1. Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a recording material suited for use in direct thermal
imaging.
2. Background of the Invention
[0002] Thermal imaging or thermography is a recording process wherein images are generated
by the use of imagewise modulated thermal energy.
[0003] In thermography two approaches are known:
1. Direct thermal formation of a visible image pattern by imagewise heating of a recording
material containing matter that by chemical or physical process changes colour or
optical density.
2. Thermal dye transfer printing wherein a visible image pattern is formed by transfer
of a coloured species from an imagewise heated donor element onto a receptor element.
[0004] Thermal dye transfer printing is a recording method wherein a dye-donor element is
used that is provided with a dye layer wherefrom dyed portions or incorporated dye
is transferred onto a contacting receiver element by the application of heat in a
pattern normally controlled by electronic information signals.
[0005] A survey of "direct thermal" imaging methods is given e.g. in the book "Imaging Systems"
by Kurt I. Jacobson-Ralph E. Jacobson, The Focal Press - London and New York (1976),
Chapter VII under the heading "7.1 Thermography". Thermography is concerned with materials
which are substantially not photosensitive, but are sensitive to heat or thermosensitive.
Imagewise applied heat is sufficient to bring about a visible change in a thermosensitive
imaging material.
[0006] Most of the "direct" thermographic recording materials are of the chemical type.
On heating to a certain conversion temperature, an irreversible chemical reaction
takes place and a coloured image is produced.
[0007] A wide variety of chemical systems has been suggested some examples of which have
been given on page 138 of the above mentioned book of Kurt I. Jacobson et al., describing
the production of a silver metal image by means of a thermally induced oxidation-reduction
reaction of a silver soap with a reducing agent. A heat-sensitive recording material
containing silver behenate and 4-methoxy-1-naphthol as reducing agent in adjacent
binder layers is described in Example 1 of US-P 3,094,417.
[0008] According to US-P 3,080,254 a typical heat-sensitive copy paper includes in the heat-sensitive
layer a thermoplastic binder, e.g ethyl cellulose, a water-insoluble silver salt,
e.g. silver stearate and an appropriate organic reducing agent, of which 4-methoxy-1-hydroxy-dihydronaphthalene
is a representative. Localized heating of the sheet in the thermographic reproduction
process, or for test purposes by momentary contact with a metal test bar heated to
a suitable conversion temperature in the range of about 90-150 °C, causes a visible
change to occur in the heat-sensitive layer. The initially white or lightly coloured
layer is darkened to a brownish appearance at the heated area. In order to obtain
a more neutral colour tone a heterocyclic organic toning agent such as phthalazinone
is added to the composition of the heat-sensitive layer. Thermo-sensitive copying
paper is used in "front-printing" or "back-printing" using infra-red radiation absorbed
and transformed into heat in contacting infra-red light absorbing image areas of an
original as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2 of US-P 3,074,809.
[0009] As described in "Handbook of Imaging Materials", edited by Arthur S. Diamond - Diamond
Research Corporation - Ventura, California, printed by Marcel Dekker, Inc. 270 Madison
Avenue, New York, New York 10016 (1991), p. 498-499 in thermal printing image signals
are converted into electric pulses and then through a driver circuit selectively transferred
to a thermal printhead. The thermal printhead consists of microscopic heat resistor
elements, which convert the electrical energy into heat via Joule effect. The electric
pulses thus converted into thermal signals manifest themselves as heat transferred
to the surface of the thermal paper wherein the chemical reaction resulting in colour
development takes place.
[0010] In a special embodiment of direct thermal imaging a recording material is used in
the form of an electrically resistive ribbon having e.g. a multilayered structure
in which a carbon-loaded polycarbonate is coated with a thin aluminium film (ref.
Progress in Basic Principles of Imaging Systems - Proceedings of the International
Congress of Photographic Science Köln (Cologne), 1986 ed. by Friedrich Granzer and
Erik Moisar - Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn - Braunschweig/Wiesbaden, Figure 6. p. 622). Current
is injected into the resistive ribbon by electrically addressing a print head electrode
contacting the carbon-loaded substrate, thus resulting in highly localized heating
of the ribbon beneath the energized electrode. In said embodiment the aluminium film
makes direct contact with the heat-sensitive recording layer or its protective outermost
layer.
