1. Field of the invention.
[0001] The present invention relates a method of processing an exposed photographic silver
halide material coated from hydrophilic layers comprising thin tabular emulsion crystals
rich in chloride.
2. Background of the invention.
[0002] It is known that by processing a silver halide photographic material finely divided
metallic silver, so-called silver deposit, is formed in the developer (ref. e.g. Photographic
Silver Halide Diffusion Processes by A.Rott and E.Weyde - The Focal Press, (1972),
p. 67). The formation of silver deposit is particularly disturbing in automatic processing
apparatus wherein it results in deposits of black silver on conveyor and transport
rollers and smudging of photographic material conducted therewith.
[0003] The formation of silver deposit can be attributed to the presence in conventional
developers of silver halide complexing agents like, e.g., sulphite and thiocyanate
ions, which make silver ions still more soluble. In this medium the complex ions formed
are effectively reduced to metallic silver nuclei. Growth of said nearly invisible
fine nuclei leads to the formation of said silver deposit.
[0004] It is clear that more soluble silver halide grains, especially grains rich in chloride
and/or fine grains, coated in one or more hydrophilic layers of a silver halide photographic
material, are promoting the formation of silver deposit, although otherwise their
higher development and fixing rates are highly appreciated. Moreover not only fine
regular or globular grains, having a small average crystal size diameter of about
0.25 µm or less are promoting the said formation, but also thin tabular grains having
a grain thickness of less than about 0.2 µm .
[0005] The silver halide emulsions utilized in high-contrast room-light-handleable elements
are slow speed emulsions. The desired slow speed is achieved by the use of small grain
sizes and by the doping of the silver halide grains with appropriate doping agents
that control photographic speed.
[0006] In order to prevent the formation of silver deposit it has been proposed to add particular
compounds to the developer, forming sparingly soluble and non-reducible silver salts,
as, e.g., 5,5'-bis-1,2,4-triazolin-3-thiones or derivatives of 1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-thiols
as described, e.g. in BE-P 606,550 and GB-P 1,120,963, 2-mercapto-1,3,4-thiadiazoles
described in US-P 3,212,892. A great variety of other mercapto compounds has been
described in FR-P 1,470,235 and 1-phenyl-5-mercapto-tetrazole compounds having a -NHX
substituent on the phenyl nucleus have been disclosed in GB-P 1,471,554. In the latter
document it has been described that the emulsion layer may contain auxiliary coating
agents such as saponin, sodium lauryl sulphate, dodecylphenol polyethylene oxide ether
and hexadecyltrimethyl ammonium bromide.
[0007] The same result can be obtained by the presence in the developer of 1-phenyl-5-mercaptotetrazole,
but if it is used in an amount higher than necessary for reducing fog in the silver
halide photographic material, the sensitivity of the said material is markedly reduced.
Such effect is probably due to the penetrating of the 1-phenyl-5-mercaptotetrazole
from the developer liquid into the exposed photographic silver halide emulsion layer
and its interaction with latent image nuclei. More recently triazolium thiolates for
use in the developer have been described in, e.g., EP-A 0 533 182.
[0008] In EP-Specification 0 223 883 a method has been described which comprises the treating
of a silver halide photographic material with an aqueous alkaline liquid in the presence
of (i) a developing agent, (ii) a heterocyclic mercapto compound including an aliphatic
group of at least 3 carbon atoms and (iii) a surface active agent, characterised in
that said surface active agent is an anionic alkylphenoxy polyalkyleneoxy phosphate
ester surfactant.
[0009] In EP-A 0 620 484, reduction of the so-called "pi-line" defect, especially for processed
materials for non-destructive testing purposes, has been described. Such materials
should comprise at least one vinyl sulphone compound as a hardening agent and at least
one polyoxyalkylene compound as a surfactant in at least one of its hydrophilic layers.
Combined with a processing method comprising a developing step wherein the developer
comprises as a surfactant at least one anionic alkylphenoxy and/or alkoxy polyalkyleneoxy
phosphate ester, sulphate ester, alkyl carboxylic, sulphonic or phosphonic acid and/or
a salt thereof a remarkable improvement has been obtained. A similar result has been
obtained as disclosed in EP-A's 0 621 506 and 0 620 483.
