exposure is contacted in a suitable manner with mercurous ions, for example, in 0.01 N mercurous nitrate or a mercurous salt of one of the described compounds of the invention, and then is contacted in a suitable manner with a physical developer containing a metal-organic complex according to the invention, such as a silverthiazolinc;Z-thione or silver thiagolidine-Z-thione complex.
The described 2-furyl thioethers, especially Z-furyl thioethers which contain a carboxyalkylthio or carboxyarylthio group in the 2 position of a furan ring, can be prepared by a one step method by reacting (a) an aliphatic or aromatic monoor dithiol with (b) a 2,5-diloweracyloxy-2, 5- dihydrofuran; 2,5-dihydro-2,5-diloweralkoxyfuran; 2,5- dihydro-2,5-diloweralkoxy-Z-methylfuran; or fumaric dialdehyde. This preparation is described in copending application Ser. No. 764,331 now US. Pat. No. 3,591,609, of R. A. Silverman filed concurrently herewith. For example (2-furylthio)-propionic acid can be prepared by refluxing thiopropionic acid with 2,5-dihydro-2,S-dimethoxyfuran in about stoichiometric concentrations in a suitable solvent such as acetonitrile or acetic acid.
The exact bonding in the reaction product of the described organic moieties and metal suitable for physical development as described, is not fully understood. These reaction products, such as the reaction product of a thiazoline-Z-thione compound with a water-soluble silver salt, such as silver nitrate, are designated as metal-organic complexes. These can include bonding which is covalent, ionic, or some other type. For example, a described metal-organic complex can be a so-called metal-organic salt, e.g., a silver salt, containing bonding which is characteristic of metal salts.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention as described hereinabove and as defined in the appended claims.
lclaim:
l. A photographic element comprising a support, a radiation-sensitive silvendye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation and a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine,
a dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: v
a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula:
a imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formulaz a mercaptocarboxyli c acid, a mercapt oacetyl amide, an alkyne compound represented by the formula:
a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid, a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, a thiaalkyl compound represented by the formula:
[(XVI)] X S Z a dithiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: [(X- VIl)]XS-SZ an oligothiaalkyl compound representedbytheforrnula: p
Mali...
oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinicacid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R R R, and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl con taining six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a fiveor six-member heterocyclic ring; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16; R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or
atoms completing a ring with R11: R is P:R1s,
or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R wherein R,,,, R,,,, R and R are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a fiveor sixmember heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10.
2. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal is silver and said metal complex is a silver complex.
3. An element as in claim 1 wherein said stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development is a stable complex of silver with a thiazoline-Z-thione.
4. A photographic element as in claim 3 in which said metalorganic complex is a complex of silver with a 4-thiazoline-2- thione, and wherein said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about l0.
5. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal-organic complex is a stable silver-5-carbethoxy-3-carboxymethyl-4- methyl-4-thiazoline-2-thione complex.
6. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal-organic complex is a stable silver-organic complex of silver with a polymer containing sulfur as a ligand atom.
7. An element as in claim 1 which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
8. An element as in claim I which additionally contains a binder and a hardener for said binder.
9. An element as in claim 1 which additionally contains a photographic silver halide.
10. A photographic element as in claim 1 wherein said metal is silver and said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10.
ii. A shaogmpmc ei'miiFZs in claim 1 were... said metal is silver, said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10 and the molar ratio of the organic moiety to said metal in said metal-organic complex is about 0.2 to about 7.
12. In a photographic process comprising physical development of a latent image in a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, employing a source of metal for said physical development, the improvement comprising employing a stable source of metal for said physical development which is a stable metal complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a o...,q ttiissst amstsissr ss t qkxths tqrmyl t0 1.
a thiourea derivative represented by the formula: [(Vl)] a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: VIII )1 an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: [(Xl)] a mercaptocarboxylic acid, a mercaptoacetyl amide, an al kyne compound represented by the formula: [(XIV)] oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl Farboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R R R and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five or six-member heterocyclic ring; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R,.,; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R R is O-R -SR or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R wherein R,,;, R R and R are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or Z is a fiveor six-member heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylsne containing one to five sa bs at msn is P9 L9, a. ,7
13. A photographic process as in claim 12 comprising physical development of a latent image in an element which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum, and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
14. A photographic process as in claim 12 wherein said metal is silver and said metal complex is a silver complex.
15. The process of claim 14 wherein the photographic process is a diffusion transfer process.
16. A photographic composition comprising a radiationsensitive silver-dye complex and a stable source of metal for physical development of a latent image in said silver-dye complex, said stable source of metal being a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a
dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: [(V)] a thiourea derivative represented by the formula:
a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: [(Vlll)] an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: [(Xl)] VIIl)] X S1. Z oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R R R and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five or sixmember heterocyclic ring; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R wherein R R,,,, R and R are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a fiveor sixmember heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z is Z or hydrogen, Y is alkylene containing one tofive carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10. i
17. A photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal-organic complex is a silver complex.
18: A photographic composition as in claim 16 whiiri'siiili i metal-organic complex is a complex of silver with a 4- thiazq insr ihipne V, ,7 n 19. A photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal is silver and said composition has a pAg range of about iQt ab qL Q- V .1... 20 A photographic composition as in claim 16 which additionally contains a photographic silver halide. N y n w v 21. A physical developer composition comprising (a) a silver halide developing agent, and (b) a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is:
a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a
dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: [(V)] a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: [(Vlll)] an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: [(XD] a mercaptocarboxylic acid, a mercaptoacetyl amide, an alkyne compound represented by the formula; [(XlV)] a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid, a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, a thiaalkyl compound represented by the formula:
[(XVI)] X S Z a dithiaalkyl compound represented by the formula:
[(XVII)]X S S Z an oligothiaalkyl compound represented by the fonnula:
[(XVIII)] X S Y-S Z oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R R R and R are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a fiveor six-member heterocyclic ring; R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R R is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R wherein R R R and R are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a fiveor sixmember heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is l to 10.
22, The physical developer composition of claim 21 wherein the composition is an alkaline solution.
23. A physical developer composition as in claim 21 wherein said metal complex is a silver complex.

