[0001] This invention relates to photographic silver bromoiodide emulsions, photographic
elements incorporating these emulsions, and processes for the use of the photographic
elements.
[0002] Photographic emulsions useful in photography typically comprise a dispersing medium,
such as gelatin, containing grains of photographic silver halide. Emulsion other than
silver bromoiodide have found only limited use in camera speed photographic elements.
Silver bromoiodide emulsions and their preparation are described in, for example,
such standard texts as Duffin, "Photographic Emulsion Chemistry", Focal Press, 1966
and Mees and James, "The Theory of the Photographic Process", MacMillan Publishing
Co., 4th Edition, 1977.
[0003] Photographic silver bromoiodide emulsions having various grain sizes and shapes are
also known in photography. Illustrative emulsions containing silver bromoiodide grains
are described in, for example, European Patent Application 330,508 and U.S. Patents
4,433,048; 4,720,452; 3,505,068 and 4,704,351.
[0004] Photographic silver bromoiodide emulsions that contain octahedral silver bromoiodide
grains are also known, such as described in U.S. Patents 4,150,994; 4,184,877 and
4,610,958 and published Japanese Patent Application (Kokai) 60-138538 published July
23, 1985.
[0005] Octahedral silver bromoiodide emulsions, particularly monodispersed emulsions, are
known to have advantages, such as high sensitivity and improved photographic properties.
However, it has been desirable to provide the following improvements: (a) improved
photographic speed and (b) decreased granularity.
[0006] It has been found that such requirements are satisfied by a photographic silver bromoiodide
emulsion comprising a dispersing medium and silver bromoiodide that (a) is octahedral
silver bromoiodide; (b) has a grain size within the range of 0.45 to 1.2 microns;
(c) contains 1 to 12 mole percent iodide; (d) has a core region (A), a surface region
(B) and a subsurface region (C) between core region (A) and surface region (B); wherein
(i) subsurface region (C) contains an iodide concentration higher than the iodide
concentration of core region (A); and, (e) the silver bromoiodide is prepared by a
process comprising, in sequence, (I) a nucleation step comprising mixing bromide salts
and silver salts in a reaction medium; then, (II) a crystal growth step under pBr
conditions within the range of 1.75 to 4.2 pBr, typically 2.0 to 2.8 pBr, enabling
formation of core region (A) comprising 50% to 90% by weight of the silver bromoiodide;
then, (III) addition to the composition from step (II) of iodide salt in which 25
to 100 mole percent of the total iodide salt is added to the composition from step
(II) within a time period of 1 second to 20 minutes, such as, 1 second to 5 minutes;
then, (IV) holding the reaction mixture from step (III) for a time period, such as
0.5 second to 20 minutes, that aids in formation of subsurface (C); then, (V) addition
of silver salts and, optionally, bromide to the reaction mixture from step (IV) until
reaction completion forming surface region (B). The step (III) is described herein
as a "dump iodide step". The method steps as described enable the formation of a higher
concentration of crystal defects in the silver bromoiodide than would otherwise be
expected. This higher concentration of crystal defects is believed to contribute to
the unexpectedly higher photographic speed of the resulting octahedral silver bromoiodide
as described.
[0007] Another aspect of the invention is a photographic element, particularly a color photographic
element, comprised of a support bearing at least one photographic silver bromoiodide
emulsion layer as described herein.
[0008] A further aspect of the invention is a method of preparing the described silver bromoiodide
emulsion including the steps of the process comprising, in sequence, (I) a nucleation
step comprising mixing bromide salts, particularly alkali metal bromide salts, and
silver salts, particularly silver nitrate, in a reaction medium, such as an aqueous
gelatin reaction medium; then, (II) a crystal growth step under pBr conditions within
the range of 1.75 to 4.2 pBr, preferably within the range of 2.0 to 2.8 pBr, enabling
formation of described core region (A) comprising 50% to 90% by weight of the silver
bromoiodide; then, (III) addition to the composition from step (II) of iodide salt
in which 25 to 100 mole percent, preferably 50 to 100 mole percent, of the total iodide
salt is added to the composition from step (II) within a time period, such as within
a time period of 1 second to 20 minutes, such as 1 second to 5 minutes, that enables
formation of subsurface region (C); then, (IV) holding the reaction mixture from step
(III) until the iodide salt dissolves and reacts, such as for a time period within
the range of 2 to 5 minutes; then, (V) addition of silver salts, such as silver nitrate,
to the reaction mixture from step (IV) until reaction completion forming surface region
(B). The octahedral silver bromoiodide grains that result from the described process
are preferably monodispersed grains having a grain size within the range of 0.6 to
1 micron.