[0011] The fact that in using a recording material having a resistive ribbon structure heat
is generated directly in the resistive ribbon and only the travelling ribbon gets
hot (not the print heads) an inherent advantage in printing speed is obtained. In
applying the thermal printing head technology the various elements of the thermal
printing head get hot and must cool down before the head can print without cross-talk
in a next position.
[0012] The image signals for modulating the electrode current are obtained directly e.g.
from opto-electronic scanning devices or from an intermediary storage means, e.g.
magnetic disc or tape or optical disc storage medium, optionally linked to a digital
image work station wherein the image information can be processed to satisfy particular
needs.
[0013] Heat-sensitive copying papers including a recording layer having a substantially
light-insensitive organic silver salt and a hydroxylamine type reductor in a thermoplastic
binder such as ethyl cellulose and after-chlorinated polyvinyl chloride are described
in US-P 4,082,901. When used in thermographic recording operating with thermal printheads
said copying papers will not be suited for reproducing images with fairly large number
of grey levels as is required for continuous tone reproduction.
[0014] The operating temperature of common thermal printheads is in the range of 300 to
400 °C as can be learned from the above mentioned "Handbook of Imaging Materials",
p. 502) and the heating time per heating element (picture element) may be less than
1.0 ms, the pressure contact of the thermal printhead with the recording material
being e.g. 200-500 g/cm² to ensure a good transfer of heat.
[0015] According to published European patent application No. 0 622 217 relating to a method
for making an image using a direct thermal imaging element, improvements in image
tone neutrality are obtained by heating the thermal recording element by means of
a thermal head having a plurality of heating elements, characterized in that the activation
of the heating elements is executed line by line with a duty cycle Δ representing
the ratio of activation time to total line time in such a way that the following equation
is satisfied :
wherein P
max is the maximal value over all the heating elements of the time averaged power density
P (expressed in W/mm²) dissipated by a heating element during a line time.
[0016] Although by controlling the power supplied to the heating elements of a thermal head
in the way as described in said EP-A a substantial improvement in continuous tone
reproduction is obtained already, from the side of the composition of the thermal
recording element further improvements to lower the image gradation are still desirable
for purposes such as portrait reproduction for identification documents and image
production for medical diagnosis wherein the image signals are derived from radiographic,
ultrasound or nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) recordings.
3. Objects and Summary of the Invention
[0017] It is an object of the present invention to provide a non-photosensitive heat-sensitive
recording material suited for use in direct thermal imaging, wherein said material
has an improved heat-exposure latitude suited for the production in direct thermography
of images with fairly low gradation.
[0018] Other objects and advantages of the present invention will appear from the further
description.
[0019] In accordance with the present invention a non-photosensitive heat-sensitive recording
material is provided suited for use in direct thermal imaging by means of information-wise
energized heating elements, wherein said recording material comprises :
(i) at least two imaging layers each containing uniformly distributed in a film-forming
resin binder (1) a substantially light-insensitive metal salt in thermal working relationship
with (2) an organic reducing agent, and
(ii) at least one heat-attenuating spacer layer for separating said imaging layers
from each other.
[0020] The present invention includes likewise the use of said recording material in direct
thermal imaging.
[0021] In particular the present invention provides a thermographic recording method, wherein
said heat-sensitive recording material is image-wise heated by means of a thermal
head containing a plurality of image-wise electrically energized heating elements,
and said heat-attenuating layer results in a reduction of gradation, i.e. an increase
of the number of gray levels, of images obtained by said heating.
[0022] By "thermal working relationship" is meant here that said substantially light-insensitive
metal salt and said reducing agent by means of heat can react to form the metal itself.
For that purpose said ingredients (1) and (2) may be present in a same layer or different
layers wherefrom by heat they can come into reactive contact with each other, e.g.
by diffusion or mixing in the melt.
