BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a bleaching solution for a light-sensitive silver halide
color photographic material and a processing method using said bleaching solution,
more particularly to a bleaching solution for a light-sensitive silver halide color
photographic material by which bleaching fog can be effectively inhibited, and a processing
method using said bleaching solution.
[0002] A processing of a light-sensitive material basically comprises two steps of color
developing and desilvering, and desilvering comprises bleaching and fixing steps or
a bleach-fixing step. As other additional processing steps than these steps, a rinsing
processing and a stabilizing processing are added.
[0003] In a processing solution having bleachability to be used for a desilvering step of
a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material, as an oxidizing agent
for bleaching image silver, inorganic oxidizing agents such as prussiate and bichromate
have been widely used.
[0004] However, some serious drawbacks have been pointed out in processing solutions containing
these inorganic oxidizing agents and having bleachability. For example, although prussiate
and bichromate are relatively excellent in the point of a bleaching power of image
silver, they have a fear of forming a cyan ion or a hexavalent chromium ion which
are decomposed by light and become harmful to human bodies, and therefore have undesirable
properties in the point of preventing pollution. Further, the processing solutions
containing these inorganic oxidizing agents have a drawback that it is difficult to
regenerate them without discarding a waste liquor after processing.
[0005] To the contrary, as a processing solution having few problems in pollution and satisfying
demands such as rapid processing, simple processing and regeneration of a waste liquor,
a processing solution containing as an oxidizing agent a metal complex salt of an
organic acid such as a metal complex salt of an aminopolycarboxylic acid has been
used. However, the processing solution using a metal complex salt of an organic acid
has a poor oxidizing power, and therefore has a drawback that a bleaching rate (oxidizing
rate) of image silver (metal silver) formed during a developing step is slow. For
example, an iron (III) complex salt of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid which is considered
to have a strong bleaching power among metal complex salts of an aminopolycarboxylic
acid has been practically utilized in part as a bleaching solution and a bleach-fixing
solution. However, it has a drawback that it is insufficient in a bleaching power
in the case of a high sensitivity light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material mainly composed of a silver chloride, silver bromide, silver chlorobromide
or silver iodobromide emulsion, particularly a color paper for photographing which
contain silver iodide as silver halide and are high in silver quantity, a color negative
film for photographing and a color reversal film, and therefore a bleaching step requires
a long period of time.
[0006] Further, in a development processing method in which a large quantity of light-sensitive
silver halide photographic materials are processed continuously by an automatic processor,
for avoiding worsening of properties of a bleaching solution caused by change in concentrations
of respective components, a means for maintaining concentrations of respective components
of a processing solution within a predetermined range is required. As such a means,
in recent years, from the standpoints of economy and pollution, there have been proposed
a so-called high concentration and low replenishment system in which these replenishing
solutions are concentrated and replenished in small amounts or a method in which a
regenerating agent is added to an overflow solution and the solution obtained is used
again as a replenishing solution. Particularly, as to a bleaching solution, there
has been utilized practically a method in which a ferrous organic acid complex salt
generated by bleaching developed silver, for example, an iron (II) complex salt of
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid is oxidized by aeration to be converted into an iron
(III) complex salt of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, namely, a ferric organic acid
complex salt, further, a regenerating agent for supplementing insufficient components
is added thereto, and the solution obtained is used again as a replenishing solution.
[0007] However, in recent years, for processing a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material in a shorter time and reducing a cost for collection and delivery, a number
of so-called compact laboratories (another name: miniature laboratories) have increased.
In such laboratories, simplification of processing and reduction in area for setting
a developing machine are highly demanded and complicated handlings and controls are
required, and therefore a regenerating processing which requires a space for the processing
is not preferred.
[0008] Accordingly, a high concentration and low replenishment system in which low replenishment
is carried out without carrying a regenerating processing is preferred. However, when
a replenishing amount of a bleaching solution is reduced extremely, concentrations
of components of a color developing solution brought into a bleaching solution are
elevated, and also influence of condensation due to evaporation is liable to be exerted,
whereby components of a color developing solution is accumulated increasingly. Thus,
when concentrations of components of a color developing solution in a bleaching solution
are elevated, mixing ratios of a color developing agent and a sulfite which are reductive
components are increased, whereby there are drawbacks that a bleaching reaction is
inhibited and that as a more serious problem, bleaching fog is liable to be generated.
[0009] The bleaching fog has been increased in the recent low replenishment of a bleaching
solution, and a trouble of tar generation in a bleaching tank of an automatic processor
tends to occur.
[0010] Thus, in recent years, since low pollution and low cost are requested, further lower
replenishment has been demanded. Further, it has been demanded that rapid processing
services to return films to users as quickly as possible after receipt of them are
made in the above compact laboratories where a processing quantity is relatively small
in general, and a regenerating rate of a tank solution is low. Under such a situation,
the problems described above have become more serious.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] Accordingly, a first object of the present invention is to provide a bleaching solution
for a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material which enables rapid
processing and low replenishment, and yet is improved in bleaching fog, and a processing
method using the same.
[0012] Further, a second object of the present invention is to provide a bleaching solution
for a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material which is excellent
in processing stability and enables both of continuous processing and processing of
a small quantity over a long period of time, and a processing method using the same.
[0013] The above objects of the present invention can be accomplished by a bleaching solution
for a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material comprising at least
0.10 moIe/t of a ferric complex salt of a compound represented by the following formula
(A) and ammonium ions with an amount of 50 mole % or less based on total cations,
and a method for processing a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material
using said bleaching solution.

wherein A
1 to A4 may be the same or different, respectively and each represent -CH
20H, -COOM or -PO
2M↑M
2 where M, M
1 and M
2 each represent a hydrogen atom, sodium, potassium or ammonium; and X represents a
substituted or unsubstituted alkylene group having 3 to 6 carbon atoms and a total
carbon number including a branched part is 3 or more.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0014] In the following, the present invention is explained in more detail.
[0015] Preferred embodiments are the above bleaching solution having a pH of 2.0 to 5.5
and the method for processing a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material
using the bleaching solution. Further, the bleaching solution in which an amount of
ammonium ions is 20 mole % or less based on the total cations in the above bleaching
solution and the processing method using the bleaching solution are also a preferred
embodiment. Furthermore, the bleaching solution in which an amount of ammonium ions
is 0 to 10 mole % or less based on the total cations in the above bleaching solution
and the processing method using the bleaching solution are also a preferred embodiment
of the present invention. It is a preferred embodiment that a replenishing amount
of the bleaching solution is 20 to 400 ml/m
2 per 1 m
2 of a light-sensitive material since the effect of the present invention can be exhibited
remarkably.
[0016] The bleaching solution containing a ferric complex salt of a compound represented
by the formula (A) in the present invention has been known in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 222252/1987, and the fact that bleaching fog is liable to be
generated has been also known in the above Japanese Publication. Further, the fact
that bleaching fog can be prevented by making a pH of a bleaching solution 2.5 to
5.5 has been also known in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 44352/1990.
However, in the known examples as described above, bleaching fog cannot be prevented
completely by making a pH of a bleaching solution lower. When a bleaching solution
is replenished with a smaller amount, further when a processing quantity is small,
bleaching fog becomes more significant.
[0017] The present inventors have found that the above bleaching fog is liable to be generated
by a bleaching power of a ferric complex salt of the formula (A) and that the bleaching
fog is further liable to be generated by using a ferric complex salt together with
ammonium ions, to accomplish the present invention.
[0018] In the following, the compound represented by the formula (A) is described in detail.
[0019] A
1 to At may be the same or different, respectively and represent -CH
20H, -COOM or -PO
3M
1M
2 where M, M
1 and M
2 each represent a hydrogen atom, sodium, potassium or ammonium; and X represents a
substituted or unsubstituted alkylene group having 3 to 6 carbon atoms (e.g. propylene,
butylene and pentamethylene).
[0021] In addition to these compounds (A - 1) to (A - 9), a sodium salt, a potassium salt
or an ammonium salt of them can be used as desired. However, when a large amount of
an ammonium salt is used, bleaching fog is liable to be generated, whereby an ammonium
salt of a ferric complex salt is used in an amount of 50 mole % or less, preferably
20 mole % or less, more preferably 0 to 10 mole % based on the total cations for preventing
bleaching fog.
[0022] Among the above exemplary compounds, those particularly preferably used in the present
invention are (A - 1), (A - 4), (A - 7) and (A - 8), particularly preferably (A -
1).
[0023] A ferric complex salt of the compound represented by the above formula (A) is used
in an amount of at least 0.10 mole per liter of a bleaching solution, preferably in
the range of 0.15 mole to 0.6 mole, more preferably in the range of 0.18 mole to 0.5
mole.
[0024] In the bleaching solution of the present invention, in combination with a ferric
complex salt of the compound represented by the above formula (A), other ferric complex
salts of an aminopolycarboxylic acid (e.g. a ferric complex salt of ethylenediaminetetraacetic
acid, a ferric complex salt of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, a ferric complex
salt of 1,2-cyclohexanediaminetetraacetic acid and a ferric complex salt of glycol
ether diaminetetraacetic acid) can be combinedly used.
[0025] However, for exhibiting the effect of the present invention more favorably, preferred
is a bleaching solution in which substantially only a ferric complex salt of the compound
represented by the above formula (A) is used. Here, "substantially" means at least
70 % or more (calculated in terms of mole) based on all ferric complex salts. Said
ratio is preferably 80 % or more, more preferably 90 % or more, most preferably 95
% or more.
[0026] The bleaching solution according to the present invention preferably contains imidazole
and a derivative thereof or at least one compound represented by the following formulae
(I) to (IX), whereby the effect of the present invention can be exhibited more favorably.
Further, since another effect that precipitation caused by silver in the bleaching
solution is reduced can be obtained, the above compounds are used preferably in the
present invention.

wherein Q represents a group of atoms necessary for forming a nitrogen-containing
hetero ring (including those to which a 5 or 6-membered unsaturated ring is fused);
and R
1 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, a cycloalkyl
group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic group (including those to which a 5 or 6-membered
unsaturated ring is fused) or an amino group.

wherein R
2 and R
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, a hydroxy
group, a carboxy group, an amino group, an acyl group having 1 to 3 carbon atoms,
an aryl group or an alkenyl group; A represents

or an n
1-valent heterocyclic residue (including those to which a 5 or 6-membered unsaturated
ring is fused); X represents = S, = 0 or = NR"; where R and R' have the same meanings
as R
2 and R
3, respectively; X' has the same meaning as X; Z represents a hydrogen atom, an alkali
metal atom, an ammonium group, an amino group, a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic
residue, an alkyl group or

M represents a divalent metal atom; R" represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group
having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic residue
(including those to which a 5 or 6- membered unsaturated ring is fused) or an amino
group; n
1 to n
6 and m
1 to m
5 each represent an integer of 1 to 6; B represents an alkylene group having 1 to 6
carbon atoms; Y represents

or

R
4 and R
5 have the same meanings as R
2 and R
3, respectively, provided that R
4 and R
5 may each represent -B-SZ; and R
2 and R
3, R and R' and R
4 and R
5 each may be bonded to form a ring.
[0027] The compound represented by the formula (II) may include an enolized product and
a salt thereof.

wherein R
6 and R
7 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, a hydroxy
group, a carboxy group, an amino group, an acyl group having 1 to 3 carbon atoms,
an aryl group, an alkenyl group or -B
1-S-Z
1; R
6 and R
7 may be bonded to form a ring; Y
1 represents >N- or >CH-; B
1 represents an alkylene group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms; Z
1 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkali metal atom, an ammonium group, an amino group,
a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic residue or

and n
7 represents an integer of 1 to 6.

wherein R
8 and R
9 each represent

where R
10 represents an alkyl group or -(CH
2)n
8SO
3-provided that when R
10 is -(CH
2)n
8SO
3-, t represents 0, and when R
10 is an alkyl group, t represents 1; G-represents an anion; and n
8 represents an integer of 1 to 6.

wherein Q
1 represents a group of atoms necessary for forming a nitrogen-containing hetero ring
(including those to which a 5 or 6-membered unsaturated or saturated ring is fused);
and R
11 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkali metal atom,

or an alkyl group where Q' has the same meaning as Q
1.

wherein D
1, D
2, D
3 and D
4 each represent a mere bonding arm, an alkylene group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms or
a vinylene group; q
1, q
2, q
3 and q
4 each represent 0, 1 or 2; and a ring formed together with sulfur atoms may be further
fused to a 5 or 6-membered saturated or unsaturated ring.

wherein X
2 represents -COOM', -OH, -SO
3M', -CONH
2, -S0
2NH
2, -NH
2, -SH, -CN, -CO
2R
16, -SO
2R
16, -OR
16, -NR
16R
17, -SR
16, -SO
3R
16, -NHCOR
16, -NHSO
2R
16, -OCOR
16 or -SO
2R
16; Y
2 represents

mg and ns each represent an integer of 1 to 10; R
11, R
12, R
13, R
14, R
15, R
17 and R
18 each represent a hydrogen atom, a lower alkyl group, an acyl group or

where R
16 represents a lower alkyl group; R
19 represents -NR
2oR21, -OR
22 or -SR
22; R
20 and R
21 each represent a hydrogen atom or a lower alkyl group; R
22 represents a group of atoms necessary for forming a ring by bonding to R
18; R
20 or R
11 may be bonded to R
18 to form a ring; and M' represents a hydrogen atom or a cation.

wherein Ar represents a divalent aryl group or a divalent organic group in which an
aryl group is combined with an oxygen atom and/or an alkylene group; B
2 and B
3 each represent a lower alkylene group; R
23, R24, R
25 and R
26 each represent a hydroxy-substituted lower alkyl group; x and y each represent 0
or 1; G' represents an anion; and z represents 0, 1 or 2.

wherein R
29 and R
30 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group or a heterocyclic group;
R
31 represents a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group; and R
32 represents a hydrogen atom or a carboxy group.
[0028] As representative specific examples of the compounds represented by the above formulae
(I) to (IX), and imidazole and a derivative thereof, there may be mentioned (1-1)
to (1-10), (11-1) to (11-27), (III-1) to (III-15), (IV-1) to (lV-3), (V-1) to (V-23),
(VI-1) to (VI-17), (VII-1) to (VII-15), (VIII-1) to (VIII-7), (IX-1) to (IX-5) and
(A-1) to (A-8) described on p. 17 to p. 39 of Japanese Patent Application No. 32501/1988.
[0029] These compounds are compounds generally used as a bleaching accelerator, and hereinafter
called as the bleaching accelerators of the present invention.
[0030] These bleaching accelerators may be used singly or in combination of two or more
kinds, and the amount to be added is generally in the range of about 0.01 to 100 g
per liter of the bleaching solution for obtaining good results. However, generally
speaking, when the amount to be added is extremely small, a bleaching accelerating
effect is small, and when the amount to be added is unnecessarily and extremely large,
precipitation occurs, whereby a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material
processed may be stained in some cases. Accordingly, it is preferably 0.05 to 50 g,
more preferably 0.05 to 15 g per liter of the bleaching solution.
[0031] When the bleaching accelerator is added, it may be added as such and dissolved, but
in general, it may be previously dissolved in water, an alkali or an organic acid
and then added, and if necessary, it can be dissolved by using an organic solvent
such as methanol, ethanol and acetone and then added.
[0032] The bleaching solution of the present invention is preferably used at pH 2.0 to 5.5,
more preferably pH 3.0 to 5.0. If the pH of the bleaching solution is more than 5.5,
bleaching fog cannot be prevented sufficiently. On the other hand, if the pH is less
than 2.0, bleaching fog can be prevented, but influence may be exerted on photographic
performances. Processing is carried out preferably at a temperature of 20 C to 45
C, more desirably 25 °C to 42 C.
[0033] To the bleaching solution of the present invention, a halide such as ammonium bromide
is generally added.
[0034] In the bleaching solution of the present invention, pH buffering agents comprising
boric acid or various salts such as borax, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide,
sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, potassium bicarbonate,
acetic acid, sodium acetate and ammonium hydroxide can be contained singly or in combination
of two or more kinds. Further, various fluorescent brighteners, anti- forming agents,
surfactants and antifungal agents can be also contained.
[0035] In the bleaching solution of the present invention, when 50 mole % or less, preferably
20 mole %, particularly preferably 10 mole % or less of total cations is ammonium
ions, prevention of bleaching fog which is the effect of the present invention can
be effectively accomplished.
[0036] The replenishing amount of the bleaching solution according to the present invention
is preferably 20 ml to 400 ml, more preferably 30 ml to 350 ml, particularly preferably
40 ml to 300 ml, most preferably 50 ml to 250 ml per 1 m
2 of a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material.
[0037] The bleaching solution described above is used immediately after color development
during processing steps.
[0038] In the present invention, from the standpoint of rapid processing, processing is
preferably carried out by a bleaching solution and subsequently by a fixing solution
or a bleach-fixing solution.
[0039] Preferred specific processing steps of the processing method according to the present
invention are shown below.
(1) Color developing - bleaching - fixing - washing
(2) Color developing - bleaching - fixing - washing - stabilizing
(3) Color developing - bleaching - fixing - stabilizing
(4) Color developing - bleaching - fixing - first stabilizing - second stabilizing
(5) Color developing - bleaching - bleach-fixing - washing
(6) Color developing - bleaching - bleach-fixing - washing - stabilizing
(7) Color developing - bleaching - bleach-fixing - stabilizing
(8) Color developing - bleaching - bleach-fixing - first stabilizing - second stabilizing
[0040] Among these steps, preferred are (3), (4), (6), (7) and (8), particularly preferably
(3), (4) and (7), most preferably (3).
[0041] In the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing solution according to the present invention,
a so-called fixing agent is indispensable.
[0042] As the fixing agent, there may be included compounds which can form a complex salt
of an aqueous solution by reacting with silver halide, for example, thiosulfates such
as potassium thiosulfate, sodium thiosulfate and ammonium thiosulfate, thiocyanates
such as potassium thiocyanate, sodium thiocyanate and ammonium thiocyanate, or thiourea
and thioether, preferably thiosulfates and thiocyanates. Further, for practicing the
present invention, it is a preferred embodiment that 50 % or less, preferably 20 %
or less of total cations in the fixing solution or the bleach-fixing solution are
ammonium ions similarly as in the bleaching solution, whereby a slight effect on antistaining
can be obtained.
[0043] Further, in the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing solution, other than these
fixing agents, pH buffering agents comprising sulfites such as ammonium sulfite, potassium
sulfite, ammonium bisulfite, potassium bisulfite, sodium bisulfite, ammonium metabisulfite,
potassium metabisulfite and sodium metabisulfite, boric acid, and various salts such
as borax, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate,
sodium bicarbonate, potassium bicarbonate, acetic acid, sodium acetate and ammonium
hydroxide can be contained singly or in combination of two or more kinds.
[0044] Further, a large amount of rehalogenating agents such as an alkali halide or an ammonium
halide, for example, potassium bromide, sodium bromide, sodium chloride and ammonium
bromide may be desirably contained. In addition, pH buffering agents such as borate,
oxalate, acetate, carbonate and phosphate, and those generally known as additives
in a fixing solution and a bleach-fixing solution such as alkylamines and polyethylene
oxides can be added suitably.
[0045] The above fixing agent is used as a fixing agent in an amount of 0.1 mole or more,
preferably in the range of 0.3 mole to 4 mole, particularly preferably in the range
of 0.5 mole to 3.0 mole, most preferably in the range of 0.6 mole to 2.0 mole per
liter of a processing solution for obtaining the effect of the present invention.
[0046] In the present invention, for enhancing activity of the bleaching solution or the
bleach-fixing solution, air or oxygen may be blown into a processing bath or a tank
for storing a processing replenishing solution, if desired, or an appropriate oxidizing
agent such as hydrogen peroxide, bromate and persulfate may be added suitably.
[0047] When the method of the present invention is practiced, silver may be recovered from
the fixing solution or the bleach-fixing solution according to a known method. For
example, there may be effectively utilized the electrolysis method (disclosed in French
Patent No. 2,299,667), the precipitation method (disclosed in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 73037/1977 and West German Patent No. 2,331,220), the ion exchange
method (disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 17114/1976 and West
German Patent No. 2,548,237) and the metal substitution method (disclosed in U.K.
Patent No. 1,353,805).
[0048] As the silver recovery, an in-line silver recovery from a tank solution is particularly
preferred since rapid processing suitability is further improved, but silver may be
recovered from an overflow waste liquor and then used again.
[0049] When the replenishing amount of the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing solution
according to the present invention is 800 ml or less per 1 m
2 of a light-sensitive material, the effect of the present invention can be exhibited
more favorably. Particularly, when the amount is preferably 20 ml to 650 ml, particularly
preferably 30 ml to 400 ml per 1 m
2 of a light-sensitive material, good results can be obtained.
[0050] Further, when an iodide (ammonium iodide, potassium iodide, sodium iodide and lithium
iodide) is contained in an amount of 0.1 g/t to 10 g/ in the fixing solution and the
bleach-fixing solution according to the present invention, the effect of the present
invention can be further enhanced.
[0051] When its amount is preferably 0.3 g/R to 5 g/l, particularly preferably 0.5 g/t to
3 g/t, most preferably 0.8 g/t to 2 g/ℓ, good results can be obtained.
[0052] When a compound represented by the following formula (FA) or a compound among the
following group of compounds (FB) is added in the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing
solution according to the present invention, not only the effect of the present invention
can be exhibited more favorably, but also another effect that sludge generated when
a small quantity of a light-sensitive material is processed over a long period of
time by using the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing solution is extremely small
can be obtained additionally, whereby the above compounds are used more preferably
in the present invention.

wherein R' and R" each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group, an
aralkyl group or a nitrogen-containing hetero ring; and n' represents 2 or 3.
[0053] Specific exemplary compounds represented by the formula (FA) are shown below.