[0010] Although said methods are very effective it is not more than a "treating method"
wherein the amount of silver nuclei is not decreased but wherein said nuclei are more
"dispersed" and are merely inhibited to grow further to form larger crystalline silver
deposits. No "curing" effect in the sense of reducing the generation of nuclei can
be obtained with this method. Moreover the stability of the developer, especially
its sensitivity to oxidation by contact with air oxygen, is not reduced either.
[0011] As silver chloride is the more soluble silver halide salt, and therefor especially
suitable in rapid processing applications, the problem of sludge formation by processing
light-sensitive silver halide materials comprising such grains is more pronounced.
[0012] Otherwise during the last years there is an enhanced interest in the use of thin
tabular grains rich in chloride, said grains having [111] or [100] major crystal faces.
Especially for thin tabular grains rich in chloride, having [100] major faces, the
stability of the crystal habit is a highly appreciated additional advantage.
[0013] It is generally known that the said thin tabular grains with their large surfaces
are desired, e.g., as they allow the adsorption of high amounts of spectral sensitiser(s),
leading to strong absorption of incident radiation. As a result a high sensitivity
can be expected. Furthermore, as scattering of incident radiation throughout parallel
twin planes is reduced, sharpness of the processed material is expected to be better.
And last but not least the covering power of thin tabular grains comprised in coated
layers of forehardened materials is not reduced in the processing of the said materials.
3. Objects of the invention.
[0014] It is an object of the present invention to provide a processing method for a photographic
silver halide material comprising hydrophilic layers having thin tabular silver halide
crystals rich in chloride wherein the formation of silver deposit is reduced effectively
without adversely affecting photographic speed.
[0015] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a suitable sensitometry
for the said material processed in the method according to this invention.
[0016] Moreover it is an object to provide a procesing method, wherein the developer is
stable against oxidation by air oxygen as a low regeneration volume per square unit
of the said material should be highly appreciated.
[0017] Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become clear from the
further description.
4. Summary of the invention.
[0018] It has surprisingly been found now that the objects of the invention can be attained
by providing a method of processing an exposed silver halide photographic material
comprising at least one coated hydrophilic silver halide emulsion layer comprising
tabular grains rich in chlqride, bounded by [100] or [111] major faces, characterised
by the steps of developing, followed by fixing, rinsing and drying the said material,
wherein developing proceeds in a developer, comprising hydroquinone in an amount from
0 to 30 g per litre, an auxiliary developer, as silver halide complexing agents alkali
metal sulphite salts in an amount from 1 to 50 g per litre, at least 1 g of a compound
corresponding to the formula (I), a precursor thereof, a derivative thereof and/or
a metal salt thereof

wherein
each of A, B and D independently represents an oxygen atom or NR1; X represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR2; CR3R4; C=O; C=NR5 or C=S;
Y represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR'2; CR'3R'4; C=O; C=NR'5 or C=S;
Z represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR"2; CR"3R"4; C=O; C=NR"5 or C=S;
n equals 0, 1 or 2;
each of R1 to R5, R'1 to R'5 and R"1 to R"5, independently represents hydrogen, subsituted or unsubstituted alkyl, aralkyl, hydroxyalkyl,
carboxyalkyl; substituted or unsubstituted alkenyl, substituted or unsubstituted alkynyl,
substituted or unsubstituted cycloalkyl, substituted or unsubstituted cycloalkenyl,
substituted or unsubstituted aryl or substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclyl; and
wherein
R3 and R4, R'3 and R'4, R"3 and R"4, may further form together a ring; and
wherein in the case that X=CR3R4 and Y=CR'3R'4, R3 and R'3 and/or R4 and R'4 may form a ring and wherein in the case that Y=CR'3R'4 and Z=CR"3R"4 with n- 1 or 2, R'3 and R"3 and/or R'4 and R"4 may form a ring.