4. Brief Description of the Drawing
[0023] For comparison purposes characteristic curves from prints obtained in heat-sensitive
"non-invention" and "invention" materials are given in the accompanying drawing. Said
characteristic curves were obtained by plotting optical density (D) (logarithmic values)
in the ordinate and linearly increasing amounts of heat (relative values) (rel. H)
in the abscissa.
5. Detailed Description of the Invention
[0024] The term "gradation" refers to the slope of a characteristic curve representing the
relationship of optical density (D) plotted in the ordinate versus linearly increasing
amounts of heat plotted in the abscissa, said different amounts of heat being applied
to the thermographic material in neighbouring area analogously to the production of
a stepwedge. Linearly increasing amounts of heat are obtained with a thermal recording
head wherein the heating time of the heating elements at constant Joule input increases
linearly.
[0025] So, the linear increase of heat is obtained e.g. by linearly increasing the heating
time at different areas of the recording material while keeping the heat input (J)
per time unit (s) constant; alternatively the heating time can be kept constant and
the amount of input-heat is increased linearly.
[0026] By definition all gradients or slopes of said characteristic curve create together
the gradation of the thermographic image. A gradient corresponds with the slope at
a single point on the characteristic curve. The gamma (γ) is the maximum gradient
of said characteristic curve, which is normally the gradient between the end of the
toe and the beginning of the shoulder of the characteristic curve. In praxis the gamma
(γ) is the most important gradient determining the gray scale or the range of image
tone reproduction.
[0027] The use of at least one spacer layer acting to some extent as a heat-insulating layer
between neighbouring heat-sensitive imaging layers makes that the imaging layer more
remote from the heating element(s) receive(s) less heat whereby the optical density
in correspondence with the total heating range will be better differentiated giving
rise to a larger amount of visually recognizable "gray-levels" in the final print.
[0028] The spacer layer(s) functioning as heat-attenuating layer(s) are preferably made
of a film-forming transparent hydrophobic resin or polymer. Particularly suitable
polymers for that purpose are polyesters and polycarbonates.
[0029] The thickness of the spacer layer(s) depends on their heat-insulating power which
corresponds with a poor thermal conductivity, but for preventing a too strong reduction
in sensitivity the thickness of one spacer layer or a group of spacer layers is preferably
in the range of 5 to 30 µm.
[0030] According to a first embodiment heat-attenuating spacer layers are applied by coating
a resin solution or dispersion, the latter being called a latex, and removing its
liquid carrier by drying. Said liquid carrier is selected preferably in such a way
that it is not a solvent for the binder in the underlying heat-sensitive imaging layer.
Operating that way it is the intention not to disturb the image-forming characteristics
of the heat-sensitive layer.
[0031] For example, according to a first embodiment the ingredients of the heat-sensitive
layer containing polyvinyl butyral as binder are coated from a solution in which methyl
ethyl ketone is the solvent and the resin of the heat-attenuating layer is coated
from a rubber latex wherein water is the liquid medium being not a solvent for polyvinyl
butyral.
[0032] According to a second embodiment heat-attenuating spacer layers are applied by lamination
either or not using a glue or adhesive sticking layer.
[0033] Suitable heat-attenuating spacer layers that can be applied by lamination are polyethylene
terephthalate or Bisphenol A-polycarbonate strata that are laminated by means of a
pressure-sensitive adhesive layer to an underlying heat-sensitive layer, e.g. using
a pressure-sensitive adhesive as described in US-P 5,147,490.
[0034] Following the gist of the present invention a gradation-lowering effect is also obtained
by including in the spacer layer(s) finely divided (colloidal) optically transparent
inert pigments having heat-insulating power, such as transparent colloidal silica
not masking the formed metal pattern.
[0035] In a preferred embodiment the metal salt used in the recording material of the present
invention is a substantially light-insensitive organic silver salt.