[0054] These compounds represented by the formula (FA) can be synthesized according to a
general method as disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 3,335,161 and No. 3,260,718.
Group of compounds (FB)
[0055]
FB-1 Thiourea
FB-2 Ammonium iodide
FB-3 Potassium iodide
FB-4 Ammonium thiocyanate
FB-5 Potassium thiocyanate
FB-6 Sodium thiocyanate
FB-7 Thiocyano catechol
[0056] These compounds represented by the above formula (FA) and the compounds of the group
of compounds (FB) may be used singly or in combination of two or more kinds, respectively.
For example, as a preferred example, there may be mentioned combinations of thiourea,
ammonium thiocyanate and ammonium iodide, thiourea and ammonium thiocyanate, (FA-12)
and thiourea, (FA-12) and ammonium thiocyanate, (FA-12) and ammonium iodide, (FA-12)
and (FA-32), and (FA-12) and (FA-38). Among these, particularly preferred is a combination
of thiourea (FB-1) and ammonium thiocyanate (FB-4).
[0057] For obtaining good results, the amounts of the compounds represented by the formula
(FA) and the compounds of the group of compounds (FB) to be added are each in the
range of 0.1 g to 300 g, particularly in the range of 0.2 to 200 g, particularly preferably
in the range of 0.5 to 150 g per liter of a processing solution.
[0058] In the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing solution according to the present invention,
from the point of the effect of the present invention, a sulfite adduct is preferably
used.
[0059] As a compound which forms a stable sulfite adduct with the above sulfite ions, there
may be mentioned, for example, a compound having an aldehyde group, a compound containing
cyclic hemiacetal, a compound having a-dicarbonyl group and a compound having a nitrile
group, but compounds represented by the formulae (A-I) and (A-II) are particularly
preferably used.
[0060] Preferred specific examples other than the compounds represented by the formulae
(A-I) and (A-II) are shown below.

[0061] A
2, A3, At and As each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon
atoms, a formyl group, an acyl group or an alkenyl group. The alkyl group having 1
to 6 carbon atoms may include those which are straight or branched, for example, a
methyl group, an ethyl group, an n-propyl group, an iso-propyl group, an n-butyl group,
an n-pentyl group, an iso-pentyl group, a hexyl group and an isohexyl group, which
may be substituted. As the substituent group, there may be included specifically a
formyl group (e.g. each group of formylmethyl and 2-formylethyl), an amino group (e.g.
each group of aminomethyl and aminoethyl), a hydroxyl group (e.g. each group of hydroxymethyl,
2-hydroxyethyl and 2-hydroxypropyl), an alkoxy group (e.g. each group of methoxy and
ethoxy) and a halogen atom (e.g. each group of chloromethyl, trichloromethyl and dibromomethyl).
[0062] The alkenyl group may be substituted or unsubstituted. The unsubstituted alkenyl
group may include each group of vinyl and 2-propenyl, and the substituted one may
include, for example, each group of 1,2-dichloro-2-carboxyvinyl and 2-phenylvinyl.
[0063] In the following, specific examples of the compound which forms a stable sulfite
adduct with the above sulfite ions are shown, but the present invention is not limited
to these.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0064]
AO-11 Sodium bisulfite formaldehyde
AO-12 Sodium bisulfite acetaldehyde
AO-13 Sodium bisulfite propionaldehyde
AO-14 Sodium bisulfite butyraldehyde
AO-21 Sodium bisulfite succinaldehyde
AO-22 Sodium bisbisulfite glutaraldehyde
AO-23 Sodium bisbisulfite ,8-methylglutaraldehyde
AO-24 Sodium bisbisulfite maleic dialdehyde
[0065] These sulfite adduct compounds are used preferably in an amount in the range of 0.1
g to 80 g, more preferably in the range of 0.5 g to 40 g per liter of a processing
solution.
[0066] The processing time by the bleaching solution and a processing solution having fixing
ability (the fixing solution or the bleach-fixing solution) according to the present
invention is preferably 3 minutes and 45 seconds or shorter in total, and when the
total processing time is preferably 20 seconds to 3 minutes and 20 seconds, more preferably
40 seconds to 3 minutes, particularly preferably in the range of 60 seconds to 2 minutes
and 40 seconds, the effect of the present invention can be exhibited favorably.
[0067] The bleaching time can be selected as desired from within the range of the total
processing time described above, but preferably 1 minute and 30 seconds or shorter,
more preferably 10 seconds to 70 seconds, particularly preferably 20 seconds to 55
seconds for obtaining the effect of the present invention. The processing time by
the processing solution having fixing ability can be selected as desired, but preferably
3 minutes and 10 seconds or shorter, more preferably in the range of 10 seconds to
2 minutes and 40 seconds, particularly preferably in the range of 20 seconds to 2
minutes and 10 seconds for obtaining the effect of the present invention.
[0068] For preventing bleaching fog, it is a preferred embodiment for practicing the present
invention that crossover time between a color developing solution tank and a bleaching
solution tank is preferably within 10 seconds, particularly preferably within 7 seconds.
[0069] In the processing method of the present invention, it is preferred to give compulsory
stirring of a solution to the bleaching solution, the fixing solution and the bleach-fixing
solution not only for exhibiting the effect of the present invention more favorably,
but also from the standpoint of rapid processing suitability.
[0070] Here, the compulsory stirring of a solution refers not to diffusional movement of
a solution in general but to compulsory stirring by providing a stirring means.
[0071] The stirring means may include the following methods.
1. High pressure spray processing method or spraying stirring method
2. Air bubbling processing method
3. Ultrasonic oscillation processing method
4. Vibration processing method
[0072] The high pressure spray processing method is a system in which processing is carried
out by spraying a processing solution directly on a light-sensitive material in a
processing solution from a spray nozzle by applying a pressure of a discharge pressure
of 0.1 kg/cm
2 or higher, and the spraying stirring method is a system in which processing is carried
out by spraying a processing solution directly on a light-sensitive material in a
processing solution from a nozzle by applying a pressure of a discharge pressure of
0.1 kg/cm
2 or higher. As the pressure source, a pressure pump and a solution-charging pump are
generally used. As the pressure pump, there may be mentioned a plunger pump, a gear
pump, a magnet pump and a cascade pump, and for example, Model 15-LPM, Model 10-BFM,
Model 20-BFM and Model 25-BFM pumps, all trade names, manufactured by Maruyama Seisakusho
K.K. have been known as examples thereof.
[0073] As the solution-charging pump, there may be mentioned, for example, Model MD-30,
Model MO-56, Model MDH-25 and Model MDK-32 pumps, all trade names, manufactured by
Iwaki K.K.
[0074] The nozzle and the spray nozzle may be of straight advancing type, sector type, round
type, whole surface type or round ring type, and those having a strong impact force
and giving small vibrations to a light-sensitive material to be processed are effective.
The impact force of the spray is determined principally by a flow (t/min) and a spray
pressure (kg/cm
2). Accordingly, a pressurizing device which can control a pressure in proportion to
a number of spray nozzles so that the effect can be exhibited sufficiently is required.
The most preferred pressure is 0.3 to 10 kg/cm
2, and if the pressure is less than 0.3 kg/cm
2, the effect cannot be obtained, and on the other hand, if the pressure is too high,
a light-sensitive material is damaged or broken in some cases.
[0075] Next, the air bubbling processing method is a method in which a sparger is provided
at the bottom of a lower conveying roller of a processing solution tank, air or inert
gas is charged into the sparger, a light-sensitive material is vibrated by air bubbles
discharged from its opening, and further, a processing solution is brought in contact
effectively with a front surface, a back surface and a side surface of a light-sensitive
material.
[0076] As a material of the sparger, materials having a resistance to corrosion such as
rigid vinyl chloride, a stainless steel coated with polyethylene and a sintered metal
are suitable, and perforation is carried out to obtain such a perforated diameter
that air bubbles discharged have a size of 2 mm to 30 mm, preferably 5 mm to 15 mm,
whereby a better effect can be obtained. As a means for charging air, there may be
included an air compressor, for example, Babycon (0.4 KW, BU7TL) (trade name) manufactured
by Hitachi Ltd. and an air pump, for example, an air pump (Model Ap220, trade name)
manufactured by Iwaki K.K. The amount of air is required to be 2 t/min to 30 t/min,
preferably 5 R/min to 20 Umin per conveying rack of an automatic processor, whereby
more preferred results can be obtained. Depending on a size of a processing solution
tank and a quantity of a light-sensitive material, the amount of air or inert gas
should be controlled, but air or inert gas is preferably charged in such an amount
that a vibration width of a light-sensitive material caused by air bubbles becomes
0.2 mm to 20 mm.
[0077] The ultrasonic oscillation processing method is a method in which an ultrasonic oscillation
device is provided in a space at a bottom portion or a side wall within a processing
solution tank of an automatic processor, and ultrasonic waves are irradiated to a
light-sensitive material to enhance development accelerating efficiency. As the ultrasonic
oscillation device, there may be used, for example, a magnetostrictive type nickel
oscillator (horn type) and a magnetostrictive type barium titanate oscillator (holder
type) manufactured by Choonpa Kogyo K.K.
[0078] A frequency of an oscillator of the ultrasonic oscillation device to be used is preferably
5 to 1,000 KHz, particularly preferably 10 to 50 KHz in the points of the effect of
the present invention and damage to machine parts of an automatic processor. As an
irradiation method of ultrasonic waves to a light-sensitive material, there may be
included a method in which ultrasonic waves are irradiated directly or indirectly
through a reflecting plate to a light-sensitive material. However, since ultrasonic
waves are damped in proportion to an irradiating distance, a direct irradiation is
more preferred. The irradiation time may be at least 1 second. When a partial irradiation
is effected, it may be effected at any of a primary stage, an intermediate stage or
a latter stage of processing steps.
[0079] Further, the vibration processing method is a method in which a light-sensitive material
is vibrated between an upper roller and a lower roller in a processing solution tank
of an automatic processor to carry out immersion processing effectively. As a vibrator
which is a vibration source, there may be generally used, for example, Model V-2B
and Model V-4B both trade names manufactured by Shinko Denki K.K. The vibrator is
fixed to the upper portion of a immersion processing tank of an automatic processor
and set so that the vibrator strikes against the back side of a light-sensitive material.
The vibration number of the vibrator is preferably 100 to 10,000 times/min, most preferably
in the range of 500 to 6,000 times/min. A vibrational amplitude of a light-sensitive
material to be processed is 0.2 mm to 30 mm, preferably 1 mm to 20 mm. If the amplitude
is lower than 0.2 mm, no effect can be exhibited, and on the other hand, if it is
too great, a light-sensitive material may be damaged in some cases. The number of
vibrators to be set may be different depending on a size of an automatic processor.
When a processing tank comprises a plural number of tanks, at least one vibrator is
set per one processing tank for obtaining preferred effect.
[0080] In the present invention, the processing time of a light-sensitive silver halide
color photographic material by using a color developing solution is preferably 210
seconds or shorter and 10 seconds or longer.
[0081] In the method for processing a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material
of the present invention, the color developing solution is a color developing solution
containing an aromatic primary amine type color developing agent preferably in an
amount of 5.0 x 10-
3 mole or more, more preferably 1.0 x 10-
2 mole or more, particularly preferably 1.2 x 10-
2 to 2 x 10-
1 mole per liter of the processing solution.
[0082] The color developing agent of the color developing solution which can be preferably
used in the present invention is described below.
[0083] The aromatic primary amine type color developing agent used in the preferred color
developing solution as described above may include those known to the art which have
been used widely in various color photographic processings. These developing agents
may include aminophenol type and p-phenylenediamine type derivatives. These compounds
are generally used in the form of a salt, for example, in the form of a chloride or
a sulfate since they are stabler than those under a free state. As the aminophenol
type developing agent, there may be mentioned, for example, o-aminophenol, p-aminophenol,
5-amino-2-oxy-toluene, 2-amino-3-oxy-toluene and 2-oxy-3-amino-1,4-dimethyl-benzene.
[0084] In the present invention, for exhibiting the effect more favorably and for improving
crystal precipitation property to an inner wall of a color developing tank of an automatic
processor, the aromatic primary amine color developing agent particularly useful in
the present invention is an aromatic primary amine color developing agent having an
amino group containing at least one water-soluble group, particularly preferably a
compound represented by the following formula (E).

[0085] In the above formula, R
1 represents a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom or an alkyl group, and said alkyl group
represents a straight or branched alkyl group having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, which may
have a substituent group.
[0086] R
2 and R
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, or an alkyl group or an aryl group, and these groups
may have a substituent group. At least one of R
2 and R
3 is an alkyl group substituted with a water-soluble group such as a hydroxyl group,
a carboxylic acid group, a sulfonic acid group, an amino group and a sulfonamide group,
or

The alkyl group may further have a substituent group.
[0087] R
4 represents a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group, the alkyl group represents a straight
or branched alkyl group having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, and p and q each represent an
integer of 1 to 5.
[0088] In the following, compounds represented by the above formula (E) are shown, but the
present invention is not limited to these.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0090] These p-phenylenediamine derivatives represented by the formula (E) can be used as
a salt of an organic acid or an inorganic acid, and, for example, hydrochlorides,
sulfates, phosphates, p-toluenesulfonates, sulfites, oxalates and benzenedisulfonates
can be used.
[0091] In the present invention, among the p-phenylenediamine derivatives represented by
the above formula (E), E-1 and E-2 are used most preferably for exhibiting the effect
of the present invention remarkably.
[0092] As a preservative used in the color developing solution to be used in the present
invention, there may be mentioned sulfites, and the sulfites may include sodium sulfite,
sodium hydrogen sulfite, potassium sulfite and potassium hydrogen sulfite. When the
silver halide is substantially a silver chloride emulsion, the sulfite is used in
an amount of 1.0 x 10-
2 mole/t or less, preferably 5.0 x 10-
3 mole/t or less, particularly preferably 0. When the silver halide is a silver iodobromide
emulsion, the sulfite may be used preferably in an amount in the range of 0.1 to 40
g/t, more preferably in the range of 0.5 to 10 g/t.
[0093] As a preservative other than the sulfites, there may be preferably used, as organic
preservatives, hydroxylamine, hydroxylamine derivatives disclosed in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publications No. 146043/1988, No. 146042/1988, No. 146041/1988, No. 146040/1988,
No. 135938/1988 and No. 118748/1988, and hydroxamic acids, hydrazines, hydrazides,
phenols, a-hydroxyketones, a-aminoketones, saccharides, monoamines, diamines, quaternary
ammonium salts, nitroxy radicals, alcohols, oximes, diamide compounds and fused ring
type amines disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 62639/1989.
[0094] Particularly, when the silver halide is silver chloride having a high concentration,
organic preservatives other than hydroxylamine, particularly hydroxylamine derivatives
substituted with alkyl and hydrazines are preferably used.
[0095] Further, as a development inhibitor preferably used in the above color developing
solution, there may be mentioned halides such as sodium chloride, potassium chloride,
sodium bromide, potassium bromide, sodium iodide and potassium iodide and further
organic inhibitors. Their amounts to be added are preferably in the range of 0.005
to 30 g/t, more preferably in the range of 0.01 to 20 g/t.
[0096] As the above organic inhibitor preferably used when the present invention is practiced,
there may be mentioned nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds, compounds containing
a mercapto group, aromatic compounds, onium compounds and compounds having an iodine
atom as a substituent group, and specific examples of them are the following exemplary
compounds.
[0097] However, the compounds which can be used are not limited to the following compounds.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0099] Among the above organic inhibitors, preferred are compounds represented by the following
formulae (R-I), (R-II) and (R-III).
[0100] The compound represented by the following formula (R-I) is more preferably a compound
represented by the formula (R-IV) or (R-V), most preferably compounds represented
by the formulae (R-VI) to (R-XI).
[0101] On the other hand, the compound represented by the following formula (R-II) is most
preferably a compound represented by the formula (R-XII) or (R-XIII).

wherein X and X
1 each represent a halogen atom, a mercapto group, an oxycarbonyl group, an alkyl group,
an aryl group, an amino group, a hydroxyl group, a nitro group, a carboxyl group and
a sulfo group; X
2 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group or a double bond for forming
a ring; Z is an atomic group necessary for forming a ring comprising a carbon atom,
a nitrogen atom and a sulfur atom; n and m each represent 0, 1 or 2; and when n and
m are 2, each X and X
1 may be the same or different.

wherein Y, Yi, Y
2 and Y
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, an alkyl group, an amino group, a
hydroxyl group, a nitro group, a carboxyl group, an oxycarbonyl group, a sulfo group
and a sulfonyl group.

wherein T represents a nitrogen atom or a phosphor atom; X
2 and X
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group or a halogen atom;
Y
4 and Ys each represent an alkyl group or an aryl group; and Y
4 and Ys may be closed to form a hetero ring.