[0009] A further aspect of the invention is directed to forming a visible photographic image,
particularly a color photographic image, by a process comprising processing an exposed
photographic element, as described, herein in an aqueous alkaline solution in the
presence of a photographic developing agent, particularly a color photographic silver
halide developing agent.
[0010] The described invention enables unique and unexpected advantages. The described photographic
emulsion, element and process enable the improvement of photographic speed and reduced
granularity without sacrificing the advantages of an octahedral silver bromoiodide
emulsion. The described emulsions are particularly advantageous when chemically sensitized
and spectrally sensitized and in color photographic materials designed to form dye
images. The described emulsions, elements and processes enable significantly improved
photographic speed for color images, especially images that have particularly useful
sharpness and speed-grain relationship.
[0011] The term octahedral herein includes octahedral and such grains that do not include
sharp edges, such as cubooctahedral grains.
[0012] The term core region (A) herein means the central portion of the octahedral silver
bromoiodide grain according to the invention. This region (A) can contain 0 to 9 mole
percent iodide. It comprises 50% to 90%, typically 60% to 80% by weight of the total
silver bromoiodide grain.
[0013] The term surface region (B) herein means the outer region of the octahedral silver
bromoiodide beyond subsurface region (C). This region (B) can contain 0 to 9 mole
percent iodide. This typically comprises 10% to 40% by weight of the total silver
bromoiodide grain.
[0014] The term subsurface region (C) herein means the region of the silver bromoiodide
grain according to the invention between the core region (A) and the surface region
(B) as described. The subsurface region (C) typically comprises 1% to 20% by weight
of the total silver bromoiodide grain. The interfaces between the regions (A), (B)
and (C) as described are typically not sharply defined in the silver bromoiodide grain.
Each of the regions (A), (B) and (C) may, but typically do not, comprise multiple
regions within each of the described regions, that is each region does not typically
comprise multiple shells.
[0015] In the process as described necessary bromide can be added before or after the described
dump iodide step.
[0016] The step (IV) can be essentially eliminated or extended depending on the emulsion
making equipment capability. Preferably, the hold step (IV) is present and is typically
carried out within a period of about 2 minutes to 10 minutes.
[0017] In the process of preparation of the silver bromoiodide emulsion it is preferred
to carry out a finishing step as known in the photographic art. This finishing step
is preferably carried out using at least one spectral sensitizing dye as part of the
finishing step. Any spectral sensitizing dye known to be useful in a finishing step
can be used for this purpose. In addition it is preferable to use a finishing modifier
known in the photographic art in the finishing step, such as a benzothiazolium finish
modifier. Such a finishing step using at least one spectral sensitizing dye and a
finish modifier, such as a benzothiazolium compound, enables the resulting photographic
silver bromoiodide emulsion of the invention to have even higher photographic speed
than otherwise would be expected.
[0018] The term monodispersed herein means that at least 95%, such as 95% to 99.9%, by weight
of the silver bromoiodide grains less than the mean grain diameter and at least 95%,
such as 95% to 99.9%, by number of the silver bromoiodide grains larger than than
the mean grain diameter must be within 40% of the mean grain diameter. The mean grain
diameter means the diameter of a circle equal in area to the mean projected area of
the silver bromoiodide grains, especially as viewed in a photomicrograph or an electronmicrograph
of an emulsion sample.
[0019] The octahedral silver bromoiodide grains as described may have rounded corners and
rounded edges.
[0020] The grain size and characteristics of the silver bromoiodide grains as described
can be readily ascertained by procedures well known in the photographic art. In some
instances a concentration of silver halide grains that are not octahedral silver bromoiodide
grains can be present in the emulsion and element without adversely affecting the
required properties of the silver bromoiodide emulsion as described.
[0021] The silver bromoiodide emulsion as described is prepared by controlling the introduction
of the iodide salts in the precipitation process. The iodide is added in the process
within a reasonably short time and can be termed a "dump iodide process" because the
iodide is not run into the reaction mixture over the entire term of the precipitation.
The described step (III) is a "dump iodide step".