Claims (21)

  1. 2. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal is silver and said metal complex is a silver complex.
  2. 3. An element as in claim 1 wherein said stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development is a stable complex of silver with a thiazoline-2-thione.
  3. 4. A photographic element as in claim 3 in which said metal-organic complex is a complex of silver with a 4-thiazoline-2-thione, and wherein said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10.
  4. 5. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal-organic complex is a stable silver-5-carbethoxy-3-carboxymethyl-4-methyl-4-thiazoline-2-thione complex.
  5. 6. An element as in claim 1 wherein said metal-organic complex is a stable silver-organic complex of silver with a polymer containing sulfur as a ligand atom.
  6. 7. An element as in claim 1 which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
  7. 8. An element as in claim 1 which additionally contains a binder and a hardener for said binder.
  8. 9. An element as in claim 1 which additionally contains a photographic silver halide.
  9. 10. A photographic element as in claim 1 wherein said metal is silver and said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10.
  10. 11. A photographic element as in claim 1 wherein said metal is silver, said element has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10 and the molar ratio of the organic moiety to said metal in said metal-organic complex is about 0.2 to about 7.
  11. 12. In a photographic process comprising physical development of a latent image in a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation which has the property of forming active sites for physical development upon exposure to radiation, employing a source of metal for said physical development, the improvement comprising employing a stable source of metal for said physical development which is a stable metal complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound whiCh is: a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: ((V)) a thiourea derivative represented by the formula: ((VI)) a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: (VIII)) an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: ((XI)) a mercaptocarboxylic acid, a mercaptoacetyl amide, an alkyne compound represented by the formula: ((XIV)) a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid, hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, a thiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVI)) X - S - Z a dithiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVII)) X -S - S - Z an oligothiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVIII)) X - S - Y-S -n Z'' oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R1, R2, R4 and R5 are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five-or six-member heterocyclic ring; R15 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16; R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16; R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R17; R17 is -O-R18, -S-R19, or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R16, wherein R18, R19, R20, and R21 are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or Z is a five- or six-member heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z'' is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10.
  12. 13. A photographic process as in claim 12 comprising physical development of a latent image in an element which contains a layer sensitive to the red region of the spectrum, a layer sensitive to the green region of the spectrum, and a layer sensitive to the blue region of the spectrum.
  13. 14. A photographic process as in claim 12 wherein said metal is silver and said metal complex is a silver complex.
  14. 15. The process of claim 14 wherein the photographic process is a diffusion transfer process.
  15. 16. A photographic composition comprising a radiation-sensitive silver-dye complex and a stable source of metal for physical development of a latent image in said silver-dye complex, said stable source of metal being a stable metal-organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is: a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: ((V)) a thiourea derivative represented by the formula: a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: ((VIII)) an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: ((XI)) a mercaptocarboxylic acid, mercaptoacetyl amide, an alkyne compound represented by the formula: ((XIV)) a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid, a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, a thiaalkyl compound represented by the formula:((XVI) X - S - Z a dithiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVII) X- S - S - Z an oligothiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVIII)) X - S - Y-S -n Z '' oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R1, R2, R4 and R5 are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five- or six-member heterocyclic ring; R15 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16; R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R17; R17 is -O-R18, -S-R19, or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R16 wherein R18, R19, R20 and R21 are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a five- or six-member heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z'' is Z or hydrogen, Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10.
  16. 17. A photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal-organic complex is a silver complex.
  17. 18. A photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal-organic complex is a complex of silver with a 4-thiazoline-2-thione.
  18. 19. A photographic composition as in claim 16 wherein said metal is silver and said composition has a pAg range of about 2.0 to about 10. 20 A photographic composition as in claim 16 which additionally contains a photographic silver halide.
  19. 21. A physical developer composition comprising (a) a silver halide developing agent, and (b) a stable source of metal for physical development which is a stable metal organic complex of a metal suitable for physical development with a compound which is: a thiazoline thione, a thiazolidine thione, a thiopyrimidine, a dithiocarbamate represented by the formula: ((V)) a thiourea derivative represented by the formula:((VI)) a pseudothiohydantoin represented by the formula: ((VIII)) an imidazolidine, an imidazoline, an isothiourea derivative represented by the formula: ((XI)) a mercaptocarboxylic acid, a mercaptoacetyl amide, an alkyne compound represented by the formula; ((XIV)) a hydroxyalkyl carboxylic acid, a hydroxy heterocyclic carboxylic acid, a thiaalkyl compound represented by the formula:((XVI)) X - S - Z a dithiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVII))X - S - S - Z an oligothiaalkyl compound represented by the formula: ((XVIII)) X - S- Y-S -n Z'' oxalic acid, a phenylene dioxy dialkyl carboxylic acid, succinic acid, or a polymer containing a ligand atom having the property of complexing a metal suitable for physical development, wherein R1, R2, R4 and R5 are hydrogen, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a five- or six-member heterocyclic ring; R15 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R16; R16 is hydrogen, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or atoms completing a ring with R17; R17 is -O-R18, -S-R19, or an alkylene oxide polymer adduct or atoms completing a ring with R16 wherein R18, R19, R20 and R21 are each hydrogen, acyl containing one to five carbon atoms, or alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms; wherein Z or X is a five- or six-member heterocyclic ring, aryl containing six to 30 carbon atoms, alkyl containing one to 20 carbon atoms, or acyl containing one to five carbon atoms; Z'' is Z or hydrogen; Y is alkylene containing one to five carbon atoms; n is 1 to 10.
  20. 22. The physical developer composition of claim 21 wherein the composition is an alkaline solution.
  21. 23. A physical developer composition as in claim 21 wherein said metal complex is a silver complex.
US764330A 1968-10-01 1968-10-01 Photographic element, composition and process Expired - Lifetime US3647439A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US76433068A 1968-10-01 1968-10-01

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3647439A true US3647439A (en) 1972-03-07

Family

ID=25070401

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US764330A Expired - Lifetime US3647439A (en) 1968-10-01 1968-10-01 Photographic element, composition and process

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (1) US3647439A (en)
JP (1) JPS516535B1 (en)
CA (1) CA922148A (en)
DE (1) DE1949418A1 (en)
GB (2) GB1292617A (en)