[0102] Compound in which 2 to 5 carbon atoms at the positions of 1 to 9 are substituted
with nitrogen atoms, and a derivative thereof

[0104] In the above formulae (R-IV) to (R-XIII), R, Ri, R
2, Y
1 and Y
2 have the same meanings of Y, Yi, Y
2 and Y
3 in the description of the above formula (R-II), respectively. m and n have the same
meanings of those in the formula (R-I).
[0105] By using said organic inhibitor in combination with the above inorganic inhibitor,
the effect of the present invention can be exhibited more remarkably.
[0106] The organic inhibitor in the present invention has been described above, and further
specific examples thereof may include (Z-1) to (Z-3), (Z-6), (Z-8), (Z-13), (Z-15)
to (Z-17), (Z-19), (Z-22) to (Z-25), (Z-29), (Z-31) to (Z-38), (Z-40), (Z-41), (Z-43)
to (Z-64) and (Z-66) to (Z-73) described on pp. 101 to 113 of Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 170955/1987.
[0107] In the color developing solution to be used in the present invention, various components
generally added, for example, alkali agents such as sodium hydroxide and sodium carbonate,
alkali metal thiocyanate, alkali metal halides, benzyl alcohol, a water softener,
a thickener and a developing accelerator can be further contained as desired.
[0108] Other additives added in the above color developing solution may include an antistaining
agent, an antisludging agent, a preservative, an interlayer effect accelerator and
a chelating agent.
[0109] The color developing solution of the present invention is used preferably at a pH
of 9 or more, particularly preferably at a pH of 9 to 13.
[0110] For exhibiting the effect which accomplishes the objects of the present invention
more favorably, the color developing solution is employed preferably at a temperature
of 30 °C or higher, particularly preferably in the range of 33 °C to 60 C.
[0111] Next, the stabilizing solution to be used in the present invention is described.
The stabilizing solution to be used in the present invention can be applied to a stabilizing
solution used in a stabilizing processing which is the final processing step of a
light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material. Further, the present invention
can be also applied to the case where a light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material is processed by a processing solution having fixing ability, for example,
a fixing solution or a bleach-fixing solution, followed by stabilizing processing
substantially without washing. The light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material to be processed is not particularly limited and may include negative films,
printing papers and color copies, and can be processed by using the stabilizing solution
of the present invention.
[0112] The replenishing amount of the stabilizing solution of the present invention is preferably
1- to 80-fold of the amount brought in from the previous bath per unit area of a color
photographic material to be processed, but in the present invention, a stabilizing
processing tank is preferably constituted so that the concentration of the components
of the previous bath (the bleach-fixing solution or the fixing solution) in the stabilizing
solution becomes 1/100 or less, preferably 1/100 to 1/100000, more preferably 1/200
to 1/50000 in the ultimate stabilizing solution tank in the points of low pollution
and solution storability.
[0113] The stabilizing processing tank may be constituted of plural tanks, and said plural
tanks are preferably 2 tanks to 6 tanks in the present invention.
[0114] In the present invention, when the stabilizing processing tank comprises 2 tanks
or more, a countercurrent system (a system in which a solution is supplied to a latter
bath and then a solution is overflown from a previous bath) is employed particularly
preferably in the point of the effect of the present invention, particularly in the
points of low pollution and improvement of image storage.
[0115] The amount to be brought in varies depending on a kind of a light-sensitive material,
conveying speed and a conveying system of an automatic processor, and a squeeze system
of a light-sensitive material surface, but in the case of a light-sensitive color
material, the amount to be brought in is generally 50 ml/m
2 to 150 ml/m
2. The replenishing amount which can exhibit the effect of the present invention more
markedly relative to said amount to be brought in is in the range of 50 ml/m
2 to 4.0 ℓ/m
2, particularly in the range of 100 ml/m
2 to 1,500 ml/m
2.
[0116] The processing with the stabilizing solution is carried out at a processing temperature
of 15 to 60 C, preferably in the range of 20 to 45 C.
[0117] In the stabilizing solution of the present invention, chelating agents represented
by the following formulae (CH-I) to (CH-III) are preferably contained.

wherein E represents an alkylene group, a cycloalkylene group, a phenylene group,
-R
5'-O-R
5'-, -Rs'-O-Rs'-O-Rs'-or -Rs'-Z-Rs'- where Z represents

R
l' to R
6' each represent an alkylene group; A
1 to As each represent -COOM or -P0
3M
2; and A4 and As each represent a hydrogen atom, a hydroxyl group, -COOM or -P0
3M
2 where M represents a hydrogen atom or an alkali metal atom.

wherein R
7' represents an alkyl group, an aryl group or a nitrogen-containing 6-membered cyclic
group; and M represents a hydrogen atom or an alkali metal atom.

wherein R
8', R
s' and Rio' each represent a hydrogen atom, a hydroxyl group, -COOM, -P0
3M
2 or an alkyl group; B
1, B
2 and B
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, a hydroxyl group, -COOM, -P0
3M
2 or

where J represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, -C
2H
40H or -P0
3M
2 where M represents a hydrogen atom or an alkali metal atom; and n and m each represent
0 or 1.
[0118] In the following, partial specific examples of the chelating agents represented by
the formulae (CH-I), (CH-II) and (CH-III) are shown. The chelating agent to be used
in the present invention is not limited to the following specific examples.
(Exemplary chelating agents)
[0120] The above chelating agents preferably used in the stabilizing solution are used preferably
in an amount of 0.01 to 100 g, more preferably 0.05 to 50 g, particularly preferably
0.1 to 20 g per liter of the stabilizing solution of the present invention.
[0121] For the purpose of improving image storability, the stabilizing solution has preferably
a pH value in the range of 4.0 to 9.0, more preferably in the range of 5.5 to 9.0,
particularly preferably in the range of 6.0 to 8.5.
[0122] As a pH controller which can be contained in the stabilizing solution, any alkali
agent or acidic agent generally known can be used.
[0123] In the stabilizing solution, organic acid salts (salts of citric acid, acetic acid,
succinic acid, oxalic acid and benzoic acid), pH controllers (phosphate, borate, hydrochloride
and sulfate), surfactants, antiseptic agents and salts of metals such as Bi, Mg, Zn,
Ni, Al, Sn, Ti and Zr can be added. These compounds may be added in any desired combination
of amounts within the range which is required to maintain a pH value in a stabilizing
bath and also exerts bad influence neither on stability of color photographic images
during storage nor generation of precipitation. Further, for exhibiting the above
effect, Ca and Mg ions may be contained in an amount of 5 ppm or less in the stabilizing
solution.
[0124] As an antifungal agent preferably used in the stabilizing solution to be used in
the present invention, there may be included hydroxybenzoate compounds, phenol type
compounds, thiazole type compounds, pyridine type compounds, guanidine type compounds,
carbamate type compounds, morpholine type compounds, phosphonium type compounds, quaternary
ammonium type compounds, urea type compounds, isoxazole type compounds, propanolamine
type compounds, sulfamide type compounds, amino acid type compounds and benztriazole
type compounds.
[0125] Further, from the standpoint of solution storability, phenol type compounds, thiazole
type compounds and benztriazole type compounds are particularly preferred.
[0126] Specific examples may include 1,2-benzisothiazolin-3-one, 2-methyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one,
2-octyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one, 5-chloro-2-methyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one, o-phenylphenol
sodium and benztriazole. The amount of the antifungal agents to be added in the stabilizing
solution are preferably in the range of 0.001 to 20 g, particularly preferably in
the range of 0.005 to 10 g per liter of the stabilizing solution.
[0127] In the stabilizing solution of the present invention, for the purpose of stabilizing
dyes, formalin, hexamethylenetetramine, triazine type compounds, N-methylol compounds
(dimethylolurea, trimethylolurea, dimethylolguanidine, N-hyroxymethylhydroxyethylamine
and trimethylolmelamine) and aliphatic aldehyde can be used in combination. From the
standpoint of pollution, the amount of formalin is preferably made 0, which is a preferred
embodiment also from the point of solution storability.
[0128] In the stabilizing solution to be used in the present invention, sulfite ion-releasing
compounds and at least one of compounds represented by the following formulae (SA)
and (SB) are preferably contained, whereby solution storability can be further improved
without exerting any bad influence on photographic performances.

[0129] In the above formulae, A,, A
2, A3 and A4 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms,
a formyl group, an acyl group or an alkenyl group. M represents an alkali metal atom
(Na, K and Li). n represents an integer of 1 to 5.
[0130] The alkyl group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms may include those which are straight or
branched, for example, a methyl group, an ethyl group, an n-propyl group, an isopropyl
group, an n-butyl group, an n-pentyl group, an iso-pentyl group, an n-hexyl group
and an isohexyl group, which may be substituted. As the substituent group, there may
be mentioned specifically a formyl group (e.g. each group of formylmethyl and 2-formylethyl),
an amino group (e.g. each group of aminomethyl and aminoethyl), a hydroxyl group (e.g.
each group of hydroxymethyl, 2-hydroxyethyl and 2-hydroxypropyl), an alkoxy group
(e.g. each group of methoxy and ethoxy) and a halogen atom (e.g. each group of chloromethyl,
trichloromethyl and dibromomethyl).
[0131] The alkenyl group may be substituted or unsubstituted. The unsubstituted alkenyl
group may include each group of vinyl and 2-propenyl, and the substituted one may
include, for example, each group of 1,2-dichloro-2-carboxyvinyl and 2-phenylvinyl.
[0132] In the following, specific examples of the compounds represented by the above formulae
(SA) and (SB) are shown, but the present invention is not limited to these.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0133]
SA-1 Sodium bisulfite formaldehyde
SA-2 Sodium bisulfite acetaldehyde
SA-3 Sodium bisulfite propionaldehyde
SA-4 Sodium bisulfite butylaldehyde
SB-1 Sodium bisulfite succinaldehyde
SB-2 Sodium bisbisulfite glutaraldehyde
SB-3 Sodium bisbisulfite β-methylglutaraldehyde
SB-4 Sodium bisbisulfite maleic dialdehyde
[0134] The compounds represented by the above formulae (SA) and (SB) may be used singly
or in combination. The amount to be added is preferably 0.1 to 50 g, more preferably
0.1 to 20 g per liter of the stabilizing solution of the present invention.
[0135] The sulfite ion-releasing compound to be used in the present invention may be either
an organic compound or an inorganic compound as long as it releases a sulfite ion,
but preferably an inorganic salt. Preferred specific examples may include:
SC-1 Sodium sulfite
SC-2 Potassium sulfite
SC-3 Ammonium sulfite
SC-4 Ammonium bisulfite
SC-5 Potassium bisulfite
SC-6 Sodium bisulfite
SC-7 Sodium metabisulfite
SC-8 Potassium metabisulfite
SC-9 Ammonium metabisulfite
SC-10 Hydrosulfite
[0136] The amount of the above sulfite ion-releasing compound to be added in a washing-substituting
stabilizing solution, a stabilizing solution and a processing solution by which a
washing-substituting stabilizing processing and a stabilizing processing can be carried
out at the same time is preferably 0.01 to 0.1 mole/t, more preferably 0.02 to 0.1
mole/ℓ.
[0137] Further, in the stabilizing solution to be used in the present invention, surfactants
represented by the following formulae (I) and (III), triethanolamine and polyvinyl
pyrrolidones are preferably contained.

wherein R
1 represents a monovalent organic group; R
2 represents an ethylene group or a propylene group; m represents an integer of 4 to
50; and X
1 represents a hydrogen atom, -S0
3M or -PO3M2 where M represents a hydrogen atom, an alkali metal atom or -NH
4.
[0139] The compounds represented by the above formula (I) can be used in an amount in the
range of 0.1 to 40 g, preferably in the range of 0.3 to 20 g per liter of the stabilizing
solution of the present invention.
[0140] The polyvinyl pyrrolidones to be used in the present invention may preferably have
an average molecular weight of 1,000 to 70,000, and their representative specific
examples may include the following compounds.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0141]
(P-1) Poly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone (see Note 1)
(P-2) Poly-N-(2-acryloyloxy)ethyl-1-pyrrolidone
(P-3) Poly-N-glycidyl-2-pyrrolidone
(P-4) Poly-N-allyl-2-pyrrolidone
(P-5) Poly-N,N-dimethyl-N-[3(1-pyrrolidonyl)-2-hydroxy]propyl-amine-N'-acryloylimine
(P-6) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/N-acryloylmorpholine (molar ratio: 42:58)
(P-7) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/N-acryloylpiperidine (molar ratio: 35:65)
(P-8) Poly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/N-methacryloyl-2-methylimidazole (molar ratio: 55:45)
(P-9) Copoly-N-(2-acryloyloxy)-ethyl-2-pyrrolidone/diethylamide acrylate (molar ratio:
60:40)
(P-1 0) Copoly-N-(2-methacryloyloxy)ethyl-2-pyrrolidone/sodium acrylate (molar ratio:
75:25)
(P-11) Copoly-N-(3-acryloyloxy)propyl-2-pyrrolidone/methyl methacrylate (molar ratio:
65:35)
(P-12) Copoly-N,N-dimethyl-N-[3-(1-pyrrolidonyl)-2-hydroxy]-propylamine-N'-acryloylimine/ethyl
acrylate (molar ratio: 70:30)
(P-13) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/vinyl acetate (molar ratio: 70:30)
(P-14) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/methyl acrylate (molar ratio: 70:30)
(P-15) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/styrene (molar ratio: 80:20)
(P-16) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/acrylamide/N-vinyl-2-methylimidazole (molar ratio:
50:30:20)
(P-17) Copoyl-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/N-(1,1-dimethyl-3-oxo)-butyl-acrylamide (molar
ratio: 70:30)
(P-18) Copoly-N-allyl-2-pyrrolidone/vinyl acetate (molar ratio: 64:36)
(P-19) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/4-vinylpyridine (molar ratio: 60:40)
(P-20) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/ethyl acrylate/monoethanolamine acrylate (molar
ratio: 50:45:5)
(P-21) Copoly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone/piperidine piperidinomaleamate (molar ratio: 53:47)
(P-22) Copoly-N-vinyl-pyrrolidone/4-vinylpyridino-N-methyliodide (molar ratio: 42:58)
(P-23) Copoly-N-vinyl pyrrolidone/maleic thiourea half ammonium salt (molar ratio:
60:40)
Note 1: Exemplary compound (P-1) is commercially available under trade names of PVP
K-15, PVP K-17, PVP K-30, PVP K-60 and PVP K-90 from General Aniline And Film Corp.,
and under trade names of Colidon 12, Colidon 17, Colidon 25, Colidon 30, Colidon 90,
Lubiskol K-17, Lubiskol K-30 and Lubiskol K-90 from BASF Aktiengesellschaft,Japan.
[0142] The polymers or copolymers of the present invention can be obtained easily since
a part of them are commercially available as described above, and can be synthesized
easily according to the method described in "Preparative Methods of Polymer Chemistry"
written by W.R. Sorenson and T.W. Campbell published by John Wilery and Sons, Inc.
in 1961.
[0143] The polymers or copolymers of the present invention may be used singly or in combination
of two or more kinds, and their amount to be used are in the range of 0.01 g to 100
g, preferably in the range of 0.05 g to 10 g per liter of the image stabilizing solution.
The polymers or copolymers of the present invention may be added in the stabilizing
solution, or may be added in a replenishing solution and then replenished in the stabilizing
solution, and also these two embodiments may be used in combination.

wherein R
s represents a hydrogen atom, a hydroxy group, a lower alkyl group, an alkoxy group,

where Rio, R
11 and R
12 each represent a lower alkyl group (preferably an alkyl group having 1 to 3 carbon
atoms such as methyl, ethyl and propyl) and the above R
io, R
11 and R
12 may be the same or different, respectively; ℓ
1 to ℓ
3 each represent an integer of 0 or 1 to 4; and p, q
1 and q
2 each represent an integer of 1 to 15.
[0144] Specific examples of the compound represented by the formula (III) are shown below.
(Water-soluble organic siloxane type compounds)
[0146] When the amount of these water-soluble organic siloxane type compounds to be added
is in the range of 0.01 to 20 g per liter of the stabilizing solution, good effect
can be exhibited.
[0147] If the amount is less than 0.01 g, stain on a light-sensitive material surface becomes
conspicuous, and if the amount is more than 20 g, a large amount of the organic siloxane
type compound is attached to a light-sensitive material surface, whereby the surface
is stained.
[0148] The water-soluble organic siloxane type compounds of the present invention are common
water-soluble organic siloxane type compounds as disclosed in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 18333/1972, Japanese Patent Publication No. 51172/1980, Japanese
Patent Publication No. 37538/1976, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 62128/1974
and U.S. Patent No. 3,545,970.
[0149] These water-soluble organic siloxane type compounds are commercially available from
Union Carbide Co. and Shin-etsu Kagaku Kogyo K.K.
[0150] The light-sensitive material according to the present invention may be either of
a coupler-in-emulsion type development system in which a coupler is contained in a
light-sensitive material (see U.S. Patents No. 2,376,679 and No. 2,801,171) or of
a coupler-in-developer type development system in which a coupler is contained in
a developing solution (see U.S. Patents No. 2,252,718, No. 2,592,243 and No. 2,590,970).
As a coupler, any coupler generally known in the art can be used. For example, as
a cyan coupler, cyan couplers outside the scope of the present invention may be used
in combination, and said cyan couplers used in combination may include those which
are based on a naphthol or phenol structure and form an indoaniline dye by coupling.
As a magenta coupler, there may be used magenta couplers having a 5-pyrazolone ring
having an active methylene group as a skeletal structure and pyrazoloazole type magenta
couplers. As a yellow coupler, there may be used yellow couplers having an active
methylene group and having a benzoylacetanilide, pivalylacetanilide or acylacetanilide
structure, which may have a substituent group or no substituent group at a coupling
position.
[0151] Thus, either so-called diequivalent couplers or so-called tetraequivalent couplers
can be used as a coupler.
[0152] When the light-sensitive color photographic material is a light-sensitive material
for negative images (e.g. a color negative film), the preferred cyan coupler may include
those represented by the following formulae (C-A), (C-B) and (C-C).

wherein R
1 represents an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group or
a heterocyclic group; Y represents a group represented by

-CONHCOR
2 or -CONHS0
2R
2 (where R
2 represents an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group or
a heterocyclic group; R
3 represents a hydrogen atom or a group represented by R
2; and R
2 and R
3 may be the same or different and may be bonded to each other to form a 5- or 6-membered
hetero ring); and Z represents a hydrogen atom or a group which can be eliminated
by coupling reaction with an oxidized product of an aromatic primary amine type color
developing agent.