[0022] In the process of preparing the silver bromoiodide emulsion as described typically
a dispersing medium, preferably an aqueous gelatin or gelatin derivative composition,
is introduced into a conventional reaction vessel designed for silver halide precipitation
equipped with an efficient stirring mechanism. The volume of dispersing medium initially
present in the reaction vessel can equal or exceed the volume of the silver bromoiodide
emulsion present in the reaction at the conclusion of the grain precipitation. The
dispersing medium introduced into the reaction vessel is preferably a dispersion of
peptizer in water, particularly gelatin in water, optionally containing other ingredients,
such as silver halide ripening agents and/or metal dopants. The peptizer, particularly
gelatin or a gelatin derivative, is typically initially present in a concentration
of at least 0.5%, preferably at least 1%, of the total peptizer present at the completion
of the silver bromoiodide precipitation. Additional dispersing medium can optionally
be added to the reaction vessel with the silver salts and the alkali metal bromide
and iodide salts and also can be introduced through a separate inlet means, such as
a separate jet. The proportion of dispersing medium can be adjusted after the completion
of the salt introductions or after washing.
[0023] During precipitation silver salts, preferably silver nitrate, bromide salts, preferably
alkali metal bromide salts, and iodide salts, preferably alkali metal bromide salts,
are added to the reaction vessel by techniques known in the photographic emulsion
making art. Typically an aqueous silver salt solution, preferably an aqueous silver
nitrate solution, is introduced into the reaction vessel concurrently with the introduction
of bromide alone or bromide and iodide salts. The bromide and iodide salts are typically
introduced as aqueous solutions, preferably as aqueous solutions of one or more alkali
metal, such as potassium or sodium salts. Alkaline earth metal salts can also be useful,
such as calcium and magnesium salts. The silver salt is introduced into the reaction
vessel separately from the halide salt. The iodide and bromide salts can be added
to the reaction vessel separately or as a mixture.
[0024] With the introduction of the silver salts into the reaction vessel the nucleation
step of the grain formation is initiated. A population of grain nuclei are formed
that are capable of serving as precipitation sites for silver bromide and silver iodide
as the introduction of silver, bromide and iodide salts continues. The precipitation
of the silver bromide and silver iodide onto the existing grain nuclei constitutes
the crystal growth step of grain formation. The permissible latitude of pBr during
the growth stage of the precipitation is within the range of 1.75 to 4.2 pBr, preferably
within the range of 2.0 to 2.8 pBr. The pBr can be measured and regulated during the
precipitation by methods and apparatus known in the photographic art. The pBr is as
defined in U.S. Patent 4,434,226 and is the negative logarithm of bromide ion concentration.
[0025] Subject to requirements of the process as described the concentrations and rates
of silver salt, bromide salt and iodide salt introductions can take any convenient
and conventional form useful for forming octahedral silver bromoiodide emulsions.
The silver and halide salts are preferably introduced in concentrations within the
range of 0.1 to 5 moles per liter. The rate of silver and halide salt introduction
can be constant or optionally increased either by increasing the rate at which the
silver and halide salt are introduced or by increasing the concentrations of the silver
and halide salts being introduced. It is preferred to increase the rate of silver
and halide salt introduction, but to maintain the rate of introduction below that
at which the formation of new grain nuclei is favored to avoid renucleation. The concentration
of iodide in each step is important to enable the higher concentration of iodide in
subsurface region (C) as described.
[0026] The process can be carried out within controlled pAg conditions using methods and
apparatus known in the photographic art. Using measuring techniques, electrodes and
conditions known in the photographic art the vAg is, for example, controlled within
the range of +5 to +160 mV, preferably within the range of +20 to +80 mV.
[0027] The process of preparing the described silver bromoiodide is preferably carried out
at a temperature within the range of 25°C to 80°C, such as 45°C.
[0028] Modifying compounds can be present during the silver bromoiodide precipitation. Such
compounds can be initially in the reaction vessel or can be added with one or more
of the salts according to conventional emulsion making procedures. Modifying compounds,
such as compounds of copper, iridium, thallium, lead, bismuth, cadmium, zinc, middle
chalcogens, such as sulfur, selenium and tellurium, gold, Group VIII noble metals,
can be present during the precipitation, as described in, for example, U.S. Patent
4,433,048 and the art described therein.
[0029] The individual silver and halide salts or a silver halide source, such as silver
iodide seeds, can be added to the reaction vessel through surface or subsurface delivery
tubes, by gravity feed or delivery apparatus for maintaining control of the rate of
delivery and the pH, pBr, and/or pAg or the reaction vessel contents as is used in
the art of photographic emulsion making.