Cited By (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3791829A (en) * 1972-07-03 1974-02-12 Itek Corp Physically developable copy medium with photoconductors and complexing agent
US3986877A (en) * 1973-09-25 1976-10-19 Agfa-Gevaert, N.V. Development promoting compounds for silver halide photography
US4047952A (en) * 1975-05-02 1977-09-13 Eastman Kodak Company Imagewise soluble silver salt intensification of diffusion transfer silver images
US4052211A (en) * 1972-11-30 1977-10-04 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Image forming material
US4066461A (en) * 1975-10-27 1978-01-03 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Color photographic process
US4156610A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-05-29 Eastman Kodak Company Copper physical development using heterocyclic ligand copper(I) complexes
US4163669A (en) * 1977-04-27 1979-08-07 Mitsubishi Paper Mills, Ltd. Multilayer silver halide color photographic material
US4168980A (en) * 1977-08-19 1979-09-25 Eastman Kodak Company Heat developable photographic material and process
US4178180A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-12-11 Eastman Kodak Company Copper physical development using heterocyclic ligand copper (I) complexes
US4220709A (en) * 1977-12-08 1980-09-02 Eastman Kodak Company Heat developable imaging materials and process
US4256830A (en) * 1977-11-22 1981-03-17 Agfa-Gevaert, A.G. Photographic material containing a stabilizer
US4400462A (en) * 1980-06-11 1983-08-23 Konishiroku Photo Industry Co., Ltd. Method for the formation of photographic images
US5206122A (en) * 1990-03-14 1993-04-27 Janssen Pharmaceutica N.V. Light stable physical developer
US6043013A (en) * 1998-01-29 2000-03-28 Eastman Kodak Company Color photographic element containing elemental silver and heterocyclic thiol in a non-light sensitive layer
US6197814B1 (en) * 1997-10-10 2001-03-06 Nvid International, Inc. Disinfectant and method of making
US20010041188A1 (en) * 1999-12-30 2001-11-15 Gibbins Bruce L. Methods and compositions for improved delivery devices
US6649330B2 (en) * 2001-12-28 2003-11-18 Eastman Kodak Company Silver halide imaging element containing sequestered silver ions
US6689335B1 (en) 2002-12-19 2004-02-10 Eastman Kodak Company Silver ion sequester and release agent
US20050202066A1 (en) * 2003-08-28 2005-09-15 Arata Andrew B. Silver dihydrogen citrate compositions comprising a second antimicrobial agent
US20060051430A1 (en) * 2004-09-07 2006-03-09 Arata Andrew B Silver dihydrogen citrate compositions
US20070003603A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2007-01-04 Karandikar Bhalchandra M Antimicrobial silver compositions
US20070254044A1 (en) * 2004-09-20 2007-11-01 Acrymed, Inc. Antimicrobial Amorphous Compositions
US20070269530A1 (en) * 1999-04-07 2007-11-22 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of making
US20070293800A1 (en) * 2006-04-28 2007-12-20 Mcmaken Jack D Antimicrobial site dressings
US7435438B1 (en) 2003-05-16 2008-10-14 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of use
US20090035342A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2009-02-05 Karandikar Bhalchandra M Antimicrobial Devices and Compositions
US20090099257A1 (en) * 2002-08-31 2009-04-16 Arata Andrew B Composition and process for treating acne
US7601755B2 (en) 2000-04-06 2009-10-13 Pure Bioscience Process for treating water
US20100034882A1 (en) * 1997-11-14 2010-02-11 Gibbins Bruce L Silver-containing compositions, devices and methods for making
US20100190004A1 (en) * 2008-11-24 2010-07-29 Gibbins Bruce L Antimicrobial laminate constructs
US8361553B2 (en) 2004-07-30 2013-01-29 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Methods and compositions for metal nanoparticle treated surfaces
US8486426B2 (en) 2002-07-29 2013-07-16 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Methods and compositions for treatment of dermal conditions

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2084420A (en) * 1933-07-25 1937-06-22 Agfa Ansco Corp Manufacture of photographic pictures
GB920277A (en) * 1959-01-10 1963-03-06 Agfa Ag A process for the production of photographic silver images
GB936609A (en) * 1958-10-11 1963-09-11 Philips Nv Improvements in or relating to stabilized photographic physical developers
US3155518A (en) * 1963-10-21 1964-11-03 Du Pont Silver halide compositions, layers and elements
US3155516A (en) * 1961-12-08 1964-11-03 Du Pont Photographic products
FR1453635A (en) * 1964-11-16 1966-06-03 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic products containing complexes of silver and dyes
US3330663A (en) * 1964-08-14 1967-07-11 Agfa Gevaert Ag Silver salts of sulfur-containing aliphatic carboxylic acids as lightsensitive compounds
US3368899A (en) * 1964-10-13 1968-02-13 Du Pont Emulsion layers and elements
GB1125646A (en) * 1965-05-19 1968-08-28 Agfa Gevaert Ag Process for the production of photographic images