Said developer further optionally comprises at least one thiocyanate salt in an amount
from 0.1 to 3.0 g, and more preferably from 0.5 to 2.5 g per litre or a compound corresponding
to the formula (II), accompanied by charge compensating anions, in amounts from 0.1
to 5 g and more preferably from 0.5 to 2.5 g per litre;

wherein at least R or one of the ring substituents contains at least one oxyethylene
group: or wherein R is a substituted or
unsubstituted aliphatic or aromatic group and wherein Z' is composed of atoms to form
a substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclic aromatic 5- or 6-ring.
5. Detailed description of the invention.
[0019] It has unexpectedly been found that a solution of the problem of silver deposit by
processing a silver halide photographic material comprising at least one coated hydrophilic
silver halide emulsion layer containing thin tabular grains rich in chloride can be
solved by applying a processing cycle characterised by the steps of developing, followed
by fixing, rinsing and drying the said material, wherein developing proceeds in a
developer, the essential elements of which are given hereinbefore in the statement
of the invention.
[0020] In a preferred embodiment for the compound according to formula (II), found as working
equivalent as alkali metal thiocyanates in the proposed amounts, the said heterocyclic
aromatic ring is a pyridine, a pyrimidine, an imidazol, a benzimidazol, a thiazol,
a benzothiazol or a derivative thereof. In a further preferred embodiment in the structure
according to the formula (II) at least R or one of the ring substituents represents
at least 3 oxyethylene units.
[0021] More specifically, a preferred compound is

wherein p = 3 to 10 and p' = 1 to 4; and still more preferred the same compound wherein
p equals a value of about 4, whereas p' equals a value of 1. As pyridinium cations
are present, anions are required to neutralise the total electrical charge of these
N-heterocyclic aromatic onium compounds. Preferred anions are sulphonate anions, like
methylsulphonate and the like, toluyl sulphonate, carbamate, benzoate, glutamate,
perchlorate, sulphate etc. In a more preferred embodiment the said anions are p-toluyl
sulphonate.
[0022] In a further preferred embodiment according to the method used according to this
invention, developing proceeds in a developer comprising a compound according to the
formula (I) wherein A, B and X each represent an oxygen atom; n=0; Y=CH-(CHOH)
m-CH
2-R
6 wherein m=1,2,3 or 4 and wherein R
6 represents OH for m=1; H or OH for m=2,3 or 4. This formula corresponds with (iso)ascorbic
acid, which is, together with 1-ascorbic acid, a preferred form of formula (I). In
another preferred embodiment A and B each represent an oxygen atom; n=0 and each of
X and Y represents C(CH
3)
2. This formula corresponds with tetramethylreductic acid.
[0023] In the developing step of the method according to this invention the compound(s)
according to formula (I) preferably is(are) present in the developer solution in an
amount comprised between 1 g and 50 g per litre. Examples of reducing precursor compounds
have, e.g., been described in WO's 94/3834 and 94/16362, which are both incorporated
herein by reference.
[0024] It is clear that within the context of this invention ascorbic acid is not merely
used in the developer as an antioxidant as, e.g., described in WO 93/12463, in JP-A's
4428673 and 55149936, in GB 1,266,533 and in US-P's 3,865,591; 4,756,997 and 4,839,259
and in the literature as, e.g., J. Am. Chem. Soc.,
60 (1938), p. 99 and p. 2084;
61 (1939), p. 442;
64 (1942), p. 1561,
65 (1943), p. 1489;
66 (1944), p. 700 and
104 (1982), p. 6273.
[0025] In the developing step of the method according to this invention the developer liquid
may contain any combination of hydroquinone as a developing agent and auxiliary developer
known for use in the development of exposed photographic silver halide, but the absence
of hydroquinone is not excluded. For example as auxiliary developing compounds may
be utilized p-methylaminophenol, a 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidine-1-one, p-phenylenediamine
derivatives and the like. Amounts of hydroquinone are lower than 30 g per litre and
more preferably lower than 20 g per litre. Preferred amounts of auxiliary developer
are present in a concentration range of up to 10 mmoles per litre of developer, said
auxiliary developer being preferably a 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidine-1-one compound, well-known
as a "phenidone" compound.