[0030] In forming the silver bromoiodide emulsions, a dispersing medium preferably comprises
in the reaction vessel initially an aqueous peptizer suspension. The peptizer concentration
is typically within the range of 0.2% to 10% by weight, based on the total weight
of the emulsion components in the reaction vessel. Typically the concentration of
peptizer in the reaction vessel is maintained below about 6%, based on the total weight,
prior to and during silver halide formation. The emulsion vehicle concentration is
typically adjusted upwardly for optimum coating characteristics by delayed, supplemental
vehicle additions. Additional vehicle can be added later to bring the concentration
up to as high as 1000 grams per mole of silver halide. Preferably the concentration
of vehicle in the finished emulsion is above 50 grams per mole of silver halide. When
coated and dried on a support forming a photographic element, the vehicle preferably
comprises about 30% to about 70% by weight of the emulsion layer.
[0031] Vehicles, including both binders and peptizers, can be selected from those conventionally
employed in photographic silver halide emulsions. Preferred peptizers are hydrophilic
colloids, that can be used alone or in combination with hydrophobic materials. Useful
hydrophilic materials include both naturally occurring substances, such as proteins,
protein derivatives, cellulose derivatives, such as cellulose esters, gelatin, such
as alkali treated gelatin or acid treated gelatin, gelatin derivatives, such as acetylated
gelatin and phthalated gelatin, polysaccharides, such as dextran, gum arabic, zein,
casein, pectin, collagen derivatives, agar-agar, arrowroot and albumin and other vehicles
and binders known in the photographic art. Gelatin is highly preferred.
[0032] Other materials commonly used in combination with hydrophilic colloid peptizers as
vehicles, including, for example, vehicle extenders such as materials in the form
of latices, are also useful in the emulsions as described, such as polymeric peptizers,
carriers and/or binders, such as poly(vinyl lactams), acrylamide polymers, poly(vinyl
alcohol) and its derivatives, poly(vinyl acetals), polymers of alkyl and sulfoalkyl
acrylates and methacrylates, hydrolyzed poly(vinyl acetates), polyamides, poly(vinyl
pyridine), acrylic acid polymers, maleic acid copolymers, vinyl amine copolymers,
methacrylic acid copolymers, acryloyloxyalkylsulfonic acid copolymers, sulfoacrylamide
copolymers, polyalkyleneimine copolymers, polyamines, N,N-dialkylaminoalkyl acrylates,
vinyl imidazole polymers and copolymers, vinyl sulfide copolymers, halogenated styrene
polymers, amineacrylamide polymers, polypeptides and other vehicles and binders known
to be useful in the photographic art, such as described in U.S. Patent 4,433,048.
[0033] These added materials need not be present in the reaction vessel during the silver
halide precipitation, but rather can typically be added to the emulsion prior to coating
on the support. The vehicles and binders, including the hydrophilic colloids, as well
as the hydrophobic materials, can be employed alone or in combination, not only in
the emulsion layers of the photographic element, but also can be used alone or in
combination in other layers, such as overcoat layers, interlayers, and layers positioned
between emulsion layers and the support.
[0034] Grain ripening can be carried out in preparation of an emulsion as described. Grain
ripening agents known to be useful in the photographic art can be useful in the photographic
emulsions. For example, a thioether ripening agent can be added to the photographic
silver bromoiodide emulsion. Useful thioether ripening agents include, for example,
those described in U.S. Patents 3,271,157; 3,574,628; and 3,737,313.
[0035] The silver bromoiodide emulsions are preferably washed to remove soluble salts. Any
of the processes and compositions known in the photographic art for this purpose can
useful for washing the photographic silver bromoiodide emulsions. The soluble salts
can be removed by decantation, filtration, and/or chill setting and leaching, coagulation
washing, by centrifugation, and by other methods and means known in the photographic
art.
[0036] If desired, the silver bromoiodide emulsion as described can be blended or otherwise
combined with other photographic silver halide emulsions. The octahedral photographic
silver bromoiodide emulsions can be, for example, optionally combined with a tabular
grain silver halide emulsion, such as one described in U.S. Patent 4,433,048, or optionally
combined with a cubic grain silver halide emulsion, such as one described in European
Patent Application No. 353,628.