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2084420A (en) * 1933-07-25 1937-06-22 Agfa Ansco Corp Manufacture of photographic pictures
GB936609A (en) * 1958-10-11 1963-09-11 Philips Nv Improvements in or relating to stabilized photographic physical developers
GB920277A (en) * 1959-01-10 1963-03-06 Agfa Ag A process for the production of photographic silver images
US3155516A (en) * 1961-12-08 1964-11-03 Du Pont Photographic products
US3155519A (en) * 1961-12-08 1964-11-03 Du Pont Photographic compositions, layers and elements
US3155518A (en) * 1963-10-21 1964-11-03 Du Pont Silver halide compositions, layers and elements
US3330663A (en) * 1964-08-14 1967-07-11 Agfa Gevaert Ag Silver salts of sulfur-containing aliphatic carboxylic acids as lightsensitive compounds
US3368899A (en) * 1964-10-13 1968-02-13 Du Pont Emulsion layers and elements
FR1453635A (en) * 1964-11-16 1966-06-03 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic products containing complexes of silver and dyes
US3446619A (en) * 1964-11-16 1969-05-27 Eastman Kodak Co Radiation sensitive silver-dye complexes
GB1125646A (en) * 1965-05-19 1968-08-28 Agfa Gevaert Ag Process for the production of photographic images

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Van Veelan et al., Photographische Korr Espondenz, Vol. 99, No. 9 pps. 139 145, Sept., 1963 *

Cited By (49)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3791829A (en) * 1972-07-03 1974-02-12 Itek Corp Physically developable copy medium with photoconductors and complexing agent
US4052211A (en) * 1972-11-30 1977-10-04 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Image forming material
US3986877A (en) * 1973-09-25 1976-10-19 Agfa-Gevaert, N.V. Development promoting compounds for silver halide photography
US4047952A (en) * 1975-05-02 1977-09-13 Eastman Kodak Company Imagewise soluble silver salt intensification of diffusion transfer silver images
US4066461A (en) * 1975-10-27 1978-01-03 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Color photographic process
US4163669A (en) * 1977-04-27 1979-08-07 Mitsubishi Paper Mills, Ltd. Multilayer silver halide color photographic material
US4168980A (en) * 1977-08-19 1979-09-25 Eastman Kodak Company Heat developable photographic material and process
US4178180A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-12-11 Eastman Kodak Company Copper physical development using heterocyclic ligand copper (I) complexes
US4156610A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-05-29 Eastman Kodak Company Copper physical development using heterocyclic ligand copper(I) complexes
USRE31514E (en) * 1977-11-22 1984-01-31 Agfa-Gevaert Aktiengesellschaft Photographic material containing a stabilizer
US4256830A (en) * 1977-11-22 1981-03-17 Agfa-Gevaert, A.G. Photographic material containing a stabilizer
US4220709A (en) * 1977-12-08 1980-09-02 Eastman Kodak Company Heat developable imaging materials and process
US4400462A (en) * 1980-06-11 1983-08-23 Konishiroku Photo Industry Co., Ltd. Method for the formation of photographic images
US5206122A (en) * 1990-03-14 1993-04-27 Janssen Pharmaceutica N.V. Light stable physical developer
US7803407B2 (en) 1997-10-10 2010-09-28 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of making
US6197814B1 (en) * 1997-10-10 2001-03-06 Nvid International, Inc. Disinfectant and method of making
US20100034882A1 (en) * 1997-11-14 2010-02-11 Gibbins Bruce L Silver-containing compositions, devices and methods for making
US8203029B2 (en) 1997-11-14 2012-06-19 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Silver-containing compositions, devices and methods for making