[0026] Further in the developing step of the method according to this invention the developer
further comprises silver complexing compound(s) such as alkali metal sulphites, bisulphites,
metasulphites or metabisulphites, but preferably it contains an alkali metal sulphite
salt, and more preferably sodium sulphite, in an amount of less than 50, and more
preferably in an amount of less than 40 g per litre of developer. The developer solution
can be alkalised with alkaline metal hydroxides, phosphates, borates, carbonates and
the like. The developer liquid or activator liquid may contain still other ingredients,
e.g., metal complexing agents, an anti-fogging agent, e.g., alkali metal bromide,
in amounts ranging from 0.01 to 0.4 moles per litre, a benzotriazole, a benzothiazole,
a tetrazole, e.g., up to 0.06 g per liter of 1-phenyl-5-mercapto-tetrazole, solvents
improving the dissolution of the developing agents, e.g., alcohols, polyethylene glycols
and esters thereof and alkanolamines, surface active agents, development retarding
or activating compounds, e.g., quaternary ammonium salts, and gelatin hardening agents,
e.g., dialdehyde compounds such as glutardialdehyde. Especially the presence of polyethylene
glycols having a low molecular weight in the range from 200 to 400 is preferred.
[0027] In the developing step of the method according to this invention, values of the pH
of the developer solution are preferably in the range from 9.0 to 12.5, more preferably
in the range of 9.5 to 12.0 and still more preferably from 9.5 to 11.0. Even at those
relatively "lower" pH values, if compared with more frequently used alkaline pH values
of 12.0 and more, the required sensitometry is still attained, which means that a
developer having a composition according to this invention offers enough reactivity
to get the required sensitivity for a material that is processed therein within a
reasonable processing time.
[0028] The present invention thus includes a method for developing, by means of the developer
according to this invention, of any type of photographic silver halide emulsion layer
material, e.g., a graphic art, micrographic and an X-ray recording material, after
image-wise exposing the said material by means of suitable radiation sources, adapted
to each application in particular, and immersing it into the developer the composition
of which has been described hereinbefore, with the proviso that the said material
comprises at least one coated hydrophilic silver halide emulsion layer containing
tabular silver halide grains rich in chloride.
[0029] The said tabular silver halide grains rich in chloride, coated in hydrophilic layers
of materials to be processed according to the method of this invention, are bounded
by [100] or [111] major faces. Tabular silver halide grains rich in chloride, bounded
by [100] major faces and/or the preparation method thereof and/or materials in which
said grains are incorporated have been described in, e.g., US-P's 5,264,337; 5,275,930;
5,292,632; 5,310,635; 5,314,798; 5,320,938; in the published EP-A's 0 534 395, 0 569
971, 0 584 815, 0 584 644, 0 617 325, 0 618 492 and 0 653 669, which is incorporated
herein by reference. Tabular silver halide grains rich in chloride, bounded by [111]
major faces and/or the preparation method thereof and/or materials in which said grains
are incorporated have been described in, e.g., US-P's 4,399,215; 4,400,463; 4,804,621;
5,061,617; 5,176,991; 5,176,992; 5,178,997; 5,178,998; 5,183,732; 5,185,239; 5,217,858;
5,221,602; 5,264,337; 5,272,052; 5,275,930; 5,286,621; 5,292,632; 5,298,385; 5,298,387;
5,298,388; 5,310,644; 5,320,938; 5,356,764; in the published EP-A's 0 481 133, 0 503
700, 0 532 801, 0 533 189, 0 647 877 and 0 678 772, which are incorporated herein
by reference.
[0030] The said tabular silver halide grains rich in chloride comprised in silver halide
photographic materials to be processed according to the method of this invention preferably
have an average thickness over the total crystal population of less than 0.5 µm, more
preferably of less than 0.3 µm and still more preferably from 0.05 µm to 0.2 µm. As
an average aspect ratio, defined as the ratio, calculated from the measurements of
the equivalent diameter of a circle having the same surface area as the different
individual grains, and its thickness, is preferably higher than 2:1; more preferably
higher than 5:1 and still more preferably higher than 8:1, up to a ratio of about
100:1.
[0031] Silver halide emulsions incorporated in at least one photosensitive layer in a suitable
layer arrangement of the said materials processed by the method according to this
invention are composed of preferred amounts of chloride, in mole %, of at least 50
%, more preferably at least 70 % and even more preferably at least 90 %, up to 100
%. Other halides present are bromide, in amounts from 0 up to 50 mole% and iodide
in amounts from 0 up to 2 mole %.