[0037] The photographic silver bromoiodide can be chemically sensitized by procedures and
by compounds known in the photographic art to be useful for this purpose. For example,
the silver bromoiodide can be chemically sensitized with active gelatin, or with sulfur,
selenium, tellurium, gold, platinum, palladium, iridium, osmium, rhodium, rhenium,
or phosphorous sensitizers or combinations of these sensitizers, such as at pAg levels
within the range of 90 to 120 mV and pH levels within the range of 5 to 8 at temperatures
within the range of 30° to 80°C. The silver bromoiodide can be chemically sensitized
in the presence of finish, also known as chemical sensitization, modifiers, such as
compounds known to suppress fog and increase speed during chemical sensitization,
such as azaindenes, azapyridazines, azapyrimidines, benzothiazolium salts, and sensitizers
having more than one heterocyclic nuclei. Optionally the silver bromoiodide can be
reduction sensitized, such as with hydrogen, or through the use of reducing agents,
such as stannous chloride, thiourea dioxide, polyamines or amineboranes.
[0038] The photographic silver bromoiodide emulsion can be spectrally sensitized by methods
and compounds known in the photographic art. The silver halide emulsion can be sensitized
in the presence of sensitizing dyes. The photographic silver bromoiodide emulsion
can be spectrally sensitized by, for example, dyes of a variety of classes, including
the polymethine sensitizing dye class, including cyanines, merocyanines, complex cyanines
and merocyanines, oxonols, hemioxonols, styryls, merostyryls and streptocyanines.
Combinations of spectral sensitizers are also useful.
[0039] The photographic silver bromoiodide emulsions can be used in ways, in photographic
element formats and for purposes that silver bromoiodide emulsions have been used
in the photographic art.
[0040] Photographic silver halide elements comprising a photographic silver bromoiodide
emulsion as described can be either single color or multicolor elements. In a multicolor
element, a cyan dye-forming coupler is typically associated with a red-sensitive emulsion,
a magenta dye-forming coupler is typically associated with a green-sensitive emulsion
and a yellow dye-forming coupler is associated with a blue-sensitive emulsion. Multicolor
elements typically contain dye-forming units sensitive to each of the three primary
regions of the spectrum. Each unit can comprise a single emulsion layer or multiple
emulsion layers. The layers of the element and the image-forming units can be arranged
in various orders as known in the photographic art.
[0041] The photographic element can contain added layers, such as filter layers, interlayers,
overcoat layers, subbing layers and other layers known in the photographic art.
[0042] The following discussion of illustrative materials that are useful in photographic
silver halide materials and processes reference will be made to
Research Disclosure, December 1978, Item No. 17643, published by Kenneth Mason Publications Ltd., Dudley
Annex, 21a North Street, Emsworth, Hampshire PO10 7DQ, England. The publication will
be identified hereafter by the term "Research Disclosure".
[0043] Silver halide emulsions that can be employed in combination with the silver bromoiodide
emulsion as described can be comprised of silver bromide, silver chloride, silver
iodide, silver chloroiodide, silver chlorobromide or mixtures thereof. These silver
halide emulsions can include silver halide grains of any conventional shape or size.
Specifically the emulsions can be coarse, medium or fine grain. Tabular grain silver
halide emulsions are particularly useful in a photographic element as described. The
silver halide emulsions that are useful with the silver bromoiodide emulsions can
be polydisperse or monodisperse as precipitated. The grain size distribution of these
emulsions can be controlled by silver halide grain separation techniques or by blending
silver halide emulsions of differing grain sizes. For example, silver bromoiodide
or silver bromides of different sizes of the same type and shape can be blended.
[0044] Any coupler known in the photographic art can be used with the silver bromoiodide
emulsions as described. Examples of useful couplers are described in, for example,
Research Disclosure Section VII, paragraphs D, E, F, and G and in U.S. Patent 4,433,048
and the publications cited therein, as well as in U.S. Patents 4,333,999; 4,443,536;
4,420,556; 4,401,752; 4,777,121; 4,728,598; 4,753,871; 4,782,012; 4,477,563; 4,248,962;
4,409,323 and European Patent Applications 284,239; 271,323; 271,324; 285,274; 193,389;
255,085 and 284,240. Polymeric couplers are also useful with the described silver
bromoiodide emulsions, as described in, for example, U.S. Patents 4,804,620; 4,540,654;
and 4,576,910. The couplers can be incorporated as described in Research Disclosure
Section VII and the publications cited therein.