wherein R
11 represents -CONR
14R
15, -NHCOR
14, -NHCOOR
16, -NHSO
2R
16, -NHCONR
14R
15 or -NHSO
2NR
14R
15; R
12 represents a monovalent group; R
13 represents a substituent group; X represents a hydrogen atom or a group which can
be eliminated by coupling reaction with an oxidized product of an aromatic primary
amine type color developing agent; ℓ represents 0 or 1; m represents 0 to 3; R
14 and R
15 each represent a hydrogen atom, an aromatic group, an aliphatic group or a heterocyclic
group; R
16 represents an aromatic group, an aliphatic group or a heterocyclic group; when m
is 2 or 3, the respective R
13's may be the same or different and may be bonded to each other to form a ring; Ru
and R15, R
12 and R
13, and R
12 and X may be bonded to each other to form a ring, respectively; and when t is 0,
m is 0 and R
11 is - CONHR
17 where R
17 represents an aromatic group.
[0153] First, the formula (C-A) and the formula (C-B) shown above are explained. In said
formulae, Y is a group represented

-CONHCOR
2 or -CONHS0
2R
2. Here, R, and R
2 each represent an alkyl group, preferably an alkyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms
(e.g. each group of methyl, ethyl, t-butyl and dodecyl), an alkenyl group, preferably
an alkenyl group having 2 to 20 carbon atoms (an allyl group and a heptadecenyl group),
a cycloalkyl group, preferably 5- to 7-membered cyclic groups (e.g. cyclohexyl), an
aryl group (e.g. a phenyl group, a tolyl group and a naphthyl group) and a heterocyclic
group, preferably a 5- or 6-membered cyclic group containing 1 to 4 nitrogen atoms,
oxygen atoms or sulfur atoms (e.g. a furyl group, a thienyl group and a benzothiazolyl
group). R
3 represents a hydrogen atom or a group represented by R
2. R
2 and R
3 may be bonded to each other to form a 5- or 6-membered hetero ring. Into R
1 and R
2, any desired substituent group can be introduced, and may include, for example, an
alkyl group having 1 to 10 carbon atoms (e.g. methyl, i-propyl, i-butyl, t-butyl and
t-octyl), an aryl group (e.g. phenyl and naphthyl), a halogen atom (fluorine, chlorine
and bromine), a cyano group, a nitro group, a sulfonamide group (e.g. methanesul-
fonamide, butanesulfonamide and p-toluenesulfonamide), a sulfamoyl group (methylsulfamoyl
and phenylsulfamoyl), a sufonyl group (e.g. methanesulfonyl and p-toluenesulfonyl),
a fluorosulfonyl group, a carbamoyl group (e.g. dimethylcarbamoyl and phenylcarbamoyl),
an oxycarbonyl group (e.g. ethoxycarbonyl and phenoxycabonyl) an acyl group (e.g.
acetyl and benzoyl), a hetero ring (e.g. a pyridyl group and a pyrazolyl group), an
alkoxy group, an aryloxy group and an acyloxy group.
[0154] In the formula (C-A) and the formula (C-B), R
1 represents a ballast group necessary for imparting diffusion-proof property to the
cyan couplers represented by the formula (C-A) and the formula (C-B) and cyan dyes
formed from said cyan couplers. R
1 may be preferably an alkyl group having 4 to 30 carbon atoms, an aryl group, an alkenyl
group, a cycloalkyl group or a heterocyclic group, and, for example, a straight or
branched alkyl group (e.g. t-butyl, n-octyl, t-octyl and n-dodecyl) and a 5- or 6-membered
heterocyclic group.
[0155] In the formula (C-A) and the formula (C-B), Z represents a hydrogen atom or a group
which can be eliminated by coupling reaction with an oxidized product of a color developing
agent. Z may include, for example, a halogen atom (e.g. chlorine, bromine and fluorine),
a substituted or unsubstituted alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, a heterocyclic oxy
group, an acyloxy group, a carbamoyloxy group, a sulfonyloxy group, an alkylthio group,
an arylthio group, a heterocyclic thio group and a sulfonamide group, and further,
as a specific example thereof, there may be mentioned those disclosed in U.S. Patent
No. 3,741,563, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 37425/1972, Japanese Patent
Publication No. 36894/1973, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 10135/1975,
No. 117422/1975, No. 130441/1975, No. 108841/1976, No. 120343/1975, No. 18315/1977,
No. 105226/1978, No. 14736/1979, No. 48237/1979, No. 32071/1980, No. 65957/1980, No.
1938/1981, No. 12643/1981, No. 27147/1981, No. 146050/1984, No. 166956/1984, No. 24547/1985,
No. 35731/1985 and No. 37557/1985.
[0156] In the present invention, the cyan coupler represented by the formula (C-D) is preferred.

[0157] In the formula (C-D), R
4 is a substituted or unsubstituted aryl group (particularly preferably a phenyl group).
When said aryl group has a substituent group, the substituent group may include at
least one substituted group selected from S0
2Rs, a halogen atom (fluorine, chlorine and bromine), -CF
3, -N0
2, -CN, -CORs, -COORs, -S0
20Rs,

and

[0158] Here, R
5 represents an alkyl group, preferably an alkyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms
(e.g. each group of methyl, ethyl, t-butyl and dodecyl), an alkenyl group, preferably
an alkenyl group having 2 to 20 carbon atoms (an allyl group and a heptadecenyl group),
a cycloalkyl group, preferably 5- to 7-membered cyclic groups (e.g. cyclohexyl) and
an aryl group (e.g. a phenyl group, a tolyl group and a naphthyl group), and R
6 is a hydrogen atom or a group represented by R
s.
[0159] A suitable compound of the cyan coupler of the present invention represented by the
formula (C-D) is a compound in which R
4 is a substituted or unsubstituted phenyl group, and a substituent group of the phenyl
group is cyano group, nitro group, -S0
2R
7 (where R
7 is an alkyl group), a halogen atom or trifluoromethyl group.
[0160] In the formula (C-D), Z and R
1 each have the same meanings of those in the formulae (C-A) and (C-B). A preferred
example of the ballast group represented by R
1 is a group represented by the following formula (C-E).

wherein J represents an oxygen atom, a sulfur atom or a sulfonyl group; K represents
an integer of 0 to 4; ℓ represents 0 or 1; when K is 2 or more, two or more Rg's may
be the same or different; R
8 represents a straight or branched substituted alkylene group having 1 to 20 carbon
atoms such as an aryl group; R
9 represents a monovalent group, preferably a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom (e.g. chlorine
and bromine), an alkyl group, preferably a straight or branched alkyl group having
1 to 20 carbon atoms (e.g. each group of methyl, t-butyl, t-pentyl, t-octyl, dodecyl,
pentadecyl, benzyl and phenethyl), an aryl group (e.g. a phenyl group), a heterocyclic
group (e.g. a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic group), an alkoxy group, preferably
a straight or branched alkoxy group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms (e.g. each group of
methoxy, ethoxy, t-butyloxy, octyloxy, decyloxy and dodecyloxy), an aryloxy group
(e.g. a phenoxy group), a hydroxy group, an acyloxy group, preferably an alkylcarbonyloxy
group, an arylcarbonyloxy group (e.g. an acetoxy group and a benzoyloxy group), a
carboxy group, an alkyloxycarbonyl group, preferably a straight or branched alkylcarbonyl
group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms, preferably a phenoxycarbonyl group, an alkylthio
group, preferably an acyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms, preferably a straight
or branched alkylcarbonyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms, an acylamino group, preferably
a straight or branched alkylcarboamide group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms, a benzenecarboamide
group, a sulfonamide group, preferably a straight or branched alkylsulfonamide group
or benzenesulfonamide group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms, a carbamoyl group, preferably
a straight or branched alkylaminocarbonyl group or phenylaminocarbonyl group having
1 to 20 carbon atoms and a sulfamoyl group, preferably a straight or branched alkylaminosulfonyl
group or phenylaminosulfonyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms.
[0161] Next, specific exemplary compounds of the cyan coupler of the present invention represented
by the formula (C-A) or (C-B) are shown, but the present invention is not limited
to these.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0163] Next, the above formula (CC) is described.
[0164] Each group represented by R
12 to R
17 in the formula (C-C) may include those having a substituent group.
[0165] As R
16, an aliphatic group having 1 to 30 carbon atoms, an aromatic group having 6 to 30
carbon atoms and a heterocyclic group having 1 to 30 carbon atoms are preferred, and
as R
14 and R
15, a hydrogen atom and those mentioned as a preferred example of R
16 are preferred.
[0166] As R
12, preferred are a hydrogen atom which bonded directly or through NH, CO or S0
2 to NH, an aliphatic group having 1 to 30 carbon atoms, an aromatic group having 6
to 30 carbon atoms, a heterocyclic group having 1 to 30 carbon atoms, -OR
18, -COR
18,

-PO(̵OR
20)
2, -PO(R
20)
2, -C0
2R
20, -S0
2R
20 or -S0
20R
20 (where R
18, R
19 and R
20 each have the same meanings of R
14, R
15 and R
16 defined above; R
18 and R
19 may be bonded to form a ring).
[0167] R
17 is preferably an aromatic group having 6 to 30 carbon atoms, and as a representative
example of a substituent group of R
17, there may be mentioned a halogen atom, a hydroxy group, an amino group, a carboxyl
group, a sulfonic acid group, a cyano group, an aromatic group, a heterocyclic group,
a carbonamide group, a sulfonamide group, a carbamoyl group, a sulfamoyl group, an
ureido group, an acyl group, an acyloxy group, an aliphatic oxy group, an aromatic
oxy group, an aliphatic thio group, an aromatic thio group, an aliphatic sulfonyl
group, an aromatic sulfonyl group, a sulfamoylamino group, a nitro group, an imide
group, an aliphatic group and an aliphatic oxycarbonyl group. When R
17 is substituted with plural substituent groups, the plural substituent groups may
be bonded to each other to form a ring, and as an example thereof, there may be mentioned
a dioxymethylene group.
[0168] As a representative example of R
13, there may be mentioned a halogen atom, a hydroxy group, an amino group, a carboxyl
group, a sulfonic acid group, a cyano group, an aromatic group, a heterocyclic group,
a carbonamide group, a sulfonamide group, a carbamoyl group, a sulfamoyl group, an
ureido group, an acyl group, an acyloxy group, an aliphatic oxy group, an aromatic
oxy group, an aliphatic thio group, an aromatic thio group, an aliphatic sulfonyl
group, an aromatic sulfonyl group, a sulfamoylamino group, a nitro group and an imide
group, and a number of carbon atoms contained in this R
13 is preferably 0 to 13. When m = 2, an example of a cyclic R
13 is a dioxymethylene group.
[0169] When t is 1, R
11 is particularly preferably -CONR
14R
15, m is preferably 0, and R
12 is preferably -COR
18, -COOR
20, -S0
2R
20, -CONR
18R
19 and -SO
2NR
18R
19 which are bonded directly to NH, more preferably -COOR
20, -COR
18 and -S0
2R
20 which are bonded directly to NH, and among them most preferably -COOR
20.
[0170] Those which form a polymer such as a dimer or more through R
11 to R
13 and X are included in the present invention.
[0171] In the formula (C-C), the case where I = 0 is preferred.
[0172] Specific examples of the coupler represented by the formula (C-C) are disclosed in
Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 237448/1985, No. 153640/1986, No. 145557/1986,
No. 85242/1987, No. 15529/1973, No. 117422/1975, No. 18315/1977, No. 90932/1977, No.
52423/1978, No. 48237/1979, No. 66129/1979, No. 32071/1980, No. 65957/1980, No. 105226/1980,
No. 1938/1981, No. 12643/1981, No. 27147/1981, No. 126832/1981 and No. 95346/1983,
and U.S. Patent No. 3,488,193, and can be synthesized according to the methods disclosed
in these publications.
[0173] For adding the coupler to a light-sensitive material, depending on physical properties
(e.g. solubility) of the coupler, various methods such as the oil-in-water type emulsifying
dispersion method in which a water-insoluble high boiling point organic solvent is
used, the alkali dispersion method in which a coupler is added.in the form of an alkaline
solution, the latex dispersion method and the solid dispersion method in which a coupler
is added directly in the form of minute solid can be employed.
[0174] The amount of the coupler to be added is generally 1.0 x 10-
3 mole to 1.0 mole, preferably in the range of 5.0 x 10-
3 mole to 8.0 x 10
-1 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0175] In the following, representative specific examples of the coupler represented by
the formula (C-C) are shown, but the present invention is not limited to these.
(Exemplary compounds)
[0177] When the light-sensitive color photographic material is a light-sensitive material
for positive images (e.g. a color negative film), the preferred cyan coupler may include
those represented by the following formula (C-1).

wherein R
1 represents a ballast group; H
2 represents an alkyl group having or more carbon atoms; ana Z
1 represents a hydrogen atom, or an atom or a group which can be eliminated by the
reaction with an oxidized product of a color developing agent.
[0178] In the cyan coupler represented by the above formula (C-1), the alkyl group represented
by R
2 may be straight or branched and include those having a substituent group.
[0179] R
2 is preferably an alkyl group having 2 to 6 carbon atoms.
[0180] The ballast group represented by R
1 is an organic group having a size and a shape which can give a volume sufficient
to substantially prevent diffusion of a coupler from a layer in which the coupler
is used to other layers, to a coupler molecule.
[0181] A preferred example of said ballast group is represented by the following formula.

wherein R
B1 represents an alkyl group having 1 to 12 carbon atoms; Ar represents an aryl group
such as a phenyl group; and the aryl group includes those having a substituent groups.
[0183] In addition to these examples, specific examples of the cyan coupler which can be
used in the present invention are disclosed in Japanese Patent Publication No. 11572/1974,
and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 3142/1986, No. 9652/1986, No. 9653/1986,
No. 39045/1986, No. 50136/1986, No. 99141/1986 and No. 105545/1986.
[0184] The cyan dye-forming coupler represented by the above formula (C-1) of the present
invention can be used generally in an amount of 1 x 10-
3 mole to 1 mole, preferably in the range of 1 x 10-
2 mole to 8 x 10-
1 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0185] In the present invention, the cyan coupler represented by the formula (C-1) is preferably
used in combination with a 2,5-diacylaminophenol type cyan coupler.
[0186] As the 2,5-diacylaminophenol type cyan coupler, a coupler represented by the following
formula (C-2) is preferred.

wherein R
1 represents an alkyl group or an aryl group; R
2 represents an alkyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group or a heterocyclic group;
R
3 represents a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, an alkyl group or an alkoxy group; R
3 may form a ring together with Ri; and Z represents a hydrogen atom, or an atom or
a group which can be eliminated by reaction with an oxidized product of an aromatic
primary amine type color developing agent.
[0187] In the cyan coupler represented by the above formula (C-2), the alkyl group represented
by R
1 is preferably alkyl groups having 1 to 32 carbon atoms, and these alkyl groups may
be straight or branched and also include those having a substituent group.
[0188] The aryl group represented by R
1 is preferably a phenyl group, and also includes those having a substituent group.
[0189] The alkyl group represented by R
2 is preferably alkyl groups having 1 to 32 carbon atoms, and these alkyl groups may
be straight or branched and also include those having a substituent group.
[0190] The cycloalkyl group represented by R
2 is preferably alkyl groups having 3 to 12 carbon atoms, and these cycloalkyl groups
also include those having a substituent group.
[0191] The aryl group represented by R
2 is preferably a phenyl group, and also includes those having a substituent group.
[0192] The heterocyclic group represented by R
2 is preferably 5- to 7-membered heterocyclic groups, and these heterocyclic groups
include those having a substituent group and may be fused.
[0193] R
3 represents a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, an alkyl group or an alkoxy group, and
said alkyl group and said alkoxy group may include those having a substituent group.
However, R
3 is preferably a hydrogen atom.
[0194] The ring formed by R
1 and R
3 is preferably a 5- or 6-membered ring, and an example thereof may include

[0195] In the formula (I), an atom or a group represented by Z, which can be eliminated
by reaction with an oxidized product of a color developing agent may include a halogen
atom, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, an acyloxy group, a sulfonyloxy group, an
acylamino group, a sulfonylamino group, an alkoxycarbonyloxy group, an aryloxycarbonyloxy
group and an imide group (including those having a substituent group), but preferably
a halogen atom, an aryloxy group and an alkoxy group.
[0196] Among the above cyan couplers, particularly preferred are a cyan coupler represented
by the following formula (C-2A).

wherein R
G1 represent a phenyl group substituted with at least one halogen atom and further includes
those having a substituent group other than a halogen atom; R
G2 has the same meaning of R
1 in the above formula (C-2); and Z
G represents a halogen atom, an aryloxy group or an alkoxy group and includes those
having a substituent group.
[0198] As a specific example of the above cyan coupler, there may be further included, for
example, 2,5- diacylamino type cyan couplers disclosed on pp. 26 to 35 of Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publication No. 178962/1987, in the left lower column on p. 7 to
the right lower column on p. 10 of Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 225155/1985,
in the left upper column on p. 6 to the right lower column on p. 8 of Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 222853/1985 and in the left lower column on p. 6 to the left
upper column on p. 9 of Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 185335/1984, and
these couplers can be synthesized according to the methods disclosed in these publications.
[0199] The cyan dye-forming coupler represented by the above formula (C-2) of the present
invention can be used generally in an amount of 1 x 10-
3 to 1 mole, preferably in the range of 1 x 10-
2 mole to 8 x 10-
1 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0200] When the cyan coupler represented by the above formula (C-1) and the cyan coupler
represented by the formula (C-2) are used in combination, their mixing ratio is preferably
1 : 9 to 9 : 1, particularly preferably 7 : 3 to 3 : 7 in terms of a molar ratio.
[0201] Next, the magenta coupler preferably used in the present invention is represented
by the following formula (M-1).