[0032] The processing steps according to the present invention are advantageously applied
in automatic processing equipment, preferably containing conveyer rollers as described,
e.g., in US-P 3,025,779 and 3,545,971, in a time from 5 to 45 seconds at a temperature
from 25 to 40°C.
[0033] Preferably during the processing according to the method described herein, concentration
of the derivatives corresponding to formula (I) and the pH are maintained at a constant
value by replenishment with unoxidised developing agent, thereby adding a concentrated
alkali hydroxide solution under controlled constant redox potential as has been illustrated
in EP-A 0 552 511, which is incorporated herein by reference. This invention allows
the use of low regeneration amounts for the developer used in the developing step
according to the method of this invention, having a composition wherein minimum regeneration
amounts of developing solution from 50 to 250 ml/m
2 of photographic material are possible and even more preferred from 50 to 150 ml/m
2.
[0034] Photosensitive silver halide emulsion layer(s) present in silver halide photographic
materials processed by the method according to this invention may be of any type or
composition used in silver halide photography, provided that at least one layer comprises
at least one thin tabular silver halide emulsion rich in chloride bounded by [100]
or [111] major faces and may be present in whatever a layer arrangement used in the
art of photography. So black-and-white silver halide films intended to be used for
contact exposures form an important class of photographic films. These so-called contact
films are used for proper reproduction on one hand and for dry dot-etching on the
other hand. In modern pre-press graphic arts these contact materials are designed
to be usable for several minutes under roomlight conditions, meaning light containing
substantially no UV-light. Accurately reproducing the relative proportions of white
and black areas of a dot or line image implicates high contrast and high image density.
Contact materials usually are processed in Rapid Access chemistry containing hydroquinone,
but they give equal or better results, concerning contrast or image density, in Rapid
Access chemistry containing ascorbic acid or ascorbic acid derivatives instead of
hydroquinone.
[0035] The present invention is illustrated by the following examples without, however,
limiting it thereto.
6. EXAMPLES.
[0036] Methods to determine quantitatively the silver deposit present in developing solutions
used in the processing of silver halide photographic materials have ever been difficult
to be carried out unambigeously. Many factors are indeed playing a role in the phenomenon
related to silver deposit:
a. with relation to the film material, the determining factors can be summarised as:
the ratio of the exposed to the unexposed surface part of the film (as this ratio
is determining the chemical and physical dissolution reactions); water absorption
(determined by the degree of hardening of the material); grain size of the emulsions
(determining the solubility of the said grains); type of gelatin used in the coated
layers; stabilising compounds (determining silver complexation and adsorption in the
rinsing step of the processing) and spectral sensitisation (also related with adsorption).
b. with relation to the developer: the sort and the amounts of compounds promoting
the solubility of silver ions, the pH value having an influence on complexation, the
total volume of the developer in the processing machine and the regeneration volume.
c. with relation to the processing, the agitation and squeezing throughout the rollers,
the temperature, the developing time, the simultaneous use of different types of films
and the cross-over.
Method
[0037] The method for determining the silver deposit makes use of the GEVASET 437N automatic
processor, trademarked product from Agfa-Gevaert, which has a tank volume of only
1 litre per tank. The temperature and the processing velocity are made variable. As
there is only one roller before entering and after leaving every bath, there is no
danger to disturb the outlook of the film surface. Moreover the agitation of the developer
is reduced to a negligable extent and the developer tank is followed by two fixation
tanks and one rinsing tank, both having a content of 1 litre. At a velocity of 25
cm/min, the film is immersed into the developer tank for 46 seconds at a temperature
of 30°C. The developer is
not regenerated. In the exhaustion experiment, 15 sheets of film, together being equal
to a total surface of 1 m
2, were processed: 10 sheets were unexposed and 5 sheets of film were completely exposed
during 10 minutes in roomlight. The sheets were processed consecutively in the following
order: two unexposed films, one exposed film etc..