[0045] The photographic emulsions and elements can contain addenda known to be useful in
the photographic art. The photographic emulsions and elements can contain brighteners
(Research Disclosure Section V), antifoggants and stabilizers (Research Disclosure
Section VI), antistain agents and image dye stabilizers (Research Disclosure Section
VII, paragraphs I and J), light absorbing and scattering materials (Research Disclosure
Section VIII), hardeners (Research Disclosure Section XI), plasticizers and lubricants
(Research Disclosure Section XII), antistatic agents (Research Disclosure Section
XIII), matting agents (Research Disclosure Section XVI) and development modifiers
(Research Disclosure Section XXI).
[0046] The photographic emulsions can be coated on a variety of supports as described in,
for example, Research Disclosure Section XVII and the references cited therein.
[0047] The photographic elements as described can be exposed to actinic radiation, typically
in the visible region of the spectrum, to form a latent image as described in Research
Disclosure Section XVII and then processed to form a visible image using processes
and compositions known in the photographic art, such as described in Research Disclosure
Section XIX and U.S. Patent 4,433,048 and the references described therein.
[0048] Processing of a color photographic element as described to form a visible dye image
includes the step of contacting the element with a color photographic silver halide
developing agent to reduce developable silver halide and oxidize the color developing
agent. Oxidized color developing agent in turn reacts with at least one coupler to
yield a dye.
[0049] Preferred color developing agents are p-phenylenediamines. Especially preferred are
4-amino-3-methyl-N,N-diethylaniline hydrochloride; 4-amino-3-methyl-N-ethyl-N-β-(methanesulfonamido)-ethylaniline
sulfate hydrate; 4-amino-3-methyl-N-ethyl-N-β-hydroxyethylaniline sulfate; 4-amino-3-β-(methanesulfonamido)ethyl-N,N-diethyl-aniline
hydrochloride and 4-amino-N-ethyl-N-(2-methoxyethyl)-m-toluidine di-p-toluene sulfonic
acid.
[0050] With the negative working silver bromoiodide emulsion this processing step leads
to a negative image. To obtain a positive image (or reversal image), this step can
be preceded by development with a non-chromogenic developing agent to develop exposed
silver halide, but not form dye, and then uniform fogging of the element to render
unexposed silver halide developable.
[0051] Development is followed by conventional steps of bleaching, fixing, or bleach-fixing,
to remove silver and silver halide, washing and drying.
[0052] Improvements in sharpness can be obtained with a photographic silver bromoiodide
emulsion and element as described, a photographic silver halide development inhibitor
releasing compound or coupler (DIR compound or DIAR compound). Any development inhibitor
releasing compound or coupler known in the photographic art is useful with the photographic
silver bromoiodide emulsion and element. Particularly useful development inhibitor
releasing compounds or couplers are represented by the formula: CAR-TIME-INH wherein
CAR is a carrier moiety, preferably a coupler moiety; TIME is at least one timing
group; and INH is a development inhibitor moiety.
[0053] The DIR compounds that satisfy the formula CAR-TIME-INH are known in the art and
are described in, for example, U.S. Patents 4,248,962; 4,409,323; 4,684,604; 4,737,451;
4,546,073; 4,564,587; 4,618,571; 4,698,297; 4,782,012; and U.K Patent 2,099,167 and
European Published Patent Applications 167,168 and 255,085 and German OLS 3,307,506,
the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
[0054] The carrier moiety (CAR) can be any moiety that, as a result of reaction with oxidized
color developing agent, will release the timing group (TIME). Preferably the carrier
is a coupler, but it can be another group, such as a hydrazide, a hydrazine or hydroquinone.
Coupler moieties can be colored or colorless, diffusible or nondiffusible, reaction
product with oxidized color developing agent.
[0055] When the carrier moiety is a coupler moiety, the DIR compounds are DIR couplers represented
by the formula: COUP-TIME-INH wherein COUP is a coupler moiety.
[0056] Preferred timing groups are described in U.S. Patents 4,248,962; 4,409,323; 4,782,012
and European Patent Application 255,085.
[0057] The development inhibitor that is released from the DIR compound or coupler during
processing of the element can be any of the development inhibitors known in the photographic
art. Illustrative INH moieties are mercaptotetrazoles, selenotetrazoles, mercaptobenzolthiazoles,
selenobenzothiazoles, selenobenzimidazoles, mercaptobenzimidazoles, mercaptobenzoxazoles,
selenobenzoxazoles, benzotriazoles, and benzodiazoles. Particularly preferred are
those described in U.S. Patents 4,477,563 and 4,782,012.