[0036] Substantially light-insensitive organic silver salts particularly suited for use
in recording materials according to the present invention are silver salts of aliphatic
carboxylic acids known as fatty acids, wherein the aliphatic carbon chain has preferably
at least 12 C-atoms, e.g. silver laurate, silver palmitate, silver stearate, silver
hydroxystearate, silver oleate and silver behenate, and likewise silver dodecyl sulphonate
described in US-P 4,504,575 and silver di-(2-ethylhexyl)-sulfosuccinate described
in published European patent application 227 141. Useful modified aliphatic carboxylic
acids with thioether group are described e.g. in GB-P 1,111,492 and other organic
silver salts are described in GB-P 1,439,478, e.g. silver benzoate and silver phthalazinone,
which may be used likewise to produce a thermally developable silver image. Further
are mentioned silver imidazolates and the substantially light-insensitive inorganic
or organic silver salt complexes described in US-P 4,260,677.
[0037] Suitable organic reducing agents for the reduction of metal salts, preferably substantially
light-insensitive organic silver salts, are organic compounds containing at least
one active hydrogen atom linked to O, N or C, such as is the case in aromatic di-
and tri-hydroxy compounds, e.g. hydroquinone and substituted hydroquinones, catechol,
pyrogallol, gallic acid and gallates; aminophenols, METOL (tradename), p-phenylenediamines,
alkoxynaphthols, e.g. 4-methoxy-1-naphthol described in US-P 3,094,417, pyrazolidin-3-one
type reducing agents, e.g. PHENIDONE (tradename), pyrazolin-5-ones, indanedione-1,3
derivatives, hydroxytetrone acids, hydroxytetronimides, hydroxylamine derivatives
(ref. e.g. US-P 4,082,901), hydrazine derivatives, reductones, and ascorbic acid;
see also US-P 3,074,809, 3,080,254, 3,094,417 and 3,887,378.
[0038] It has been experimentally stated by us that an improved continuous tone reproduction
can be obtained by the use of heat-sensitive recording materials containing a catechol-type
reducing agent, by which is meant a reducing agent containing at least one benzene
nucleus with two hydroxy groups (-OH) in ortho-position.
[0039] Preferred are catechol and polyhydroxy spiro-bis-indane compounds corresponding to
the following general formula:

wherein
R¹⁰ represents hydrogen or alkyl, e.g. methyl or ethyl, each of R¹¹ and R¹² (same
or different) represents H, an alkyl group, e.g. methyl, ethyl or propyl, an alkenyl
group or a cycloalkyl group, e.g. cyclohexyl group, or R¹¹ and R¹² together represent
the atoms necessary to close a homocyclic non-aromatic ring, e.g. a cylohexyl ring,
each of R¹³ and R¹⁴ (same or different) represents H, an alkyl group, e.g. methyl,
ethyl or propyl, an alkenyl group or a cycloalkyl group, e.g. cyclohexyl group, or
R¹³ and R¹⁴ together represent the atoms necessary to close a homocyclic non-aromatic
ring, e.g. cyclohexyl,
each of Z¹ and Z² (same or different) represents the atoms necessary to close an
aromatic ring or ring system, e.g. benzene ring, substituted with at least two hydroxyl
groups in ortho- or para-position and optionally further substituted with at least
one hydrocarbon group, e.g an alkyl or aryl group.
[0040] Particularly useful are the polyhydroxy-spiro-bis-indane compounds described in US-P
3,440,049 as photographic tanning agent, more especially 3,3,3',3'-tetramethyl-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydroxy-1,1'-spiro-bis-indane
(called indane I) and 3,3,3',3'-tetramethyl-4,6,7,4',6',7'-hexahydroxy-1,1'-spiro-bis-indane
(called indane II). Indane is also known under the name hydrindene.
[0041] Preferably the reducing agent is added to the heat-sensitive imaging layer but as
already mentioned all or part of the reducing agent may be added to an adjacent layer
wherefrom it can diffuse into the layer containing the substantially light-insensitive
silver salt.
[0042] The present heat-sensitive recording material may contain one or more primary reducing
agents of the type defined above in combination with one or more auxiliary reducing
agents having poor reducing power compared with said main reducing agents. The auxiliary
reducing agents are incorporated preferably in the heat-sensitive layer containing
the organic silver salt. For that purpose sterically hindered phenols and aromatic
sulphonamide compounds are useful.