US6043013A (en) * 1998-01-29 2000-03-28 Eastman Kodak Company Color photographic element containing elemental silver and heterocyclic thiol in a non-light sensitive layer
US20110009484A1 (en) * 1999-04-07 2011-01-13 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of making
US20070269530A1 (en) * 1999-04-07 2007-11-22 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of making
US20010041188A1 (en) * 1999-12-30 2001-11-15 Gibbins Bruce L. Methods and compositions for improved delivery devices
US9687503B2 (en) 1999-12-30 2017-06-27 Avent, Inc. Devices for delivering oxygen to the wounds
US8679523B2 (en) 1999-12-30 2014-03-25 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Oxygen-delivery closed cell foam matrix for wound treatment
US20100012593A1 (en) * 2000-04-06 2010-01-21 Arata Andrew B Process for treating water
US7601755B2 (en) 2000-04-06 2009-10-13 Pure Bioscience Process for treating water
US6649330B2 (en) * 2001-12-28 2003-11-18 Eastman Kodak Company Silver halide imaging element containing sequestered silver ions
US8486426B2 (en) 2002-07-29 2013-07-16 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Methods and compositions for treatment of dermal conditions
US20090099257A1 (en) * 2002-08-31 2009-04-16 Arata Andrew B Composition and process for treating acne
US6689335B1 (en) 2002-12-19 2004-02-10 Eastman Kodak Company Silver ion sequester and release agent
US7763297B2 (en) 2003-05-16 2010-07-27 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of use
US7435438B1 (en) 2003-05-16 2008-10-14 Pure Bioscience Disinfectant and method of use
US20080319062A1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2008-12-25 Arata Andrew B Disinfectant and method of use
US20070185350A1 (en) * 2003-08-28 2007-08-09 Arata Andrew B Anhydrous silver dihydrogen citrate compositions
US7732486B2 (en) 2003-08-28 2010-06-08 Pure Bioscience Anhydrous silver dihydrogen citrate compositions
US20060100273A1 (en) * 2003-08-28 2006-05-11 Pure Bioscience Anhydrous silver dihydrogen citrate compositions
US20050202066A1 (en) * 2003-08-28 2005-09-15 Arata Andrew B. Silver dihydrogen citrate compositions comprising a second antimicrobial agent
US9888691B2 (en) 2004-07-30 2018-02-13 Avent, Inc. Antimicrobial silver compositions
US20090035342A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2009-02-05 Karandikar Bhalchandra M Antimicrobial Devices and Compositions
US10251392B2 (en) 2004-07-30 2019-04-09 Avent, Inc. Antimicrobial devices and compositions
US20070003603A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2007-01-04 Karandikar Bhalchandra M Antimicrobial silver compositions
US8900624B2 (en) 2004-07-30 2014-12-02 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Antimicrobial silver compositions
US8361553B2 (en) 2004-07-30 2013-01-29 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Methods and compositions for metal nanoparticle treated surfaces
US20060051430A1 (en) * 2004-09-07 2006-03-09 Arata Andrew B Silver dihydrogen citrate compositions
US20070254044A1 (en) * 2004-09-20 2007-11-01 Acrymed, Inc. Antimicrobial Amorphous Compositions
US9289378B2 (en) 2004-09-20 2016-03-22 Avent, Inc. Antimicrobial amorphous compositions
US8293965B2 (en) 2006-04-28 2012-10-23 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Antimicrobial site dressings
US20070293800A1 (en) * 2006-04-28 2007-12-20 Mcmaken Jack D Antimicrobial site dressings
US20100190004A1 (en) * 2008-11-24 2010-07-29 Gibbins Bruce L Antimicrobial laminate constructs