[0202] In the formula (M-I), Z
m represents a group of non-metallic atoms necessary for forming a nitrogen-containing
heterocyclic ring, and the ring formed by said Z
m may have a substituent group.
[0203] X
m represents a hydrogen atom or a group which can be eliminated by reaction with an
oxidized product of a color developing agent.
[0204] The substituent group represented by R
m is not particularly limited, but may representatively include each group of alkyl,
aryl, anilino, acylamino, sulfonamide, alkylthio, arylthio, alkenyl and cycloalkenyl.
Additionally, there may be mentioned a halogen atom, and each group of cycloalkenyl,
alkynyl, hetero ring, sulfonyl, sulfinyl, phosphonyl, acyl, carbamoyl, sulfamoyl,
cyano, alkoxy, aryloxy, heterocyclic oxy, siloxy, acyloxy, carbamoyloxy, amino, alkylamino,
imide, ureido, sulfamoylamino, alkoxycarbonylamino, aryloxycarbonylamino, alkoxycarbonyl,
aryloxycarbonyl and heterocyclic thio, and also a spiro-compound residue and a bridged
hydrocarbon compound residue.
[0205] The alkyl group represented by R
m are preferably alkyl groups having 1 to 32 carbon atoms, which may be straight or
branched.
[0206] The aryl group represented by R
m is preferably a phenyl group.
[0207] The acylamino group represented by R
m may include an alkylcarbonylamino group and an arylcarbonylamino group.
[0208] The sulfonamide group represented by R
m may include, for example, an alkylsulfonylamino group and an arylsulfonylamino group.
[0209] The alkyl component and aryl component in the alkylthio group and arylthio group
represented by R
m are each the alkyl group and aryl group represented by the above R
m.
[0210] The alkenyl group represented by R
m is alkenyl groups having 2 to 32 carbon atoms, and the cycloalkyl group is cycloalkyl
groups preferably having 3 to 12 carbon atoms, particularly preferably 5 to 7 carbon
atoms. The alkenyl groups may be straight or branched.
[0211] The cycloalkenyl group represented by R
m is cycloalkenyl groups preferably having 3 to 12 carbon atoms, particularly preferably
5 to 7 carbon atoms.
[0212] The sulfonyl group represented by R
m may include an alkylsulfonyl group and an arylsulfonyl group; the sulfinyl group,
for example, an alkylsulfinyl group and arylsulfinyl group; the phosphonyl group,
for example, an alkylphosphonyl group, an alkoxyphosphonyl group, an aryloxyphosphonyl
group and an arylphosphonyl group; the acyl group, for example, an alkylcarbonyl group
and an arylcarbonyl group; the carbamoyl group, for example, an alkylcarbamoyl group
and an arylcarbamoyl group; the sulfamoyl group, for example, an alkylsulfamoyl group
and an arylsulfamoyl group; the acyloxy group, for example, an alkylcarbonyloxy group
and an arylcarbonyloxy group; the carbamoyloxy group, for example, an alkylcarbamoyloxy
group and an arylcarbamoyloxy group; the ureido group, for example, an alkylureido
group and an arylureido group; the sulfamoylamino group, for example, an alkylsulfamoylamino
group and an arylsulfamoylamino group; the heterocyclic group, preferably 5- to 7-membered
cyclic groups, specifically including a 2-furyl group, a 2-thienyl group, a 2-pyrimidinyl
group and a 2-benzothiazolyl group; the heterocyclic oxy group, preferably groups
having 5- to 7-membered heterocyclic rings, specifically including a 3,4,5,6-tetrahydropyranyl-2-oxy
group, a 1-phenyltetrazole-5-oxy group; the heterocyclic thio group, preferably 5-
to 7-membered heterocyclic thio groups, for example, a 2-pyridylthio group, a 2-benzothiazolylthio
group, a 2,4-diphenoxy-1,3,5-triazole-6-thio group; the siloxy group, a triethylsiloxy
group, a triethylsiloxy group and a dimethybutylsiloxy group; the imide group, a succinimide
group, a 3-heptadecyl succinimide group, a phthalimide group and a glutarimide group;
the spiro-compound residue, spiro[3,3]-heptan-1-yl; the bridged hydrocarbon compound
residue, bicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-1-yl, tricyclo[3.3.1.1
3,7]-decan-1-yl and 7,7-dimethyl- bicyclo[2.2.1 ]heptan-1-yl.
[0213] The group represented by X
m, which can be eliminated by reaction with an oxidized product of a color developing
agent, may include, for example, a halogen atom (a chlorine atom, a bromine atom and
a fluorine atom), and each group of alkoxy, aryloxy, heterocyclic oxy, acyloxy, sulfonyloxy,
alkoxycarbonyloxy, aryloxycarbonyl, alkyloxalyloxy, alkoxyoxalyloxy, alkylthio, arylthio,
heterocyclic thio, alkyloxycarbonylthio, acylamino, sulfonamide, nitrogen-containing
hetero ring which is bonded by N atom, alkyloxycarbonylamino, aryloxycarbonylamino,
carboxyl, and

wherein R
m1' has the same meaning as the above R
m; Z' has the same meaning as the above Z; and R
m2' and R
m3' each represent a hydrogen atom, an aryl group, an alkyl group or a heterocyclic ring,
preferably a halogen atom, particularly preferably a chlorine atom.
[0214] Further, the nitrogen-containing hetero ring formed by Z
m or Z' may include, for example, a pyrazole ring, an imidazole ring, a triazole ring
or a tetrazole ring, and as a substituent group which may be possessed by the above
rings, there may be mentioned those in the description of the above R
m.
[0216] In the above formulae (M-II) to (M-VII), R
m1 to R
m8 and X
m each have the same meaning as the above R
m and Xm.
[0217] Among the magenta couplers represented by the formula (M-I), preferred is a magenta
coupler represented by the following formula (M-VIII).

wherein R
m1, X
m and Z
m1 each have the same meanings as R
m1, X
m and Z
m in the formula (M-I).
[0218] Among the magenta couplers represented by the above formulae (M-II) to (M-VII), particularly
preferred is the magenta coupler represented by the formula (M-II).
[0219] The substituent groups which may be possessed by the ring formed by Z
m in the formula (M-I) and the ring formed by Z
m1 in the formula (M-VIII), and R
m2 to R
m8 in the formulae (M-II) to (M-VI) are preferably those represented by the following
formula (M-IX).

wherein R
m1 represents an alkylene group; and R
m2 represents an alkyl group, a cycloalkyl group or an aryl group.
[0220] The alkylene group represented by the above R
m1 may have preferably 2 or more, more preferably 3 to 6 carbon atoms in its straight
portion, and may be either straight or branched.
[0221] The cycloalkyl group represented by the above R
m2 is preferably 5- or 6-membered.
[0222] When used for forming positive images, most preferred substituent groups R
m and R
m1 on the above hetero ring are represented by the following formula (M-X).

wherein R
mg, R
m10 and R
m11 each have the same meaning of the above R
m.
[0223] Two of R
mg, R
m10 and R
m11, for example, R
m9 and R
m10 may be bonded to form a saturated or unsaturated ring (e.g. cycloalkane, cycloalkene
and hetero ring), and further, R
m11 may be bonded to said ring to constitute a bridged hydrocarbon compound residue.
[0224] Among those represented by the formula (M-X), preferred are the case (i) where at
least two of R
m9 to R
m11 are alkyl groups, and the case (ii) where one of R
m9 to R
m11, for example, R
m11 is a hydrogen atom, and the other two of R
m9 and R
m10 are bonded to form cycloalkyl together with a root carbon atom.
[0225] In the case (i), preferred is the case where two of R
m9 to R
m11 are alkyl groups, and the other one is a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group.
[0226] Further, when used for forming negative images, most preferred substituent groups
R
m and R
m1 on the above hetero rina are represented bv the followina formula (M-XI).

wherein Rm12 has the same meaning of the above R
m.
[0227] R
m12 is preferably a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group.
[0229] As a specific example of the compound represented by the formula (M-I), in addition
to the representative specific examples shown above, there may be mentioned compounds
Nos. 1 to 4, Nos. 8 to 17, Nos. 14 to 24, Nos. 26 to 43, Nos. 45 to 59, Nos. 61 to
104, Nos. 106 to 121, Nos. 123 to 162 and Nos. 164 to 223 among the compounds described
on p. 66 to p. 122 of Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 166339/1987.
[0230] The above couplers can be synthesized by referring to Journal of the Chemical Society,
Perkin I (1977), pp. 2047 to 2052, U.S. Patent No. 3,725,067, and Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publications No. 99437/1984, No. 42045/1984, No. 162548/1984, No. 171956/1984,
No. 33552/1985, No. 43659/1985, No. 172982/1985 and No. 43659/1985.
[0231] The magenta coupler represented by the formula (M-I) is used generally in an amount
of 1 x 10-
3 mole to 1 mole, preferably in the range of 1 x 10-
2 mole to 8 x 10-
8 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0232] Further, the coupler represented by the formula (M-I) can be used in combination
with other kinds of magenta dye-forming couplers.
[0233] In the present invention, it is also a preferred embodiment to use a polymer coupler.
As the polymer coupler, P-2, P-5, P-13, P-14, P-17, P-22 and P-23 disclosed in Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publication No. 239748/1985 are preferably used, and further, the
following polymer couplers are useful for exhibiting the effect of the present invention.

x = 85 % by weight y = 5 % by weight z = 10 % by weight

x-85 % by weight y=5 % by weight z = 10 % by weight

x = 85 % by weight y = 5 % by weight z = 10 % by weight

x = 85 % by weight y=5 % by weight z=10 % by weight

x = 85 % by weight y = 5 % by weight z = 10 % by weight
[0234] When the light-sensitive color photographic material is a light-sensitive material
for negative images, a preferred yellow coupler is a benzoylacetanilide type yellow
coupler.
[0235] The benzoylacetalinide type yellow coupler may include any benzoylacetanilide derivative,
but preferred is a compound represented by the following formula (YB-I).

wherein R
1 to R
7 and X each represent a hydrogen atom or a substituent group; and R
i, R
2, and R
3 may be preferably either the same or different, and each represent a hydrogen atom,
a halogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group, an alkoxy group, an acylamino group,
a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group, a sulfonamide group or a sulfamoyl group.
[0236] R
4, Rs, R
6 and R
7 may be the same or different, and preferably, each represent a hydrogen atom, an
alkyl group, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, an acylamino group or a sulfonamide
group.
[0237] W represents preferably a halogen atom, an alkyl group, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy
group or a dialkylamino group.
[0238] X
1 represents a hydrogen atom or an eliminatable group. As the eliminatable group, there
may be mentioned, for example, a halogen atom, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy group,
an acyloxy group, an alkylthio group, an arylthio group, a heterocyclic thio group
and a saturated or unsaturated 5-membered or 6- membered nitrogen-containing heterocyclic
group, and particularly preferred groups are represented by the formulae (YB-II) and
(YB-III).

[0239] Y
1 represents a group of non-metallic atoms necessary for forming a 5- or 6-membered
ring, and the group of non-metallic atoms may include those having a substituent group.

[0240] Ar represents an aryl group, and said aryl group may include those having a substituent
group.
[0242] These benzoylacetanilide type yellow couplers according to the present invention
may include those disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,875,057, No. 3,725,072 and No. 3,891,445,
Japanese Patent Publication No. 10783/1976, and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications
No. 73147/1973, No. 6341/1975, No. 102636/1976, No. 115219/1977, No. 21448/1979, No.
95237/1981, No. 159163/1984, No. 174838/1984, No. 206835/1984, No. 187560/1989, No.
207748/1989, No. 207749/1989, No. 214848/1989, No. 227152/1989, No. 231050/1989, No.
295256/1989, No. 309057/1989, No. 341240/1989, No. 316744/1989 and No. 316745/1989,
and they can be synthesized according to the methods disclosed in the publications.
[0243] Two or more of the benzoylacetanilide type yellow couplers according to the present
invention may be used, and yellow couplers other than these couplers may be used in
combination.
[0244] For adding the yellow coupler to a light-sensitive material, depending on physical
properties (e.g. solubility) of said yellow coupler, various methods such as the oil-in-water
type emulsifying dispersion method in which a water-insoluble high boiling point organic
solvent is used, the alkali dispersion method in which a coupler is added.in the form
of an alkaline solution, the latex dispersion method and the solid dispersion method
in which a coupler is added directly in the form of minute solid can be employed.
[0245] The total amount of the yellow coupler to be added is generally 1.0 x 10-
3 mole to 1.0 mole, preferably in the range of 5.0 x 10-
3 mole to 8.0 x 10-
1 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0246] The benzoylacetanilide type yellow coupler according the present invention is generally
contained in a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer, but, depending on a purpose,
it may be also contained in a green-sensitive or red-sensitive silver halide emulsion
layer having sensitivity to colors other than blue.
[0247] When the light-sensitive color photographic material is a light-sensitive material
for positive images, a preferred yellow coupler is represented by the following formula
(Y-1).

wherein R
1 represents an alkyl group or a cycloalkyl group; R
2 represents an alkyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an acyl group or an aryl group; R
3 represents a group with which a benzene ring can be substituted; n represents 0 or
1; Y represents a monovalent ballast group; and Z represents a hydrogen atom, or an
atom or a group which can be eliminated at the time of coupling.
[0248] In the formula (Y-1), the alkyl group represented by R
1 may be straight or branched, and may include, for example, a methyl group, an ethyl
group, an isopropyl group, a t-butyl group and a dodecyl group. These alkyl groups
may further include those having a substituent group, and as the substituent group,
there may be mentioned, for example, a halogen atom and each group of aryl, alkoxy,
aryloxy, alkylsulfonyl, acylamino and hydroxy.
[0249] The cycloalkyl group represented by R
1 may include a cyclopropyl group, a cyclohexyl group and an adamantyl group.
[0250] R
1 is preferably a branched alkyl group. As the alkyl group and the cycloalkyl group
represented by R
2, there may be mentioned the same groups in the case of Ri, and as the aryl group,
there may be mentioned, for example, a phenyl group. These alkyl groups, cycloalkyl
groups and aryl groups represented by R
2 may include those having a substituent group similarly as in the case of R
1. As the acyl group, there may be mentioned, for example, an acetyl group, a propionyl
group, a butyryl group, a hexanoyl group and a benzoyl group.
[0251] R
2 is preferably an alkyl group and an aryl group, more preferably an alkyl group.
[0252] R
3 is not particularly limited as long as it is a group with which a benzene ring can
be substituted, and may specifically include a halogen atom (e.g. a chlorine atom),
an alkyl group (e.g. an ethyl group, an i-propyl group and a t-butyl group), an alkoxy
group (e.g. a methoxy group), an aryloxy group (e.g. a phenyloxy group), an acyloxy
group (e.g. a methylcarbonyloxy group and a benzoyloxy group), an acylamino group
(e.g. an acetamide group and a phenylcarbonylamino group), a carbamoyl group (e.g.
an N-methylcarbamoyl group and an N-phenylcarbamoyl group), an alkylsulfonamide group
(e.g. an ethylsul- fonylamino group), an arylsulfonamide group (e.g. a phenylsulfonylamino
group), a sulfamoyl group (e.g. an N-propylsulfamoyl group and an N-phenylsulfamoyl
group) and an imide group (e.g. a succinimide group and a glutarimide group).
[0253] In the formula (Y-1), Z represents a group which is eliminated at the time of coupling
reaction with an oxidized product of a developing agent, and, for example, represents
a group represented by the following formula (Y-2) or (Y-3).
[0254] In the formula (Y-2), R
10 represents an aryl group or a heterocyclic group including those having a substituent
group.

[0255] In the formula (Y-3), Z represents a group of non-metallic atoms necessary for forming
a 5- or 6- membered ring together with a nitrogen atom. Here, atoms necessary for
forming the group of non-metallic atoms may include, for example methylene, methine,
substituted methine,

-NH-, -N =, -0-, -S- and -S0
2-.
[0256] The yellow dye-forming coupler represented by the above formula (Y-1) of the present
invention can be used generally in an amount of 1 x 10-
3 mole to 1 mole, preferably in the range of 1 x 10-
2 mole to 8 x 10
-1 mole per mole of silver halide.
[0258] In the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material to be used in the
present invention, particularly the light-sensitive material for negative images,
when a compound which releases a bleaching accelerator by reaction with an oxidized
product of a color developing agent (hereinafter called "a BAR compound") is contained
in at least one silver halide emulsion layer, the effect of the present invention
can be exhibited more favorably.
[0259] As the BAR compound preferably used, there may be mentioned compounds represented
by the following formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B).

wherein Cp represents a coupler residue which can undergo coupling reaction with an
oxidized product of a color developing agent; * represents a coupling position of
the coupler; TIME represents a timing group, m and each represent 0 or 1; R
1 represents a bonding group (preferably an alkylene group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms);
and R
2 represents a hydrogen atom, a cyano group, -COR
3, -CSR
3,

or a hetero ring (where R
3 represents an alkyl group and an aryl group; and R
4, R
5 and R
6 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group and an aryl group).
[0260] Rbi represents a divalent aliphatic group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms or

(where L represents a divalent aliphatic group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms or a phenylene
group), and Rb
2 represents a water-soluble group or a precursor thereof.
[0261] In the above formula, the coupler residue represented by Cp may generally include
a residue which forms an yellow, magenta or cyan dye and a residue which forms a substantially
colorless product.
[0262] In the coupler residue represented by Cp, as a representative yellow coupler residue,
there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,298,443,
No. 2,407,210, No. 2,875,057, No. 3,048,194, No. 3,265,506 and No. 3,447,928, and
Farbkupp-lereine Literaturuversiecht Agfa Mitteilung (Band II), pp. 112 to 126 (1961).
Among these, acylacetanilides, for example, benzoylacetanilides and pivaloylacetanilides
are preferred.
[0263] As a representative magenta coupler residue, there may be mentioned, for example,
those disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,369,489, No. 2,343,703, No. 2,311,182, No. 2,600,788,
No. 2,908,573, No. 3,062,653, No. 3,152,896, No. 3,519,429, No. 3,725,067 and No.
4,540,654, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 162548/1984, and the above Agfa
Mitteilung (Band II), pp. 126 to 156 (1961). Among these, pyrazolones or pyrazoloazoles
(e.g. pyrazoloimidazole and pyrazolotriazole) are preferred.
[0264] As a representative cyan coupler residue, there may be mentioned, for example, those
disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,367,531, No. 2,423,730, No. 2,472,293, No. 2,772,162,
No. 2,395,826, No. 3,002,836, No. 3,034,892, No. 3,041,236 and No. 4,666,999, and
the above Agfa Mitteilung (Band II), pp 156 to 175 (1961). Among these, phenols or
naphthols are preferred.
[0265] As a representative coupler residue which forms a substantially colorless product,
there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed in U.K. Patent No. 861,138, U.S.
Patents No. 3,632,345, No. 3,928,041, No. 3,958,993 and No. 3,961,959. Among these,
cyclic carbonyl compounds are preferred.
[0266] The timing group represented by TIME is a group which enables releasing of a bleaching
accelerator group,

or (̵S-Rb
1-Rb
2) from Cp under time control, and in this group, a group which can control a speed
of reaction between Cp and an oxidized product of a color developing agent, a diffusion
speed of

or -TIME-S-Rb
1-Rb
2 released from Cp, and a releasing speed of said bleaching accelerator group may be
contained. As a representative timing group, there may be mentioned a group which
releases a bleaching accelerator group by the intermolecular nucleophilic substitution
reaction disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,248,962 and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication
No. 56837/1982, and a group which releases a bleaching accelerator group by the electron
transfer reaction along with conjugated chains disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent
Publications No. 114946/1981 and No. 154234/1982. Additionally, there may be included
timing groups disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 188035/1982,
No. 98728/1983, No. 206834/1984, No. 7429/1985, No. 214358/1985, No. 225844/1975,
No. 229030/1985, No. 233649/1985, No. 237446/1985 and No. 237447/1985.
[0267] In -S-Rbi-Rb
2 which is one of the bleaching accelerator groups, Rbi represents a divalent aliphatic
group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms or

(where L represents a divalent aliphatic group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms or a phenylene
group), but preferably, it is represented by the following formula:

wherein R
3' and R
4' each represent a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group having 1 to 4 carbon atoms; nb
represents 1 to 8; and when nb is two or more, each Rs' and R
4' may be the same or different.
[0268] The alkyl group represented by R
s' and R
4' may be straight or branched, and may include, for example, a methyl group, an ethyl
group, an n-propyl group, an iso-propyl group, an n-butyl group and a tert-butyl group.
As a preferred group of R
1 in the formula (BAR-A), there may be mentioned a group having the same meaning as

which is described as the preferred group of the above Rbi.
[0269] In the following, preferred examples as Rb
1 are shown. -CH
2-, -CH
2CH
2-, -CH
2CH
2CH
2-,

[0270] In the following, preferred examples as the water-soluble group represented by Rb
2 or a precursor thereof are shown. -COOH, -COONa, -COOCH
3, -COOC
2H
5, -NHSO
2CH
5, -NHCOOCH
3, -NHCOOC
2H
5, -SO
3H, -SO
3K, -OH,

and -NR
5'R
6' (where Rs' and R
6' each repersent a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group having 1 to 4 carbon atoms).
[0271] As the bleaching accelerator group represented by -S-Rbi-Rb
2, particularly preferred are -S-CH
2CH
2COOH, -S-CH
2CH
2CH
2COOH,

[0272] As the yellow coupler residue represented by Cp in the formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B),
those represented by the following formulae (II) and (III) are preferred.