[0043] Sterically hindered phenols as described e.g. in US-P 4,001,026 are examples of such
auxiliary reducing agents that can be used in admixture with said organic silver salts
without premature reduction reaction and fog-formation at room temperature.
[0044] The silver image density depends on the coverage of the above defined reducing agent(s)
and organic silver salt(s) and has to be preferably such that on heating above 100
°C an optical density of at least 1.5 can be obtained. Preferably at least 0.10 mole
of reducing agent(s) per mole of organic silver salt is used.
[0045] For obtaining a neutral black image tone with silver formed in the higher optical
density parts and neutral grey in the lower densities the reducible silver salt(s)
and reducing agents are advantageously used in conjunction with a so-called toning
agent known from thermography or photo-thermography.
[0046] Suitable toning agents are the phthalimides and phthalazinones within the scope of
the general formulae described in US-P 4,082,901. Further reference is made to the
toning agents described in US-P 3,074,809, 3,446,648 and 3,844,797. Particularly useful
toning agents are likewise the heterocyclic toner compounds of the benzoxazine dione
or naphthoxazine dione type.
[0047] A toner compound particularly suited for use in combination with said polyhydroxy
spiro-bis-indane reducing agents is 3,4-dihydro-2,4-dioxo-1,3,2H-benzoxazine described
in US-P 3,951,660.
[0048] As binding agent for the heat-sensitive imaging layer preferably thermoplastic water-insoluble
resins are used wherein the ingredients can be dispersed homogeneously or form therewith
a solid-state solution. For that purpose all kinds of natural, modified natural or
synthetic resins may be used, e.g. cellulose derivatives such as ethylcellulose, cellulose
esters, carboxymethylcellulose, starch ethers, polymers derived from α,β-ethylenically
unsaturated compounds such as polyvinyl chloride, after-chlorinated polyvinyl chloride,
copolymers of vinyl chloride and vinylidene chloride, copolymers of vinyl chloride
and vinyl acetate, polyvinyl acetate and partially hydrolyzed polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl
alcohol, polyvinyl acetals, e.g. polyvinyl butyral, copolymers of acrylonitrile and
acrylamide, polyacrylic acid esters, polymethacrylic acid esters, polystyrene and
polyethylene or mixtures thereof. A particularly suitable ecologically interesting
(halogen-free) binder is polyvinyl butyral. A polyvinyl butyral containing some vinyl
alcohol units is marketed under the trade name BUTVAR B79 of Monsanto USA.
[0049] The binder to organic silver salt weight ratio is preferably in the range of 0.2
to 6, and the total thickness of all the heat-sensitive imaging layers present in
the thermosensitive recording material according to the present invention should preferably
be in the range of 5 to 16 µm.
[0050] The layer containing the organic silver salt is commonly coated on a support in sheet-
or web-form from an organic solvent containing the binder dissolved therein but may
be applied from an aqueous medium as a latex, i.e. as aqueous polymer dispersion.
For use as a latex the dispersable polymer has preferably some hydrophilic functionality.
Polymers with hydrophilic functionality for forming an aqueous polymer dispersion
(latex) are described e.g. in US-P 5,006,451, but serve therein for forming a barrier
layer preventing unwanted diffusion of vanadium pentoxide present as antistatic agent.
[0051] The heat-sensitive layer containing the organic substantially light-insensitive silver
salt and optionally an adjacent layer containing a reducing agent may contain waxes
or "heat solvents" also called "thermal solvents" or "thermosolvents" improving the
reaction speed of the redox-reaction at elevated temperature.