[0038] After exhaustion 1 l of developer was taken from the developer in order to avoid
deposit of silver on the walls of the developer tank. A sample thereof was taken to
determine the amount of silver present by means of the atomic absorption spectrophotometric
(A.A.S.) technique. The beaker was covered with a foil of cellofane and the content
was filtered after 24 hours of sedimentation. During said 24 hours the silver deposit
has the occasion to grow by agglomeration. The filtration was carried out under vacuum
suction with a Büchner filter apparatus with a filtration paper Rotband Nr 589-5,
the weight of which was determined before the operation started. After filtration
the filter was rinsed with about 1 1 of demineralised water, in order to remove the
soluble salts of the developer. The filter paper was dried in an oven for 1 hour at
80°C, whereafter it was cooled for 90 minutes and weighed again. The difference in
weight obtained gives an idea about the amount of silver deposit.
[0039] After 4 weeks the procedure was repeated in order to detect the velocity of sedimentation.
From the resulting filtrate a sample was taken to determine the amount of silver therein
by means of A.A.S..
[0040] Experimental data are further given in Example 1.
Material A (cubic silver chloride emulsion)
[0041] This is a material having pure AgCl cubic crystals in its emulsion layers. It was
prepared in the following way. A silver chloride emulsion having cubic silver chloride
crystals was prepared by a double jet technique. The silver halide composition was
100 mole % of chloride and the average grain size was 0.55 µm. Therefor an amount
of 615 ml of demineralised water was used as starting volume in the vessel, containing
further 46 g of inert gelatin and 10.3 mmoles of sodium chloride at 60°C. Concentrated
solutions of 1 1 of AgNO
3 and NaCl, 3 N each, were run with the double jet technique at a rate of 20 ml per
minute for the silver nitrate solution during 50 minutes and at a rate of 20.83 ml
per minute for the sodium chloride solution during 48 minutes. After an additional
physical ripening time of 15 minutes at the end of the precipitation the flocculation
procedure could begin: pH was adjusted at a value of 3.3 with a 3 molar solution of
sulphuric acid, and 4.5 g of polystyrene sulphonic acid was added slowly in 2 minutes.
The washing procedure was performed in a discontinous way, adding 3 1 of demineralised
water, containing up to 8 mmole of sodium chloride pro liter, until pAg was reaching
a value of about 7.3. After addition of inert gelatin to a ratio of gelatin to silver
nitrate in the emulsion of about 0.35, the emulsion was peptised and was chemically
ripened to an optimal fog-sensitivity relationship at 52°C, pAg having a value of
about 6.95. Chemical ripening agents, besides gold (in an amount of 0.019 mmole) and
sulphur (tetramethyl thiodithiocarboxylic acid diamide in an amount of 0.061 mmole),
were toluene thiosulphonic acid and iodide ions, both being predigestion agents in
amounts of 0.02 and 8.6 mmoles respectively.
[0042] A photographic material was prepared having on a subbed polyester base a gelatinous
silver halide emulsion of which the silver halide consists for 99.7 % of silver chloride
having an average grain size of 0.55 µm the preparation of which has been described
above. Before coating said emulsion was spectrally sensitised with two spectral sensitisers,
corresponding to the following formulae (see compound III and compound IV):

[0043] These spectral sensitisers were added consecutively in an amount of 0.1 mmole and
0.3 mmole per mole of silver nitrate respectively. The emulsion was further stabilised
with 0.22 mmole of compound (V) and 0.68 mmole of compound (VI) per mole of silver
nitrate.

[0044] A coated amount of silver expressed as the equivalent amount of silver nitrate of
3.8 g per square meter and a gelatin to silver chloride (expressed in equivalent amount
of silver nitrate) ratio of 0.35 was provided with a gelatin covering layer (anti-stress
layer) of 1.30 g of gelatin per m2 on both sides of a polyethylene terephtalate film
support having a thickness of 175 µm.