[0273] In the above formulae (II) and (III), R
7 and Rs each represent an alkyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group, a hetero
ring or a halogen atom, and the alkyl group, the cycloalkyl group, the aryl group
and the hetero ring described above may be bonded through an oxygen atom, a nitrogen
atom or a sulfur atom. Further, the alkyl group, the cycloalkyl group, the aryl group
and the hetero ring described above may be bonded through the following bonding groups.
Specifically, these groups may be bonded through each group of acylamino, carbamoyl,
sulfonamide, sulfamoyl, sulfamoylcarbonyl,carbonyloxy, oxycarbonyl, ureido, thioureido,
thioamide, sulfone and sulfonyloxy. Further, the alkyl group, the cycloalkyl group,
the aryl group and the hetero ring described above may include those having substituent
groups described below. Specifically, as said substituent groups, there may be mentioned,
for example, a halogen atom, each group of nitro, cyano, alkyl, alkenyl, cycloalkyl,
aryl, alkoxy, aryloxy, alkoxycarbonyl, aryloxycarbonyl, carboxy, sulfo, sulfamoyl,
carbamoyl, acylamino, ureido, urethane, sulfonamide, hetero ring, arylsulfonyl, alkylsulfonyl,
arylthio, alkylthio, alkylamino, anilino, hydroxy, imide and acyl. When two or more
R
7 and R
s are present, they may be the same or different.
[0275] In the above formulae (IV) to (VII), R
7 and R
8 have the same meanings as R
7 and R
8 in the formulae (II) and (III), respectively.
[0277] In the above formulae (VIII) to (X), R
7 and R
8 have the same meanings as R
7 and R
8 in the formulae (II) and (III), respectively.
[0278] As the coupler residue which forms a substantially colorless product, represented
by Cp in the formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B), those represented by the formulae (XI)
to (XIV) are preferred.

wherein R
s represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group, a halogen atom, an alkoxy
group, an acyloxy group or a heterocyclic group; X represents an oxygen atom or =
N-R
10 where R
10 represents an alkyl group, an aryl group, a hydroxy group, an alkoxy group or a sulfonyl
group; and Z represents a group of non-metallic atoms necessary for forming 5- to
7-membered carbon rings (e.g. indanone, cyclopentanone and cyclohexanone) and hetero
rings (e.g. piperidone, pyrrolidone and hydrocarbostyryl).

wherein R
s and X have the same meanings as R
9 and X in the formula (XI), respectively; and R
11 represents an alkyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic group, a cyano group, a
hydroxy group, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, a heterocyclic oxy group, an alkylamino
group, a dialkylamino group or an anilino group.

wherein R
12 and R
13 may be the same or different, and each represent an alkoxycarbonyl group, a carbamoyl
group, an acyl group, a cyano group, a formyl group, a sulfonyl group, a sulfinyl
group, a sulfamoyl group, an ammonium group or

where A represents a group of non-metallic atoms necessary for forming 5- to 7-membered
hetero rings (e.g. phthalimide, triazole and tetrathiazole) with a nitrogen atom.

wherein R
14 represents, for example, an alkyl group, an aryl group, an anilino group, an alkylamino
group or an alkoxy group; and B represents an oxygen atom, a sulfur atom or a nitrogen
atom.
[0279] The TIME useful for practicing the present invention may include those represented
by the following formulae (XV), (XVI) and (XVII), but the present invention is not
limited to these.

wherein X represents a benzene ring which may have a substituent group or a group
of atoms necessary for forming a naphthalene ring; Y represents -0-, -S- or

and is bonded to a coupling position of the coupler residue represented by Cp in the
formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B); R
15, R
16 and R
17 each represent a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group or an aryl group; and a
5 group is substituted with Y at an ortho-position or a para-position, and bonded to
an oxygen atom of a bleaching accelerator group.

wherein Y, R
15 and R16 have the same meanings of those in the formula (XV), respectively; R
18 represents, for example, a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group, an acyl
group, a sulfonyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group and a heterocyclic residue; R
19 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic residue,
an alkoxy group, an amino group, an acid amide group, a sulfonamide group, a carboxy
group, an alkoxycarbonyl group, a carbamoyl group and a cyano group; and this timing
group is bonded to a coupling position of the coupler residue represented by Cp in
the formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B) by Y similarly as in the formula (XV), and to an
oxygen atom of a bleaching acceralator group by a

group.
[0280] Next, an example of the timing group which releases a bleaching accelerator group
by the intermolecular nucleophilic substitution reaction is represented by the formula
(XVII).

wherein Nu is a nucleophilic group having an oxygen, sulfur or nitrogen atom abundant
in electrons, and bonded to a coupling position of the coupler residue represented
by Cp in formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B); E is an electrophilic group having a carbonyl
group, a thiocarbonyl group, a phosphinyl group or a thiophosphinyl group insufficient
in electrons, and bonded to an oxygen atom of a bleaching accelerator group; and X
makes a stereographic relationship between Nu and E, and is a bonding group which
undergoes the intermolecular nucleophilic substitution reaction accompanied with formation
of a 3-membered ring or a 7-membered ring after Nu is released from the coupler residue
represented by Cp in the formulae (BAR-A) and (BAR-B), and thereby can release a bleaching
accelerator.
[0281] Representative specific examples of the timing group may include the following compounds.

[0282] In the following, specific examples of the BAR compound which can be used in the
present invention are shown, but the present invention is not limited to these examples.
[0284] In the method for processing the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material of the present invention, as a silver halide emulsion to be used in the light-sensitive
material for negative images, there may be preferred a silver halide emulsion containing
silver halide grains which are constituted of two or more phases having different
silver iodide contents, and have said average silver iodide content higher than the
silver iodide content of a peripheral phase thereof.
[0285] The state that the average silver iodide content of the grains is higher than the
silver iodide content of the peripheral phase of the grains can be measured according
to the following method.
[0286] When the silver halide emulsion is an emulsion containing silver halide grains having
an average value of grain size/grain thickness of less than 5, an average silver iodide
content (Ji) obtained by an X-ray fluorescence analysis and a silver iodide content
of a grain surface (J
2) obtained by an X-ray excited photoelectron spectroscopy are compared, the relationship
of J,>J
2 is satisfied.
[0287] The grain size herein mentioned is a diameter of a circumscribed circle of a plane
which has a maximum projected area of the grain.
[0288] The X-ray excited photoelectron spectroscopy is explained.
[0289] Prior to a measurement by the X-ray excited photoelectron spectroscopy, an emulsion
is pretreated in the following manner. First, a pronase solution is added to the emulsion,
and stirred at 40 ° C for 1 hour to effect gelatin degradation. Subsequently, after
centrifugation was carried out to precipitate emulsion grains, a supernatant was removed,
and then an aqueous pronase solution was added to effect gelatin degradation again
under the above conditions. This sample was subjected again to centrifugation, a supernatant
was removed, and then distilled water was added to redisperse the emulsion grains
in distilled water, followed by centrifugation and removal of a supernatant. After
this washing operation was repeated three times, the emulsion grains were redispersed
in ethanol. The solution obtained was coated thinly on a silicone wafer applied with
mirror polishing to give a sample for measurement.
[0290] In the measurement according to the X-ray excited photoelectric spectroscopy, ESCA/SAM
Model 560 (trade name) manufactured by PHI Co. is used as a device, and the measurement
is conducted under the conditions of X-rays for excitation of Mg-Kα rays, an X-ray
source voltage of 15 KV, an X-ray source current of 40 mA and a pass energy of 50
eV.
[0291] For measuring a surface halide composition, Ag
3d, Br
3d and bd3/2 elecrons are detected.
[0292] A composition ratio is calculated by using integral intensities of the respective
peaks according to the relative sensitivity coefficient method. As the relative sensitivity
coefficients of Ag3d, Br3d and 13d3/2, 5.10, 0.81 and 4.592 are used, respectively,
thereby giving a composition ratio in a unit of atomic percentage.
[0293] When the silver halide emulsion to be used in the present invention contains grains
having an average value of grain size/grain thickness of less than 5, a grain size
distribution is preferably monodispersed. The monodispersed silver halide emulsion
refers to an emulsion in which a weight of silver halide included within the range
of ± 20 % of its grain size with an average grain size r as a center is 60 % or more,
preferably 70 % or more, more preferably 80 % or more of a total weight of silver
halide grains.
[0294] Here, the average grain size r is defined as a grain size ri when the product of
ni which is frequency of grains having a grain size of ri and ri
3 (ni x ri
3) becomes maximum (effective number of 3 digits, a number of a minimum digit is rounded).
[0295] When the silver halide grain is spherical, the grain size mentioned here is its diameter,
and when the silver halide grain has a shape other than sphere, it is a diameter obtained
by converting its projected area to a circle area having the same area.
[0296] The grain size can be obtained by, for example, photographing said grains magnified
at a magnification of 10,000 to 50,000 with an electron microscope, and by measuring
a diameter or a projected area of the grains on the print (there should be randomly
1,000 or more grains to be measured on the print).
[0297] The highly monodispersed emulsion particularly preferred in the present invention
is an emulsion having a distribution width of 20 % or less, preferably 15 % or less
defined by the following formula:

[0298] Here, the average grain size and the standard deviation of the grains are determined
from ri defined above.
[0299] In the case where the silver halide emulsion is a tabular silver halide emulsion
having an average value of grain size/grain thickness of 5 or more, when an average
silver iodide content (J) obtained by the above X-ray fluorescence analysis and an
average measured value of a silver iodide content measured on silver halide crystals
which are apart by 80 % or more from a central portion relative to a grain size direction
of the silver halide grains (J
3) according to an X-ray microanalysis are compared, the relationship of J,>J
3 is satisfied.
[0300] The X-ray microanalysis is explained. In a grid for observation with a electron microscope
in which an energy dispersion type X-ray analysis device is provided, silver halide
grains are dispersed, and a magnification is set by cooling with liquid nitrogen so
that there is one grain within a CRT field, and intensities of ILα rays and AgLa rays
for a predetermined time are integrated. By using an intensity ratio of ILα/AgLα and
a calibration curve previously prepared, a silver iodide content can be calculated.
[0301] In the tabular silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain
thickness of 5 or more, the average value of grain size/grain thickness is preferably
6 or more and 100 or less, particularly preferably 7 or more and 50 or less.
[0302] In the silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain thickness
of less than 5 of the present invention, the silver iodide content of the grain surface
measured according to the X-ray excited photoelectron spectroscopy is preferably 6
to 0 mole %, more preferably 5 to 0 mole %, particularly preferably 4 to 0.01 mole
%.
[0303] In the tabular silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain
thickness of 5 or more of the present invention, the average measured value of a silver
iodide content measured on silver halide crystals which are apart by 80 % or more
from a central portion relative to a grain size direction of the silver halide grains
(J
3) according to the X-ray microanalysis is preferably 6 to 0 mole %, more preferably
5 to 0 mole %, particularly preferably 4 to 0.01 mole %. The average thickness of
the tabular silver halide grains is preferably 0.5 to 0.01 µm, particularly preferably
0.3 to 0.05 µm. The average grain size of the silver halide grains contained in the
tabular silver halide emulsion is preferably 0.5 to 30 µm, more preferably 1.0 to
20 µm.
[0304] The above silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain thickness
of less than 5 is preferably monodispersed, and preferably of a core/shell type. The
above tabular silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain thickness
of 5 or more comprises preferably silver iodide existing locally at a central portion
of the grain.
[0305] The core/shell type silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain
thickness of less than 5 comprises silver halide grains having a grain structure comprising
two or more phases having different silver iodide contents, in which a phase with
the highest silver iodide content (called "core") is not the most outer layer (called
"shell").
[0306] In the inner phase with the highest silver iodide content (core), the silver iodide
content is preferably 6 to 40 mole %, more preferably 8 to 30 mole %, particularly
preferably 10 to 20 mole %. The silver iodide content of the most outer phase is preferably
less than 6 mole %, more preferably 0 to 4.0 mole %.
[0307] The rate of the shell portion in the core/shell type silver halide grains is preferably
10 to 80 %, more preferably 15 to 70 %, particularly preferably 20 to 60 % in volume.
[0308] The rate of the core portion is preferably 10 to 80 %, more preferably 20 to 50 %
in volume of the total grains.
[0309] The difference between the core portion with a high silver iodide content and the
shell portion with a low silver iodide content may have a sharp borderline or may
change continuously without a distinct borderline. Also, silver halide grains having
an intermediate phase with an intermediate silver iodide content between the contents
of the core portion and the shell portion, between the core and the shell are preferably
used.
[0310] When the silver halide emulsion comprises core/shell type silver halide grains having
the above intermediate layer, the volume of the intermediate layer is preferably 5
to 60 %, more preferably 20 to 55 % of the total grains. The differences in silver
iodide content between the shell and the intermediate layer and between the intermediate
layer and the core are preferably 3 mole % or more, respectively, and the difference
in silver iodide content between the shell and the core is preferably 6 mole % or
more.
[0311] The core/shell type silver halide emulsion is preferably silver iodobromide, and
its average silver iodobromide content is preferably 4 to 20 mole %, more preferably
5 to 15 mole %. Further, silver chloride can be contained within the range which does
not impair the effect of the present invention.
[0312] The core/shell type silver halide emulsion can be prepared according to the known
methods disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 177535/1984, No.
138538/1985, No. 52238/1984, No. 143331/1985, No. 35726/1985 and No. 258536/1985.
[0313] When the core/shell type silver halide emulsion is grown from seed grains as in the
method disclosed in Example of Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 138538/1985,
there may be a halogen composition region which is different from the core in the
central portion of the grains.
[0314] In such a case, as a halogen composition of the seed grains, there can be used any
desired composition such as silver bromide, silver iodobromide, silver chloroiodobromide,
silver chlorobromide and silver chloride, preferably silver iodobromide or silver
bromide having a silver iodide content of 10 mole % or less.
[0315] The rate of the seed grains in total silver halide is preferably 50 % or less, particularly
preferably 10 % or less in volume.
[0316] The distribution state of silver iodide in the above core/shell type silver halide
grains can be detected according to various physical measurement methods. For example,
it can be determined according to a luminescence measurement at low temperatures and
an X-ray diffractometry as described in Summary of Lectures in Meeting of Japan Photographic
Society in 1981.
[0317] The core/shell type silver halide grains may comprise either normal. crystals which
are cubic, tetradecahedral or octahedral or twins, and further it may comprise a mixture
of these, but preferably normal crystals.
[0318] In the tabular silver halide emulsion having an average value of grain size/grain
thickness of 5 or more and comprising silver iodide existing locally at a central
portion of the grain, the phase with a high iodine content at the central portion
is preferably 80 % or less, particularly 60 % to 10 % of the total volume. The silver
iodide content at the central portion is preferably 5 to 40 mole %, particularly preferably
10 to 30 mole %. The phase with a low iodine content with which the phase with a high
iodine content at the central portion is surrounded (a peripheral portion) may comprise
silver iodobromide preferably having a silver iodide content of 0 to 10 mole %, more
preferably 0.1 to 6.0 mole %.
[0319] The tabular silver halide emulsion comprising silver iodide existing locally at the
central portion can be obtained by the known method disclosed in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 99433/1984.
[0320] In the method for processing the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic
material of the present invention, the average silver iodide content of all the silver
halide emulsions in the light-sensitive silver halide photographic material for negative
images is preferably 0.1 to 15 mole %, more preferably 0.5 to 12 mole %, particularly
preferably 1 to 6 mole %.
[0321] The average grain size of all the silver halide emulsions in the light-sensitive
silver halide color photographic material for negative images is 2.0 µm or less, more
preferably 0.1 to 1.0 µm or less, particularly preferably 0.2 to 0.6 lim.
[0322] The lower limit of the sum of total dry film thickness of all the hydrophilic colloid
layers of the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material for negative
images (hereinafter described as "the film thickness of the emulsion surface") is
limited depending on silver halide emulsions, couplers, lubricants and additives contained
therein, and the film thickness of the emulsion surface is preferably 5 µm to 18 µm,
more preferably 10 µm to 16 µm. The thickness from the most outer surface of the emulsion
surface to the lower end of the emulsion layer which is the nearest to a support is
preferably 14 µm or less, and the thickness to the lower end of the emulsion layer
which is different in color sensitivity from said emulsion layer and is the nearest
to a support in the second place to said emulsion layer is preferably 10 µm or less.
[0323] As a method for making a layer of the light-sensitive color material for negative
images thinner, there may be mentioned a method by reducing a hydrophilic colloid
which is a binder. Since a hydrophilic colloid is added for the purposes of maintaining
coupler fine oil drops dissolved in silver halide and a high boiling point solvent,
preventing increase of fog due to mechanical stress and preventing color contamination
caused by diffusion of an oxidized product of a developing agent between layers, it
can be reduced to the extent which does not impair these purposes.
[0324] As another method for making a layer thinner, there may be mentioned a method by
using a coupler having high color developing property.
[0325] As another method for making a layer thinner, there may be mentioned a method by
reducing a high boiling point solvent and a method in which an intermediate layer
is made thinner by adding a scavenger of an oxidized product of a developing agent
to the intermediate layer between layers having different color sensitivities.
[0326] The total amount of silver halide contained in the light-sensitive silver halide
emulsion contained in all the emulsion layers of the light-sensitive silver halide
color photographic material for negative images is preferably 6.5 g/m
2 or less, more preferably 2.5 to 6.0 g/m
2, particularly preferably 3.0 to 5.5 g/m
2, most preferably 3.5 to 5.0 g
/m2.
[0327] The swelled film thickness at the time of development of the totally hydrophilic
protective colloid layer provided by coating on a support at an emulsion layer side
of the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material for negative images
is preferably 180 % to 350 %, particularly preferably 200 % to 300 % of the dried
film thickness.
[0328] A technique for thus controlling the swelled film thickness is well known in the
art, and the thickness can be controlled by selecting, for example, an amount and
a kind of a hardener suitably.
[0329] As the hardener, there can be used aldehyde and aziridine type hardeners (e.g. those
disclosed in PB Report 19,921, U.S. Patents No. 2,950,197, No. 2,964,404, No. 2,983,311
and No. 3,271,175, Japanese Patent Publication No. 40898/1971, and Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 91315/1975), isoxazole type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed
in U.S. Patent No. 331,609), epoxy type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed in U.S. Patent
No. 3,047,394, West German Patent No. 1,085,663, U.K. Patent No. 1,033,518 and Japanese
Patent Publication No. 35495/1973), vinyl sulfone type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed
in PB Report 19,920, West German Patents No. 1,100,942, No. 2,337,412, No. 2,545,722,
No. 2,635,518, No. 2,742,308 and No. 2,749,260, U.K. Patent No. 1,251,091, Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publications No. 150556/1971 and No. 3450/1975, U.S. Patents No.
3,539,644 and No. 3,490,911), acryloyl type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed in Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publication No. 154675/1974 and U.S. Patent No. 3,640,720), carbodiimide
type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,938,892, No. 4,043,818
and No. 4,061,499, Japanese Patent Publication No. 38715/1971 and Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 140154/1974), triazine type hardeners (e.g. those disclosed
in West German Patents No. 2,410,973 and No. 2,553,915, U.S. Patent No. 3,325,287
and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 12722/1977), high molecular type hardeners
(e.g. those disclosed in U.K. Patent No. 822,061, U.S. Patents No. 3,623,878, No.
3,396,029 and No. 3,226,234, Japanese Patent Publications No. 18578/1972, No. 18579/1972
and No. 48896/1972), and otherwise maleimide type, acetylene type and methanesulfonate
type (N-methylol type) hardeners, singly or in combination. As useful combination
techniques, there may be mentioned, for example, combinations disclosed in West German
Patents No. 2,447, 587, No. 2,505,746 and No. 2,514,245, U.S. Patents No. 4,047,957,
No. 3,832,181 and No. 3,840,370, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 43319/1973,
No. 63062/1975 and No. 127329/ 1977 and Japanese Patent Publication No. 32364/1973.
[0330] In the present invention, the swelled film thickness at the time of development is
defined as a thickness after dipping for 3 minutes in the following solution maintained
at 38 C.
Solution for measuring swelled degree
[0331]