[0052] By the term "heat solvent" in this invention is meant a non-hydrolyzable organic
material which is in solid state in the recording layer at temperatures below 50 °C
but becomes a plasticizer for the recording layer in the heated region and/or liquid
solvent for the reducing agent combined with the organic silver salt, at a temperature
above 60 °C. Useful for that purpose are a polyethylene glycol having a mean molecular
weight in the range of 1,500 to 20,000 described in US-P 3,347,675. Further are mentioned
compounds such as urea, methyl sulfonamide and ethylene carbonate being heat solvents
described in US-P 3,667,959, and compounds such as tetrahydro-thiophene-1,1-dioxide,
methyl anisate and 1,10-decanediol being described as heat solvents in Research Disclosure,
December 1976, (item 15027) pages 26-28. Still other examples of heat solvents have
been described in US-P 3,438,776, and 4,740,446, and in published EP-A 0 119 615 and
0 122 512 and DE-A 3 339 810.
[0053] In addition to said ingredients the heat-sensitive layers may contain other additives
such as free fatty acids, surface-active agents, antistatic agents, e.g. non-ionic
antistatic agents including a fluorocarbon group as e.g. in F₃C(CF₂)₆CONH(CH₂CH₂O)-H,
ultraviolet light absorbing compounds, white light reflecting and/or ultraviolet radiation
reflecting pigments, colloidal silica, and/or optical brightening agents.
[0054] In the recording material according to the present invention the at least two heat-sensitive
layers, that are separated from each other by at least one heat-attenuating spacer
layer, not necessarily have the same composition. By which is meant that e.g. ingredients
influencing image color, optical density and gradients may be different. Moreover,
said heat-sensitive layers may have different thickness and coverage of said ingredients.
[0055] Direct thermal imaging can be used for both the production of transparencies and
reflection type prints. Such means that the support may be transparent or opaque,
e.g. the support has a white light reflecting aspect. For example, a paper base, e.g.
polyolefine-coated paper base is used which may contain white light reflecting pigments,
optionally also applied in an interlayer between the recording layer and said base.
In case a transparent base is used, said base may be colourless or coloured, e.g.
has a blue colour.
[0056] In the hard copy field, recording materials on white opaque base are used, whereas
in the medical diagnostic field black-imaged transparencies find wide application
in inspection techniques operating with a light box.
[0057] A transparent support of the heat-sensitive recording material according to the present
invention is preferably a thin flexible resin carrier made e.g. from a cellulose ester,
e.g. cellulose triacetate, polypropylene, polycarbonate or polyester, e.g. polyethylene
terephthalate. The support may be in sheet, ribbon or web form and may be subbed if
need be to improve the adherence to the thereon coated heat-sensitive recording layer.
[0058] The coating of the heat-sensitive layers may proceed by any coating technique e.g.
as described in Modern Coating and Drying Technology, edited by Edward D. Cohen and
Edgar B. Gutoff, (1992) VCH Publishers Inc. 220 East 23rd Street, Suite 909 New York,
NY 10010, U.S.A.
[0059] The recording materials of the present invention are particularly suited for use
in thermographic recording techniques operating with thermal printheads. Suitable
thermal printheads are e.g. a Fujitsu Thermal Head (FTP-040 MCS001), a TDK Thermal
Head F415 HH7-1089, and a Rohm Thermal Head KE 2008-F3.
[0060] According to the present invention an image can be obtained by image-wise heating
the above defined recording materials while moving the recording material with its
imaging side in contact with a stationary thermal head. The recording material locally
reach a temperature of up to 400°C by varying the number of heat pulses given off
by the thermal head. By varying the number of heat pulses the density of the corresponding
image pixel is varied correspondingly.
[0061] In a particular embodiment in order to avoid direct contact of the print-heads with
the recording layer that has not been provided with an outermost protective layer,
the imagewise heating of an imaging layer proceeds through a contacting but removable
resin sheet or web wherefrom during said heating no transfer of imaging material to
the printhead can take place.
[0062] In another embodiment in order to avoid local deformation of the relatively weak
imaging layer, to improve resistance against abrasion and in order to avoid the direct
contact of the printheads with the recording layer a protective coating is applied
thereto. Such coating may have the same composition as an anti-sticking coating or
slipping layer which is applied in thermal dye transfer materials at the rear side
of the dye donor material.