Material B (tabular silver chloride emulsion with major [111] faces)
[0045] The following solutions were prepared :
- 3 l of a dispersion medium (C) containing 0.444 moles of sodium chloride, 15 g of
inert gelatin and 270 mg of adenine; temperature was established at 45 °C and pH was
adjusted to 5.5;
- a 2.94 molar silver nitrate solution (A);
- a solution containing 4.476 moles of sodium chloride and 420 mg of adenin (B1);
[0046] A nucleation step was performed by introducing solution A and solution B1 simultaneously
in dispersion medium C both at a flow rate of 30 ml/min during 30 seconds. After a
physical ripening time of 15 min during which the temperature was raised to 70 °C
and 97.5 g of gelatin and 1500 ml of water were added and the mixture was stirred
for an additional 5 minutes. Then a growth step was performed by introducing by a
double jet during 66 minutes solution A starting at a flow rate of 7.5 ml/min and
linearly increasing the flow rate to an end value of 37.5 ml/min, and solution B1
at an increasing flow rate as to maintain a constant mV-value, measured by a silver
electrode versus a saturated calomel electrode (S.C.E.), of +92 mV.
[0047] After cooling to about 40 °C the pH value of the said dispersing medium was adjusted
to a value of 3.0 with sulphuric acid, and after the addition of 55.5 ml of polystyrene
sulphonic acid the obtained flocculate was decanted and washed three times with an
amount of 6 1 of demineralised water in order to remove the soluble salts present.
[0048] Tabular silver chloride crystals having [111] major phase and a sphere equivalent
average diameter of 1.20 µm were obtained, with an average thickness of 0.37 µm and
thus an average aspect ratio of 3.3.
[0049] In order to evaluate the said emulsion B sensitometrically a photographic material
was further prepared having on a subbed polyester base a gelatinous silver halide
emulsion of which the silver halide consists for 100 % of tabular silver chloride,
the preparation and emulsion crystal characteristics have been given hereinbefore.
[0050] Before coating said emulsion was spectrally sensitised, in the presence of optimally
chemical ripening amounts of sulphur and gold compounds, with a two spectral sensitisers,
corresponding to the formulae (III) and (IV). These spectral sensitisers were added
consecutively in an amount of 0.5 mmole and 0.2 mmole per mole of silver nitrate respectively.
The emulsion was further stabilised with 0.45 mmole of compound (V) and 1.05 mmole
of compound (VI) per mole of silver nitrate.
[0051] A coated amount of silver expressed as the equivalent amount of silver nitrate of
3.8 g per square meter and a gelatin to silver chloride (expressed in equivalent amount
of silver nitrate) ratio of 0.35 was provided with a gelatin covering layer (anti-stress
layer) of 1.30 g of gelatin per m2 on both sides of a polyethylene terephtalate film
support having a thickness of 175 µm.
Material C (tabular silver chloride emulsion with major [100] faces)
[0052] The following solutions were prepared :
- 2 l of a dispersion medium (C) containing 20 mmoles of sodium chloride and 10 g of
inert bone gelatin; temperature was established at 50 °C and pH was adjusted to 6.0;
- a 2.94 molar silver nitrate solution (A):
- a 2.94 molar sodium chloride solution (B1).
[0053] The temperature of A and B1 was established at 40°C.
[0054] A nucleation step was performed by introducing solution A and solution B1 simultaneously
in dispersion medium C both at a flow rate of 60 ml/min during 30 seconds. After a
physical ripening time of 20 min during which the temperature was raised to 70 °C.
Then a growth step was performed by introducing by a double jet during 64 minutes
and 40 seconds solution A starting at a flow rate of 5 ml/min and linearly increasing
the flow rate to an end value of 25 ml/min, and solution B1 at an increasing flow
rate as to maintain a constant mV-value, measured by a silver electrode versus a saturated
calomel electrode (S.C.E.), of +135 mV.
[0055] To this dispersion medium, after addition of 50 g of inert bone gelatin an amount
of 1.25 mmole per mole of silver chloride was added of the dye anhydro-5,5'-dichloro-
3,3'-bis(n-sulphobutyl)-9-ethyloxacarbo-cyanine hydroxide.
[0056] After cooling to about 40 °C the pH value of the said dispersing medium was adjusted
to a value of 3.0 with sulphuric acid, and after the addition of 37 ml of polystyrene
sulphonic acid the obtained flocculate was decanted and washed three times with an
amount of 6 l of demineralised water in order to remove the soluble salts present.