The swelled film thickness can be measured according to, for example, a method described
in A. Green and G.I.B. Levenson, Journal of Photographic Science, 20, 205 (1972).
[0332] The swelled film thickness refers to a film thickness measured at 23 ° C and under
a controlled humidity of 55 %. Sections of dried samples are enlarged and photographed
by a scanning electron microscope, and film thicknesses of the respective layers are
measured.
[0333] As the above totally hydrophilic protective colloid layer, there may be included
in addition to blue-sensitive, green-sensitive and red-sensitive silver halide emulsion
layers each of which has at least one layer as described above, and further, a protective
layer, an antihalation layer, an yellow filter layer and an intermediate layer provided
by coating if necessary.
[0334] The layer structure of the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material
for negative images which can exhibit the effect according to the present invention
particularly is a layer structure comprising a colloidal silver antihalation layer,
(an intermediate layer), a red-sensitive layer, (an intermediate layer), a green-sensitive
layer, (an intermediate layer), a colloidal silver yellow filter layer, a blue-sensitive
layer, (an intermediate layer) and a protective layer coated successively in this
order from a support, and further a layer structure comprising a colloidal silver
antihalation layer, (an intermediate layer), a red-sensitive layer, (an intermediate
layer), a green-sensitive layer, (an intermediate layer), a blue-sensitive layer,
(an intermediate layer), a red-sensitive layer, (an intermediate layer), a green-sensitive
layer, (a colloidal silver yellow filter layer), a blue-sensitive layer, (an intermediate
layer) and a protective layer coated successively in this order from a support.
[0335] The layers in the parentheses may be omitted. The respective layers of the above
red-sensitive layer, green-sensitive layer and blue-sensitive layer are preferably
divided into high sensitivity layers and low sensitivity layers, respectively. Further,
there may be included a layer structure in which at least one of a red-sensitive layer,
a green-sensitive layer and a blue-sensitive layer is divided into three partial layers
as disclosed in Japanese Patent Publication No. 15495/1974, a layer structure in which
a high sensitivity emulsion layer unit and a low sensitivity emulsion layer unit are
divided as disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 49027/1976, and
various layer constitutions as disclosed in West German Publications No. 2,622,922,
No. 2,622,923, No. 2,622,924, No. 2,704,826 and No. 2,704,797.
[0336] In the present invention, layer constitutions disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent
Publications No. 177551/1982, No. 177552/1984 and No. 180555/1984 can be also applied.
[0337] These silver halide emulsions may be chemically sensitized by using active gelatin;
sulfur sensitizers such as allylthiocarbamide, thiourea and cystine; selenium sensitizers;
reducing sensitizers such as stannous salt, thiourea dioxide and polyamine; noble
metal sensitizers such as a gold sensitizer, specifically including potassium aurithiocyanate,
potassium chloroaurate and 2-aurothio-3-methylbenzothiazolium chloride, or, for sensitizers
of water-soluble groups such as ruthenium, palladium, platinum, rhodium and iridium,
specifically including ammonium chloropalladate, potassium chloroplatinate and sodium
chloropalladate (some kinds of these act as a sensitizer or a fog restrainer depending
on the amount used) singly or in suitable combination (e.g. a combination of a gold
sensitizer and a sulfur sensitizer and a combination of a gold sensitizer and a selenium
sensitizer).
[0338] The silver halide emulsion is chemically ripened by adding a sulfur-containing compound,
and prior to this chemical ripening, during ripening or after ripening, at least one
hydroxytetrazaindenes and at least one nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds
having a mercapto group may be contained in the silver halide emulsion.
[0339] For imparting a sensitivity to the respective desired light-sensitive wavelength
regions, silver halide may be optically sensitized by adding an appropriate sensitizing
dye in an amount of 5 x 10-
8 to 3 x 10-
3 mole per mole of silver halide. As the sensitizing dye, various sensitizing dyes
can be used singly or in combination of two or more kinds. As the sensitizing dye
advantageously used in the present invention, there may be mentioned, for example,
those mentioned below.
[0340] Specifically, as a sensitizing dye used in the blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion,
there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed in West German Patent No. 929,080,
U.S. Patents No. 2,231,658, No. 2,493,748, No. 2,503,776, No. 2,519,001, No. 2,912,329,
No. 3,656,959, No. 3,672,897, No. 3,694,217, No. 4,025,349 and No. 4,046,572, U.K.
Patent No. 1,242,588, and Japanese Patent Publications No. 14030/1969 and No. 24844/1977.
As a sensitizing dye used in the green-sensitive silver halide emulsion, there may
be typically mentioned, for example, cyanine dyes, merocyanine dyes or composite cyanine
dyes disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 1,939,201, No. 2,072,908, No. 2,739,149 and No.
2,945,763 and U.K. Patent No. 505,979. Further, as a sensitizing dye used in the red-sensitive
silver halide emulsion, there may be typically mentioned, for example, cyanine dyes,
merocyanine dyes or composite cyanine dyes disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,269,234,
No. 2,270,378, No. 2,442,710, No. 2,454,629 and No. 2,776,280. Furthermore, cyanine
dyes, merocyanine dyes or composite cyanine dyes disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 2,213,995,
No. 2,493,748 and No. 2,519,001 and West German Patent No. 929,080 can be used advantageously
in the green-sensitive silver halide emulsion or the red-sensitive silver halide emulsion.
[0341] These sensitizing dyes may be used singly or in combination of these.
[0342] If necessary, according to a spectral sensitization method by using cyanine or merocyanine
dyes singly or in combination, an optical sensitization to a desired wavelength region
may be effected.
[0343] As a particularly preferred spectral sensitization method, there may be typically
mentioned, for example, methods by using a combination of benzimidazolocarbocyanine
with benzoxazolocarbocyanine disclosed in Japanese Patent Publications No. 4936/1968,
No. 22884/1968, No. 18433/1970, No. 37443/1972, No. 28293/1973, No. 6209/1974 and
No. 12375/1978, and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 23931/1977, No. 51932/1977,
No. 80118/1979, No. 153926/1983, No. 116646/1984 and No. 116647/1984.
[0344] As a method by using a combination of carbocyanine having a benzimidazole nucleus
with another cyanine or merocyanine, there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed
in Japanese Patent Publications No. 25831/1970, No. 11114/1972, No. 25379/1972, No.
38406/1973, No. 38407/1973, No. 34535/1979 and No. 1569/1980, and Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publications No. 33220/1975, No. 38526/1975, No. 107127/1976, No. 115820/1976,
No. 135528/1976, No. 104916/1977 and No. 104917/1977.
[0345] As a method by using a combination of benzoxazolocarbocyanine (oxacarbocyanine) with
another carbocyanine, there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed in Japanese
Patent Publications No. 32753/1969 and No. 11627/1971 and Japanese Unexamined Patent
Publication No. 1483/1982, and as a method by using merocyanine, there may be mentioned,
for example, those disclosed in Japanese Patent Publications No. 38408/1973, No. 41204/1973
and No. 40662/1975 and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 25728/1981, No.
10753/1983, No. 91445/1983, No. 116645/1984 and No. 33828/1975.
[0346] As a method by using a combination of thiacarbocyanine with another carbocyanine,
there may be mentioned, for example, those disclosed in Japanese Patent Publications
No. 4932/1968, No. 4933/1968, No. 26470/1970, No. 18107/1971, and No. 8741/1972 and
Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 114533/1984, and further, a method by using
zeromethine or dimethinemerocyanine, monomethine or trimethinecyanine and a styryl
dye disclosed in Japanese Patent Publication No. 6207/1974 can be used advantageously.
[0347] These sensitizing dyes are previously dissolved in a hydrophilic organic solvent,
for example, methyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol, acetone, dimethylformamide or fluorinated
alcohol disclosed in Japanese Patent Publication No. 40659/1975, and added in the
form of a dye solution.
[0348] The time of addition may be any desired period such as the time of initiating the
chemical ripening of the silver halide emulsion, during the ripening and the time
of completion of the ripening, and may be at the step immediately before emulsion
coating depending on the case.
[0349] In the photographic constituent layer of the light-sensitive silver halide color
photographic material, a dye which is water-soluble or decolored by a color developing
solution (Al dye) can be added, and said AI dye may include oxonol dyes, hemioxonol
dyes, merocyanine dyes and azo dyes. Among them, oxonol dyes, hemioxonol dyes and
merocyanine dyes are useful. As an example of the AI dye which can be used, there
may be mentioned those disclosed in U.K. Patents No. 584,609 and No. 1,277,429, Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publications No. 85130/1973, No. 99620/1974, No. 114420/1974, No.
129537/1974, No. 108115/1977, No. 25845/1984, No. 111640/1984 and No. 111641/1984,
U.S. Patents No. 2,274,782, No. 2,533,472, No. 2,956,079, No. 3,125,448, No. 3,148,187,
No. 3,177,078, No. 3,247,127, No. 3,260,601, No. 3,540,887, No. 3,575,704, No. 3,653,905,
No. 3,718,472 and No. 4,070,352.
[0350] These AI dyes are generally used preferably in an amount of 2 x 10-
3 to 5 x 10-
1 mole per mole of silver in the emulsion layer.
[0351] Further, in addition to a DIR compound, a compound releasing a development inhibitor
in accompaniment with development can be also used in the present invention, and may
include, for example, those disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 3,297,445 and No. 3,379,529,
West German Patent Application (OLS) No. 2,417,914, and Japanese Unexamined Patent
Publications No. 15271/1977, No. 9116/1978, No. 123838/1984 and No. 127038/1984.
[0352] The DIR compound is a compound which can release a development inhibitor by reaction
with an oxidized product of a color developing agent.
[0353] A representative example of such a DIR compound is a DIR coupler in which a group
capable of forming a compound having development inhibition action when eliminated
from an active site of the coupler is introduced to an active site of the coupler,
and disclosed in, for example, U.K. Patent No. 935,454, U.S. Patents No. 3,227,554,
No. 4,095,984 and No. 4,149,886.
[0354] When the above DIR coupler undergoes coupling reaction with an oxidized product of
a color developing agent, a coupler mother nucleus forms a dye, and on the other hand,
it has property of releasing a development inhibitor. Further, in the present invention,
there may be included compounds which release a development inhibitor, but not form
a dye by coupling reaction with an oxidized product of a color developing agent, as
disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 3,652,345, No. 3,928,041, No. 3,958,993, No. 3,961,959
and No. 4,052,213, and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications No. 110529/1978, No.
13333/1979 and No. 161237/1980.
[0355] Furthermore, a compound in which a mother nucleus forms a dye or a colorless compound
when reacted with an oxidized product of a color developing agent, and on the other
hand, a timing group eliminated releases a development inhibitor by the intermolecular
nucleophilic substitution reaction or elimination reaction as disclosed in Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publications No. 145135/1979, No. 114946/1981 and No. 154234/1982,
a so-called timing DIR compound can be also used in the present invention.
[0356] Also, timing DIR compounds in which the timing group as described above is bonded
to a coupler mother nucleus which forms a totally diffusible dye when reacted with
an oxidized product of a color developing agent disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent
Publications No. 160954/1983 and No. 162949/1983 can be also used.
[0357] The amount of the DIR compound to be contained in the light-sensitive material is
preferably in the range of 1 x 10-
4 mole to 10 x 10-
1 mole per mole of silver.
[0358] The silver halide grains to be used in the case of the light-sensitive color material
for positive images (e.g. a color negative paper) have a silver chloride content of
90 mole % or more, a silver bromide content of 10 mole % or less and a silver iodide
content of 0.5 mole % or less, and more preferably, the silver halide grains are silver
chlorobromide having a silver bromide content of 0.1 to 2 mole %.
[0359] Said silver halide grains may be used alone or in combination with other silver halide
grains having different compositions, and further may be used in combination with
silver halide grains having a silver chloride content of 10 mole % or less.
[0360] In the silver halide emulsion layer containing the silver halide grains having a
silver chloride content of 90 mole % or more, the rate of the silver halide grains
having a silver chloride content of 90 mole % or more in all the silver halide grains
contained in said emulsion layer is 60 % by weight or more, preferably 80 % by weight
or more.
[0361] The above silver halide grains may comprise a uniform composition from an inner portion
to an outer portion of the grain, or different compositions between an inner portion
and an outer portion of the grain. When compositions are different between an inner
portion and an outer portion, the compositions may change continuously or discontinuously.
[0362] The grain size of the above silver halide grains is not particularly limited, but
may be 0.2 to 1.6
wm, more preferably in the range of 0.25 to 1.2 pm in consideration of rapid processing
characteristics and other photographic performances such as sensitivity.
[0363] The above grain size can be measured according to various methods generally used
in this technical field. The representative method is described in "Grain Size Analysis
Method" (A.S.T.M. Symposium on Light Microscopy, 1955, pp. 94 to 122) by Labland or
"Theory of Photographic Process" (written by Meeth and James, 3rd edition, Chapter
2, published by McMillan Co. (1966)).
[0364] The grain size can be measured by using projected area or an approximate diameter
value of the grain. When the grains have a substantially uniform shape, its grain
side distribution can be represented fairly precisely as a diameter or projected area.
[0366] Here, ri represents a grain size of each grain, and ni represents a number of grains.
When the silver halide grain is spherical, the grain size mentioned here represents
its diameter, and when the silver halide grain has a shape other than cube or sphere,
it represents a diameter obtained by converting its projected area to a circle area
having the same area.
[0367] The silver halide grains to be used in the above emulsion may be obtained according
to any method such as an acidic method, a neutral method and an ammoniacal method.
Said grains may be grown at one time or may be grown after seed grains are formed.
A method for forming seed grains and a method for growing them may be the same or
different.
[0368] The system for reacting soluble silver salts with soluble halogen salts may be a
normal precipitation, a reverse precipitation, a simultaneous precipitation or a mixture
thereof, but preferably a simultaneous precipitation. As one system of the simultaneous
precipitation, a pAg controlled double jet method disclosed in Japanese Unexamined
Patent Publication No. 48521/1979 can be also used.
[0369] Further, if necessary, a silver halide solvent such as thioether may be used. Also,
a mercapto group- containing compound, a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compound
or a compound such as a sensitizing dye may be added at the time of forming the silver
halide grains or after completion of forming the grains.
[0370] The above silver halide grains can have any desired shape. One preferred example
is a cube having {100} phase as a crystalline surface. There may be also employed
grains having a shape of octahedron, tetradecahedron or dodecahedron prepared according
to the methods disclosed in U.S. Patents No. 4,183,756 and No. 4,225,666, Japanese
Unexamined Patent Publication No. 226589/1980, Japanese Patent Publication No. 42737/1980
and The Journal of Photographic Science, 21, 39 (1973). Further, grains having a twin
surface may be also used. The silver halide grains according to the present invention
may be grains comprising a single shape or a mixture of grains having various shapes.
[0371] In the above silver halide grains, in the step of forming the grains and/or the step
of growing the grains, a metal ion such as a cadmium salt, a zinc salt, a lead salt,
a thallium salt, an iridium salt or a complex salt thereof, a rhodium salt or a complex
salt thereof and an iron salt or a complex salt thereof can be added to be contained
internally of the grain and/or on a grain surface. By placing the grains under an
appropriate reducing atmosphere, a reducing sensitizing nucleus can be given internally
of the grain and/or a grain surface.
[0372] After completion of growing of the silver halide grains, unnecessary soluble salts
may be removed from the emulsion containing the above silver halide grains, or may
be contained therein. Said salts can be removed according to a method described in
Research Disclosure No. 17643.
[0373] The above silver halide grains may be a grain of which a latent image is mainly formed
on a grain surface or a grain of which a latent image is mainly formed internally
of a grain, but preferably a grain of which a latent image is mainly formed on a grain
surface.
[0374] The above emulsion can be chemically sensitized according to a conventional method.
[0375] The respective silver halide emulsions of the light-sensitive color photographic
material for positive images are preferably arranged from a support side in the order
of a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer containing a yellow coupler, a green-sensitive
silver halide emulsion layer containing a magenta coupler and a red-sensitive silver
halide emulsion layer containing a cyan coupler, and in the whole light-sensitive
material, it is preferred that a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer containing
a yellow coupler, a green-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer containing a magenta
coupler, a non-light-sensitive intermediate layer containing a UV absorber, a red-sensitive
silver halide emulsion layer containing a cyan coupler, a non-light-sensitive layer
containing a UV absorber and a protective layer are arranged on a support as essential
layers in this order from said support side.
[0376] As the UV absorber, those represented by the following formula (U) are preferred.