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA922148A (en) 1973-03-06
DE1949418A1 (en) 1970-10-29
JPS516535B1 (en) 1976-02-28
GB1292617A (en) 1972-10-11
GB1292616A (en) 1972-10-11

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3647439A (en) Photographic element, composition and process
US3297446A (en) Synergistic sensitization of photographic systems with labile selenium and a noble metal
JP2986958B2 (en) High-contrast photographic elements containing arylsulfonamidophenylhydrazides containing alkylpyridinium groups
US4336321A (en) Silver halide photographic materials
US3241971A (en) Photographic silver halide emulsions
US3598598A (en) Fog stabilizers for photographic emulsions
US3576633A (en) Photographic process and compositions
US3658527A (en) Oxidation inhibitors for photographic materials
US5266442A (en) Method for increasing the contrast of photographic silver images
US3784381A (en) High speed silver chloroiodide emulsions
US3544336A (en) Phosphate antifoggants for photographic emulsions
US3565625A (en) Photographic elements having thiazolidine compounds in light-in-sensitive layers
JPS63314541A (en) Image forming method
US3785822A (en) Photographic emulsions and developers containing 2-mercapto heterocyclic compounds
US4054457A (en) Silver halide emulsions containing hexathiocane thiones as sensitizers
US3326689A (en) Photographic direct-print silver halide emulsions
US3706562A (en) Photographic materials and processes for developing photographic compositions
JP3240334B2 (en) Method for developing black-and-white silver halide photographic materials
US3573049A (en) Photographic materials and processes for developing photographic compositions having a zwitterionic and anionic elements
US3597213A (en) Fog reduction in photographic silver halide emulsions
JPS5950975B2 (en) How to form high contrast silver images
JP3121624B2 (en) New photo stabilizer
US3607278A (en) Photographic elements containing fogged and unfogged silver halide grains and a slow silver halide emulsion layer
US3615490A (en) Photographic overcoat comprising a benzotriazole toning agent and a silver salt of 5-mercapto-1-substituted tetrazole
JP2995360B2 (en) Silver halide photographic material