[0063] A slipping layer being said outermost layer may comprise a dissolved lubricating
material and/or particulate lubricating material, e.g. talc particles, optionally
protruding from the outermost layer. Examples of suitable lubricating materials are
a surface active agent, a liquid lubricant, a solid lubricant or mixtures thereof,
with or without a polymeric binder. The surface active agents may be any agents known
in the art such as carboxylates, sulfonates, phosphates, aliphatic amine salts, aliphatic
quaternary ammonium salts, polyoxyethylene alkyl ethers, polyethylene glycol fatty
acid esters, fluoroalkyl C₂-C₂₀ aliphatic acids. Examples of liquid lubricants include
silicone oils, e.g. BAYSILONE Öl (tradename of BAYER AG, Germany), synthetic oils,
saturated hydrocarbons and glycols. Examples of solid lubricants include various higher
alcohols such as stearyl alcohol, fatty acids and fatty acid esters. Suitable slipping
layer compositions are described in e.g. EP 138483, EP 227090, US-P 4,567,113, 4,572,860
and 4,717,711 and in published European patent application 311841.
[0064] A suitable slipping layer being here an outermost layer at the recording layer side
comprises as binder a styrene-acrylonitrile copolymer or a styrene-acrylonitrile-butadiene
copolymer or a mixture hereof and as lubricant in an amount of 0.1 to 10 % by weight
of the binder (mixture) a polysiloxane-polyether copolymer or polytetrafluoroethylene
or a mixture hereof.
[0065] Another suitable outermost slipping layer may be obtained by coating a solution of
at least one silicon comound and a substance capable of forming during the coating
procedure a polymer having an inorganic backbone which is an oxide of a group IVa
or IVb element as described in published European patent application 0554576.
[0066] Other suitable protective layer compositions that may be applied as slipping (anti-stick)
coating are described e.g. in published European patent applications (EP-A) 0 501
072 and 0 492 411.
[0067] The following example illustrates the present invention. The percentages and ratios
are by weight unless otherwise indicated.
EXAMPLE 1 (comparative example)
- Thermosensitive recording material A (non-invention material)
[0068] A subbed polyethylene terephthalate support having a thickness of 100 µm was doctor
blade-coated from a coating composition containing methyl ethyl ketone as a solvent
and the following ingredients so as to obtain thereon after drying the following recording
layer containing :
silver behenate |
3.20 g/m² |
polyvinyl butyral (BUTVAR B79-tradename) |
3.20 g/m² |
reducing agent S as defined hereinafter |
0.60 g/m |
3,4-dihydro-2,4-dioxo-1,3,2H-benzoxazine |
0.22 g/m² |
BAYSILON Öl (tradename) |
12 mg/m² |
Reducing agent S is a polyhydroxy spiro-bis-indane, viz. 3,3,3',3'-tetramethyl-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydroxy-spiro-bis-indane.
- Thermosensitive recording material B (invention material)
[0070] A subbed polyethylene terephthalate support having a thickness of 100 µm was doctor
blade-coated from methyl ethyl ketone as solvent so as to obtain after drying the
following first thermosensitive imaging layer containing:
silver behenate |
1.60 g/m² |
polyvinyl butyral (BUTVAR B79-tradename) |
1.60 g/m² |
reducing agent S as defined hereinafter |
0.30 g/m² |
3,4-dihydro-2,4-dioxo-1,3,2H-benzoxazine |
0.11 g/m² |
BAYSILON Öl A (tradename) |
6 mg/m² |
[0071] Onto said first thermosensitive imaging layer a spacer layer was applied from the
following aqueous polymer dispersion:
25 % latex of copoly(ethyl acrylate, methylmethacrylate methacrylic acid) (50/33.5/16.5) |
10 g |
ULTRAVON W (tradename of Ciba Geigy) wetting agent |
10 mg |
[0072] The solids coverage after drying was 25 g/m².
[0073] Onto said dried spacer layer a hydrophilic barrier layer on the basis of gelatin
was coated from aqueous medium. By the fact that a gelatin layer forms an impermeable
barrier for methyl ethyl ketone containing dissolved reducing agent, diffusion of
said reducing agent from the second thermosensitive imaging layer into the first thermosensitive
imaging layer is prevented.