[0058] The following examples further illustrate the invention.
Example 1:
[0059] A series of 4 monodisperse silver bromoiodide octahedral grain emulsions all containing
a total of 3 mole percent iodide were prepared. The emulsions differed in the placement
and method of introduction of the iodide. Emulsions A and B are comparison emulsions
and emulsions C and D are examples of the invention.
Examples:
[0060]
- Emulsion A -
- (Iodide introduced uniformly throughout the precipitation)
[0061] A monodisperse, octahedral grain, silver bromoiodide (3M% I) emulsion having a grain
size of 0.8 micron was prepared in the following manner:
[0062] Eight solutions were prepared as follows:

[0063] To Solution 1A, at 80°C, were added 0.018 g of 1,10-dithio-4,7,13,16-tetraoxacyclooctadecane
dissolved in 36 ml of methanol and distilled water (1:1). The pH of the contents of
the reaction vessel was determined to be 5.22, and the pBr was adjusted to 2.8 using
a 1M sodium bromide solution. Solutions 2A and 4A were then simultaneously run into
Solution 1A, with continuous agitation, for 5 minutes using a balanced double jet
technique at a flow rate of 15 ml per minute, while maintaining the pBr at 2.8 and
the temperature at 80°C. At this point Solution 7A was added and the resulting composition
was held for 5 minutes. At 2 1/2 minutes into the hold the pBr was adjusted to 2.2
with Solution 3A. After the completion of the hold, the precipitation was continued
by simultaneously adding Solutions 3A and 5A using an accelerated flow balanced double
jet technique according to the following profile: 15 minutes at 25 ml per minute,
10 minutes at 35 ml per minute, 10 minutes at 65 ml per minute, 10 minutes at 105
ml per minute, then 155 ml per minute, until Solution 5A was exhausted, while maintaining
the pBr at 2.2 and temperature at 80°C. At this point the pump supplying Solution
5A was switched to Solution 6A and the pump supplying Solution 3A was switched off
until the pBr was adjusted to 2.5. At this point the salt supply pump was switched
on and Solutions 3A and 6A were simultaneously added at a rate of 35 ml per minute
until Solution 6A was exhausted. The resulting emulsion was then cooled to 40°C and
washed using by diafiltration, with a semipermeable membrane to a pBr of 3.4. Solution
8A was then added and the pH and pBr were adjusted to 5.6 and 3.4 respectively.
- Emulsion B -
- (All of the iodide was introduced uniformly throughout the first 80% of the precipitation,
followed by only bromide for the last 20%)
[0065] To Solution 1B, at 80°C, were added 0.018 g of 1,10-dithio-4,7,13,16-tetraoxacyclooctadecane
dissolved in 36 ml of methanol and distilled water (1:1). The pH of the contents of
the reaction vessel was determined to be 5.17, and the pBr was adjusted to 2.8 using
a 1M solution of sodium bromide. Solutions 2B and 5B were then simultaneously run
into Solution 1B, with continuous agitation, for 5 minutes using a balanced double
jet technique at a flow rate of 15 ml per minute, while maintaining the pBr at 2.8
and the temperature at 80°C. At this point Solution 8B was added and the resulting
composition was held for 5 minutes. At 2 1/2 minutes into the hold the pBr was adjusted
to 2.2 with Solution 3B. Solutions 3B and 6B were then simultaneously run into the
reaction vessel using the same flow profile described above in Emulsion A while maintaining
the pBr at 2.2 until Solution 6B was exhausted. Solution 7B was then added until the
pBr reached 2.5. Solutions 4B and 7B were then simultaneously introduced over a period
of 85.4 minutes using the same flow profile described in Emulsion A above while maintaining
a pBr of 2.5. The resulting emulsion was then cooled to 40°C and washed by diafiltration,
with a semipermeable membrane, to a pBr of 3.5. Solution 9B was then added and the
pH and pBr were adjusted to 5.6 and 3.4, respectively. The resulting emulsion had
a grain size of 0.7 micron.
- Emulsion C -
- (All of the iodide was introduced at one finite time during the precipitation)
[0066] Ten solutions were prepared as follows:

[0067] The pH of the reaction vessel was determined to be 5.82, and the pBr was adjusted
to 2.8 using a 1M solution of sodium bromide. Solutions 2C and 5C were then simultaneously
run into Solution 1A in the reaction vessel, with constant agitation. The addition
was performed over a 5-minute period, using a balanced double jet technique at a flow
rate of 24 ml per minute while maintaining the pBr at 2.8 and the temperature at 80°C.