wherein R
i, R
2 and R
3 each represent a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, an alkyl gorup, an aryl group, an
alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, an alkenyl group, a nitro group and a hydroxyl group.
[0377] The respective groups represented by R
1 to R
3 include those having a substituent group.
[0378] Among the groups represented by R
1 and R
2, a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an alkoxy group and an aryl group are preferred,
and particularly, a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group and an alkoxy group are preferred.
[0379] Among the groups represented by R
3, a hydrogen atom, a halogen atom, an alkyl group and an alkoxy group are particularly
preferred.
[0380] At least one of R
1 to R
3 is preferably an alkyl group, and further, at least two of them are preferably alkyl
groups. At least one of R
1 to R
3 is preferably a branched alkyl group.
[0382] The amount to be added of the compound represented by the formula (U) is preferably
0.1 to 300 % by weight, more preferably 1 to 200 % by weight based on a binder in
the layer to which said compound is added.
[0383] In the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material to be used in the
present invention, various additives for photography can be further contained. There
can be used, for example, an antifoggant, a stabilizer, a UV absorber, a color antistaining
agent, a fluorescent brightener, a color image anti-fading agent, an antistatic agent,
a hardener, a surfactant, a plasticizer and a lubricant described in Research Disclosure
No. 17643.
[0384] In the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material to be used in the
present invention, a hydrophilic colloid to be used for preparing the emulsion may
include any desired one such as gelatin, gelatin derivatives, graft polymers of gelatin
and other polymers, proteins such as albumin and casein, cellulose derivatives such
as hydroxyethyl cellulose derivatives and carboxymethyl cellulose derivatives, starch
derivatives and synthetic hydrophilic polymers of homopolymers or copolymers such
as polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylimidazole and polyacrylamide.
[0385] As a support of the light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material to
be used in the present invention, there may be mentioned, for example, a baryta paper,
a polyethylene-coated paper, a polypropylene synthetic paper, a transparent support
provided with a reflective layer or used in combination with a reflector, for example,
a glass plate, polyester films such as cellulose acetate, cellulose nitrate or polyethylene
terephthalate, a polyamide film, a polycarbonate film and a polystyrene film, and
also other transparent supports used in general.
[0386] These supports are selected suitably depending on the use of the light-sensitive
material.
EXAMPLES
[0387] The present invention is described in detail below by referring to Examples, but
the present invention is not limited by these Examples at all.
Example 1
[0388] In all Examples, the amount added in the light-sensitive silver halide photographic
material is represented in a number of grams per 1 m
2 unless otherwise indicated, and the amounts of silver halide and colloidal silver
are represented by calculating them on silver.
[0389] On a triacetyl cellulose film support, the respective layers having the compositions
shown below were formed successively from a support side to prepare Sample I of a
multilayer color photographic element.
Sample I
[0390] First layer: Antihalation layer (HC-1)

[0391] Second layer: Intermediate layer (IL-1)

[0392] Third layer: Low sensitivity red-sensitive emulsion layer (RL)

[0393] Fourth layer: High sensitivity red-sensitive emulsion layer (RH)

[0394] Fifth layer: Intermediate layer (IL-2)

[0395] Sixth layer: Low sensitivity green-sensitive emulsion layer (GL)

[0396] Seventh layer: Intermediate layer (IL-3)

[0397] Eighth layer: High sensitivity green-sensitive emulsion layer (GH)

[0398] Ninth layer: Yellow filter layer (YC)

[0399] Tenth layer: Low sensitivity blue-sensitive emulsion layer (BL)

[0400] Eleventh layer: High sensitivity blue-sensitive emulsion layer (BH)

[0401] Twelfth layer: First protective layer (PRO-1)

[0402] Thirteenth layer: Second protective layer (PRO-2)

[0403] In the respective layers, in addition to the compositions as described above, a coating
aid Su-2, a dispersing aid Su-3, an antiseptic agent DI-1, a stabilizer Stab-1, and
antifoggants AF-1 and AF-2 were added.
Em-1
[0404] Monodispersed emulsion in which a small amount of silver iodide is contained in the
surface, having an average grain size of 0.45 µm and an average silver iodide content
of 7.5 mole %.
Em-2
[0405] Monodispersed emulsion of which the composition is uniform, having an average grain
size of 0.30 µm and an average silver iodide content of 2.1 mole %.
Em-3
[0406] Monodispersed emulsion in which a small amount of silver iodide is contained in the
surface, having an average grain size of 0.81 µm and an average silver iodide content
of 6.1 mole %.
Em-4
[0407] Monodispersed emulsion in which a small amount of silver iodide is contained in the
surface, having an average grain size of 0.98 µm and an average silver iodide content
of 8.0 mole %.
[0409] The samples thus prepared were subjected to wedge exposure by using white lights,
and then the following development processings were carried out.
[0410] (Processings for experiment)

[0411] The color developing solution used had the following composition.

[0412] The bleaching solution used had the following composition.

[0413] Color developing solution shown above 250 ml made up to 1 liter with addition of
water, adjusted pH suitably as shown in Table 1 with diethanolamine, aqueous ammonia
or glacial acetic acid, and made a rate of an ammonium salt in total cations 5 %.
[0414] The fixing solution used had the following composition.

[0415] The stabilizing solution used had the following composition.

[0416] The bleaching solutions prepared by changing a ferric organic acid complex salt,
and an amount and a pH thereof as shown in the following Table 1 were stored at 38
° C for one week. After development processings were carried out, yellow transmission
densities at unexposed portions of the film samples after processing were measured,
and at the same time, amounts of residual silver at exposed portions by irradiation
were measured according to the X-ray fluorescence method. Further, tar generation
was examined by observing external appearances of the bleaching solutions after storage.
The above results are shown together in Table 1.

[0417] In Table 1, EDTA·Fe means a ferric sodium salt of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid,
NTA·Fe a ferric sodium salt of nitrilotriacetic acid, CyDTA·Fe a ferric sodium salt
of 1,2-cyclohexanediaminetetraacetic acid, EDTMP·Fe a ferric sodium salt of ethylenediaminetetramethylene-phosphonic
acid, NTMP·Fe a ferric sodium salt of nitrilotrimethylenephosphonic acid, and (A-1)·Fe
a ferric sodium salt of (A-1). Similarly, (A-4)-·Fe, (A-7)·Fe and (A-9)·Fe mean ferric
sodium salts of (A-4), (A-7) and (A-9), respectively.
[0418] Further, in Table 1, 0 means no tar generation, A slight tar generation and X tar
generation apparently recognized, and as a number of X is larger, the extent is larger.
[0419] From Table 1 shown above, it can be understood that when a ferric organic acid complex
salt is the ferric complex salt of the compound represented by the above formula (A)
of the present invention, its amount added is 0.10 mole/ℓ or more, and its pH is 2.0
to 5.5, the yellow fog density at unexposed portions is low, the amount of residual
silver is minute, and no tar is generated in the bleaching solution, namely all performances
are good. However, when even one of the above three conditions is not satisfied, any
of the performances is inferior, whereby the samples cannot be provided for practical
use.
Example 2
[0420] The rates of ammonium salts in total cations of Experiments No. 1-1, No. 1-6 and
No. 1-8 in Example 1 were changed as shown in Table 2, and the same evaluation as
in Example 1 was made.
[0421] However, the rates of ammonium salt were adjusted by changing rates of an ammonium
salt and a sodium salt of ferric complex salts and by adding aqueous ammonia.
[0422] The results are shown in Table 2.

[0423] As clearly shown in Table 2, when the rate of an ammonium salt in total cations is
high, in the ferric complex salt of the present invention, remarkable increase in
yellow stain is recognized as compared with EDTA*FE. Particularly when the rate is
60 % or more, yellow stain becomes high. Further, it can be understood that when the
rate of an ammonium salt is high, desilvering property becomes relatively good, but
in the case of the ferric complex salt of the present invention, improvement in desilvering
property is not so significant.
Example 3
[0424] The same light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material used in Example
1 except for changing the silver iodobromide emulsions (Em-1 to 4 and the fine silver
iodobromide emulsion) in the third, fourth, sixth, eighth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth
layers to silver chlorobromide emulsions shown in the following table were used and
processed by using the following processing steps and processing solutions, followed
by the same evaluation as in Example 2.

[0425] The above emulsions were prepared by referring to Japanese Unexamined Patent Publications
No. 26838/1989 and No. 26837/1989.

[0426] The color developing solution used had the following composition.

[0427] The same bleaching solution, fixing solution and stabilizing solution as in Example
1 were used. Consequently, substantially the same effect as in Example 2 could be
obtained.
Example 4
[0428] The light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material used in Example 2 was
changed to the following light-sensitive color photographic material, and further,
processing steps and processing solutions were changed as shown below.
Sample II
[0429] On a paper support having one surface laminated with polyethylene and the other surface
at a first layer side laminated with polyethylene containing titanium oxide, the respective
layers having the following constitutions were provided by coating to prepare a multi-layer
light-sensitive silver halide color photographic material (1). The coating solutions
were prepared as shown below.
First layer coating solution
[0430] In 6.67 g of High boiling point organic solvent (DNP), 26. g of Yellow coupler (Y-1),
10.0 g of Dye image stabilizer (ST-1), 6.67 g of (ST-2) and 0.67 g of Additive (HQ-1)
were dissolved with addition of 60 ml of ethyl acetate, and the solution was dispersed
by emulsification in 220 ml of a 10 % aqueous gelatin solution containing 7 ml of
20 % Surfactant (SU-1) by means of an ultrasonic homogenizer to prepare a yellow coupler
dispersion. This dispersion was mixed with a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion
(containing 10 g of silver) prepared under the following conditions to prepare a first
layer coating solution.
[0432] As a hardener, the following H-1 was used.

[0433] (Preparation method of blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion)
[0434] To 1,000 ml of 2 % aqueous gelatin solution maintained at 40 C, the following (A
solution) and (B solution) were added simultaneously over 30 minutes under controlling
pAg = 6.5 and pH = 3.0, and further the following (C solution) and (D solution) were
added simultaneously over 180 minutes under controlling pAg = 7.3 and pH = 5.5.
[0436] After completion of the addition, desalting was effected by using a 5 % aqueous solution
of Demol N (trade name) manufactured by Kao Atlas K.K. and a 20 % aqueous solution
of magnesium sulfate, and then the solution was mixed with an aqueous gelatin solution
to obtain a monodispersed cubic emulsion EMP-1 having an average grain size of 0.85
µm, coefficient of variation (σ/r) of 0.07 and a silver chloride content of 99.5 mole
%.
[0437] By using the following compounds, the above emulsion EMP-1 was chemically ripened
at 50 ° C for 90 minutes to obtain a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion (EmA).

(Preparation method of green-sensitive silver halide emulsion)
[0438] The procedures were carried out in the same manner as in EMP-1 except for changing
the addition time of (A solution) and (B solution) and the addition time of (C solution
) and (D solution) to obtain a monodispersed cubic emulsion EMP-2 having an average
grain size of 0.43 µm, coefficient of variation (a/r) of 0.08 and a silver chloride
content of 99.5 mole %.
[0439] By using the following compounds, the above emulsion EMP-2 was chemically ripened
at 55 °C for 120 minutes to obtain a green-sensitive silver halide emulsion (EmB).

(Preparation method of red-sensitive silver halide emulsion)
[0440] The procedures were carried out in the same manner as in EMP-1 except for changing
the addition time of (A solution) and (B solution) and the addition time of (C solution
) and (D solution) to obtain a monodispersed cubic emulsion EMP-3 having an average
grain size of 0.50 µm, coefficient of variation (σ/r) of 0.08 and a silver chloride
content of 99.5 mole %.
[0442] After the samples obtained were subjected to exposure according to a conventional
method, the same evaluation as in Example 2 was made by using the following processing
steps and processing solutions.

(Bleaching and fixing solutions) the same solutions used in Example 1.
[0443]

Consequently, substantially the same results as in Example 2 were obtained. Although
stain was slightly more liable to be generated as compared with the light-sensitive
silver halide color photographic material in Example 1, stain generation could be
prevented effectively by lowering the rate of an ammonium salt in total cations as
described above.
Example 5
[0444] The evaluation was made in the same manner as in Example 1 except for changing the
color developing agent of the color developing solution in Example 1 to 3-methyl-4-amino-N-ethyl-N(β-methanesulfonamidoethyl)-aniline
sulfate.
[0445] The results are shown in Table 3.

[0446] As clearly shown in the results in Table 3, by changing a color developing agent
from 4-amino-3-methyl-N-ethyl-N-(,8-hydroxylethyl)aniline sulfate (hereinafter called
"CD-4") to 3-methyl-4-amino-N-ethyl-N-(β-methanesulfonamidoethyl)-aniline sulfate
(hereinafter called "CD-3"), bleaching fog is slightly lowered even though tendency
of yellow stain generation is not so changed, whereby it can be said to be a preferred
embodiment in the present invention.
Example 6
[0447] By using the light-sensitive color material used in Example 1, running processing
was carried out by the following processing solutions.
(Color developing solution) the color developing solution used in Example 1.
(Color developing replenishing solution)
[0448]

(Bleaching solution)
[0449]

The bleaching replenishing solution used had the following composition.
[0450]

The fixing solution used had the following composition.
[0451]

The fixing replenishing solution used had the following composition.
[0452]

As a stabilizing replenishing solution, the stabilizing solution in Example 1 was
used.
[0453] The processing steps, processing time, processing temperature and replenishing amount
of the running processing are as shown below.

(the replenishing amount is a value per 1 m
2 of the light-sensitive material.)
[0454] The running processing was carried out until the amount of the bleaching replenishing
solution twice as much as the the bleaching tank volume was replenished. The yellow
densities at unexposed portions and amounts of residual silver at maximum density
portions after completion of the running processing were measured..
[0455] The results are shown together in Table 4.

[0456] As clearly shown in Table 4, it can be understood that also in the running processing,
by lowering the rate of an ammonium salt in total cations, bleaching fog are prevented
effectively.
Example 7
[0457] The same evaluation as in Example 6 was made except for using Experiments No. 4-1,
No. 4-5, No. 4-6 and No. 4-10 in Example 6 and changing the replenishing amounts of
the bleaching solution as shown in Table 5.
[0458] The results are shown in Table 5.

[0459] As clearly shown in Table 5, it can be understood that when the replenishing amount
of the bleaching solution is reduced, yellow stain will be generated easily, but when
the bleaching solution of the present invention is used, increase in bleaching fog
is prevented in spite of the replenishing amount, and therefore the effect of the
present invention is exhibited remarkably when the replenishing amount of the bleaching
solution is reduced.
Example 8
[0460] By using the color paper in Example 4, the same evaluation as in Example 7 was made
by using the following processing steps and processing solutions.
(Processing steps) the same processing steps used in Example 4
(Color developing tank solution)
[0461]

(Color developing replenishing solution)
[0462]
(Bleaching solution and bleaching replenishing solution)
[0463]

(Fixing solution and fixing replenishing solution)
[0464]

(Stabilizing solution and stabilizing replenishing solution)
[0465] The stabilizing solution described in Example 4.
[0466] The replenishing amounts of the respective processing solutions were 60 ml/m
2 of the color developing solution, 30 ml/m
2 of the bleaching solution, 60 ml/m
2 of the fixing solution and 250 ml/m
2 of the stabilizing solution per 1 m
2 of the light-sensitive color material. The same evaluation as in Example 7 was made
to obtain substantially the same tendency as in Example 7.
Example 9
[0467] Experiment was carried out in the same manner as in Example 6 except for providing
a nozzle made of vinyl chloride having perforations with a diameter of 5 mm in the
bleaching processing tank and the fixing processing tank, spraying the processing
solutions on an emulsion surface of the light-sensitive material by means of Iwaki
Magnet Pump MD-15 (trade name, manufactured by Iwaki Co.), and further changing crossover
time between the color developing tank and the bleaching tank from 8 seconds to 5
seconds. As a result, the yellow density at unexposed portions was further lowered
by 0.01 to 0.02, and the amount of residual silver was reduced by half.
Example 10
[0468] By using the samples in which Yellow coupler Y-2 in Sample I and Yellow coupler Y-1-3
in Sample II were changed to equimolar amounts of yellow couplers shown in Table 6,
respectively, processings were carried out by using the processing steps and processing
solutions in Example 6 or Example 8, respectively, and yellow densities at unexposed
portions were measured.
[0469] However, since the bleaching agent of the bleaching solution used was (A-1)
*Fe with the rate of an ammonium salt being 0, a processing solution of which the pH
was adjusted by triethanolamine or acetic acid was used. Sample I was measured by
a transmission density, and Sample II was measured by a reflection density.
[0470] The results are shown in Table 6.

[0471] As clearly shown in Table 6, in Sample I and Sample II, by changing a yellow coupler
to the yellow coupler preferred for practicing the present invention, yellow stain
was reduced and bleaching fog was reduced by about 0.01 to 0.03.
[0472] However, in Sample II, when YR-1 coupler is used, the yellow density becomes 0.08.
[0473] Additionally, in YB-21, YB-22, YB-23 and YB-32, the above effect was also recognized.
Example 11
[0474] By using the samples in which Magenta couplers M'-2 and M'-3 in Sample I and Magenta
coupler M-1 in Sample II were changed to equimolar amounts of magenta couplers shown
in Table 7, respectively, processings were carried out by using the processing steps
and processing solutions in Example 6 or Example 8, respectively, and magenta densities
at unexposed portions were measured. The bleaching solution having the composition
described in Example 10 was used.
[0475] The results are shown in Table 7.

[0476] As clearly shown in Table 7, it can be understood that in Sample I and Sample II,
by changing a magenta coupler to the magenta coupler preferred for practicing the
present invention, magenta stain at unexposed portion was reduced.
[0477] In addition to the magenta couplers shown in Table 7, M-20, M-21, M-31, M-46, M-76,
M-78 and M-81 were examined, and substantially the same results as shown in Table
7 were obtained.

Example 12
[0478] By using the samples in which Cyan couplers C'-2 and C'-3 in Sample I and Cyan coupler
C-2-2 in Sample II were changed to equimolar amounts of cyan couplers shown in Table
8, respectively, processings were carried out by using the processing steps and processing
solutions in Example 6 or Example 8, respectively, and cyan densities at unexposed
portions were measured. The bleaching solution having the composition described in
Example 10 was used.
[0479] The results are shown in Table 8.

[0480] As clearly shown in Table 8, it can be understood that by using the cyan coupler
preferred for practicing the present invention, cyan stain was reduced slightly.
Example 13
[0481] By pouring the bleaching solution, the fixing solution and the stabilizing solution
other then the color developing solution used in Example 6 and an overflow solution
at the time of the running processing in Example 6 into the tank for processing the
color paper in Example 8, processings were carried out continuously without replenishment.
As a result, although stain on the color paper was high by about 0.01 as compared
with the case when Y, M and C were replenished without pouring, the amount of waste
liquor was reduced by about half, and therefore this is a preferred embodiment in
the point of low pollution.