[0074] The coverage of gelatin after drying was 2 g/m².
[0075] Onto that hydrophilic barrier layer a second thermosensitive imaging layer having
the same composition as the first imaging layer was coated and dried.
- Thermographic printing
[0076] Both said recording materials A and B were exposed to a pattern of linearly increasing
amounts of heat in a thermal head printer built for thermosensitometric purposes,
using a same separatable polyethylene terephthalate ribbon of 6 µm thick between the
thermal print head and outermost heat-sensitive layer of the recording materials.
[0077] From the prints obtained in said materials A and B characteristic curves A and B
respectively were plotted in Fig. 1 with optical density (D) (logarithmic values)
in the ordinate and linearly increasing amounts of heat (relative values) (rel. H)
in the abscissa.
[0078] The optical density was measured in transmission with MacBeth TD 904 densitometer
behind ortho-filter having its main transmission in the green part (500 nm to 600
nm) of the visible spectrum.
[0079] From the comparison of these curves can be learned that the slope of the linear part
of the curve B corresponding with the invention material B is much less steep (58°)
than the slope of the linear part of curve A from non-invention material A (70°).
Such corresponds with a gamma value for the non-invention material A of 2.74 and a
gamma value for the invention-material B of 1.60.
EXAMPLE 2 (comparative example)
- Thermosensitive recording material A (non-invention material)
[0080] The composition of said thermosensitive (non-invention) recording material A was
the same as described in Example 1.
- Thermosensitive recording materials C (invention material)
Material C1
[0081] A polyethylene terephthalate support having a thickness of 100 µm was doctor blade-coated
at a wet coating thickness of 27 g/m² from a coating composition containing 100 g
of methyl ethyl ketone as solvent and the following ingredients so as to obtain after
drying a coated layer C1 having the following composition:
silver behenate |
1.60 g/m² |
polyvinyl butyral (BUTVAR B79-tradename) |
1.60 g/m² |
reducing agent S as defined hereinbefore |
0.30 g/m² |
3,4-dihydro-2,4-dioxo-1,3,2H-benzoxazine |
0.11 g/m² |
BAYSILON Öl A (tradename) |
6.0 mg/m² |
Material C2
[0082] Material C2 has the same composition as material C1 with the difference that the
polyethylene terephthalate support had a thickness of 8 µm.
[0083] Recording material C was prepared by laminating material C2 onto material C1 with
its 8 µm thick support into contact with the thermosensitive layer of material C1.
[0084] The lamination proceeded with a commercial roll laminator with a lamination speed
of 50 cm/minute while keeping the laminator rollers at 80 °C
- Thermographic printing
[0085] Said recording materials A and C were exposed to a pattern of linearly increasing
amounts of heat in a thermal head printer built for thermosensitometric purposes,
using a same separatable polyethylene terephthalate ribbon of 6 µm thick between the
thermal print head and outermost heat-sensitive layer of the recording materials.
[0086] By the applied heating procedure a wedge print having 64 steps was obtained.
[0087] From the prints obtained in said materials A and C characteristic curves A and C
respectively were plotted in Fig. 2 with optical density (D) (logarithmic values)
in the ordinate and linearly increasing amounts of heat (relative values) (rel. H)
in the abscissa.
[0088] The optical density was measured in transmission with a MacBeth TD 904 densitometer
behind ortho-filter having its main transmission in the green part (500 nm to 600
nm) of the visible spectrum.
[0089] From the comparison of these curves can be learned that the slope of the linear part
of the curve C corresponding with the invention material C is much less steep (56°)
than the slope of the linear part of curve A from non-invention material A (68°).
Such corresponds with a gamma value for the non-invention material A of 2.47 and a
gamma value for the invention-material C of 1.48.
[0090] In the above Example 2 the two heat-sensitive layers of invention material C are
identical. It is possible however to make them different in composition and/or thickness
whereby the steepness of the sensitometric curve can be tailor-make, e.g. the toe
can be made less steep while maintaining the steepness of the shoulder part.