The precipitation was then stopped and Solution 9C was added and the reaction vessel
and the resulting composition was held for 5 minutes. At 2 1/2 minutes into the hold
the pBr was adjusted to 2.2 with Solution 2C. After completion of the hold, the precipitation
was continued by simultaneously Solutions 2C and 5C using an accelerated flow balanced
double jet technique at flow rates of 24 ml per minute for 1 minute and 690 ml per
minute until Solution 5C was exhausted. Solutions 3C and 6C were then introduced using
flow rates of 24 ml per minute for 10 minutes, 40 ml per minute for 10 minutes, 65
ml per minute for 10 minutes, 105 ml per minute for 10 minutes and 155 ml per minute
until Solution 6C was exhausted while maintaining a pBr of 2.2. Solution 4C was then
dumped into the reaction vessel and the resulting composition was held for 2 minutes,
at which time Solution 8C was dumped into the reaction vessel and the composition
was again held for 2 minutes. Solution 7C was then introduced at a flow rate of 77
ml per minute for 10 minutes, then 33 ml per minute until a pBr of 2.5 was reached.
The emulsion was then cooled to 40°C and washed using by diafiltration, with a semipermeable
membrane to a pBr of 3.5. Solution 10C was then added and the pH and pBr were adjusted
to 5.6 and 3.4 respectively. The emulsion had a grain size of 0.7 micron.
- Emulsion D -
- (The introduction of the iodide was partly accomplished in a uniform manner during
the run phase of the precipitation and partly during a finite time in the precipitation)
[0068] The emulsion was prepared using the same procedure described above for Emulsion C
with the following differences in composition of the solutions:
Solution 2D:
[0069] As Solution 2C plus 1.4 g Potassium Iodide
Solution 3D:
[0070] As Solution 3C plus 16.5 g Potassium Iodide
Solution 8D:
[0071] As Solution 8C except only 0.12 moles of the preformed silver iodide emulsion.
[0072] The emulsion had a grain size of 0.6 micron.
[0073] The series of monodisperse octahedral grain silver bromoiodide emulsions described
above were spectrally sensitized to the red region of the visible spectrum then optimally
sulfur and gold chemically sensitized in the presence of sodium thiocyanate and the
finish modifier N-[N-(methyl-sulfonyl)carbamoylethyl]benzothiazoliumtetrafluoroborate.
The emulsions were separately coated in a single-layer cyan dye-forming format on
a cellulose triacetate film support. Each of the coated elements comprised the respective
emulsion at 0.8 g Ag/m², gelatin at 3.2 g/m², a solvent dispersion of the cyan dye
image-forming coupler (Coupler A) at .97 g/m² and the DIR coupler (Coupler B) at 0.03
g/m². An overcoat layer comprising gelatin at 4.3 g/m² and the hardener bis(vinylsulfonylmethyl)ether
at 1.75% based on the total gelatin weight was applied.
[0074] The resulting photographic elements were imagewise exposed at 1/100 of a second through
a 0 - 4.0 density step tablet plus a Wratten No. 29 filter (Wratten is a trademark
of Eastman Kodak Co., U.S.A.) to a 600W, 5500 K tungsten light source. Processing
was accomplished at 37.7°C in a color process of the type described in the British
Journal of Photography Annual 1979, pages 204 -206, at a development time of 3 minutes
15 seconds. The processed photographic elements were then evaluated for speed and
relative granularity position. The results are given in following Table I:

[0075] When radiation-sensitive silver halide emulsions differing in mean grain size are
optimally sensitized, there is a predictable relationship between photographic speed
and granularity. It is generally recognized that each doubling of photographic speed
results in an increase of 5 - 7 granularity units. When emulsions of differing speed
also differ in granularity by a predicted number of granularity units, the emulsions
are said to exhibit the same speed-granularity relationship. An emulsion which shows
increased speed without a proportional increase in granularity units is not only a
faster emulsion, but an emulsion exhibiting a superior speed-granularity relationship.
An emulsion which exhibits reduced granularity without a proportionate loss of speed
also exhibits an improved speed-granularity relationship.
[0076] It is clearly demonstrated in Table I that emulsions C and D of the present invention
exhibit an improved speed granularity relationship relative to comparative emulsions
A and B.