[0057] The thus obtained silver chloride tabular emulsion showed a [100]-major faces. The
average circle equivalent diameter d
EM, average thickness d, average aspect ratio AR were obtained from electron microscopic
photographs. Respective values of 1.58 µm; 0.42 µm and 3.8:1 were measured.
[0058] A coated amount of silver expressed as the equivalent amount of silver nitrate of
3.8 g per square meter and a gelatin to silver chloride (expressed in equivalent amount
of silver nitrate) ratio of 0.35 was provided with a gelatin covering layer (anti-stress
layer) of 1.30 g of gelatin per m2 on both sides of a polyethylene terephtalate film
support having a thickness of 175 µm.
[0059]
Compositions of the developers |
Type of dev. |
DEV1 |
DEV2 |
DEV3 |
DEV4 |
DEV5 |
pH ready-for-use |
10.5 |
10.0 |
10.0 |
10.0 |
10.0 |
Hydroquinone (mole/l) |
0.27 |
0.18 |
0.18 |
0.18 |
- |
1-phenyl-4-methyl-3-pyrazolidine-1-one (mmole/l) |
4.6 |
4.6 |
4.6 |
4.6 |
4.6 |
Br- (mmole/l) |
33.6 |
21 |
21 |
21 |
21 |
SO3-- (mole/l) |
0.57 |
0.19 |
0.19 |
0.19 |
0.19 |
CO3-- (mole/l) |
0.22 |
0.44 |
0.44 |
0.44 |
0.44 |
Polyglycol (ml/l) (M.W.= ca. 400) |
0.25 |
20 |
- |
20 |
20 |
SCN- (mmole/l) |
10.3 |
25.7 |
- |
- |
- |
Ascorbic Acid (mole/l) |
- |
0.11 |
0.11 |
0.11 |
0.28 |
I- (mmole/l) |
0.6 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
compound (VII) (mmole/l) |
- |
- |
1.4 |
- |
- |

Example 1
[0060] In Table 1 amounts, in mg/l, of deposited silver determined by means of the method
described hereinbefore in Exhausted Developer (ED), after 24 hours (in mg/l)(ED24),
after 4 weeks present in the filtrate (mg/l)(ED4W) as well as the Total Deposit (mg/l)
(TD) and the rest amount of Deposited Silver in the Filtrate (DSF) are given for material
A (regular cubic AgCl) and for materials B and C (tabular AgCl crystals with [111]
and [100] major faces respectively), in the developers DEV1, DEV2 and DEV5.
Table 1
Developer |
Material |
ED |
ED24 |
ED4W |
TD |
DSF |
DEV1 (comp.) |
A |
62.2 |
61.3 |
0.2 |
61.5 |
0.7 |
DEV2 (inv.) |
A |
11.5 |
9.7 |
0.5 |
10.2 |
1.7 |
|
B |
10.5 |
3.33 |
2.8 |
6.1 |
5.2 |
|
C |
12.5 |
10.2 |
0.4 |
10.6 |
1.7 |
DEV5 (inv.) |
C |
5.2 |
4.5 |
0.3 |
4.8 |
0.9 |
[0061] As can be concluded from Table 1 processing in the developer DEV2, according to the
method of this invention, gives an amount of silver deposit that is 80 % less in comparison
with DEV1, a developer for materials with high chloride content, as described in EP-A
94203085, filed October 24, 1994. The amount of silver deposit is comparable for the
three materials (DEV2). The amount of silver deposit can be further diminished by
using DEV5, a developer without isocyanate or compound VII and with ascorbic acid
instead of hydroquinone.
[0062] Samples of the coating materials A, B and C were exposed according to the ANSI procedure
1043. After processing in the developers mentioned in Table 2 for developing times
of 11 seconds at 33°C, the sensitometric properties of each material was measured.
[0063] Therefor the density was measured as a function of the light dose and therefrom were
determined the following parameters:
- fog level (with an accuracy of 0.01 density);
- the relative speed at a density of 1 above fog (expressed in logarithmic terms of
exposure amount: a decrease of the speed with 0.30 is equivalent with a speed enhancement
with a factor 2);
- the contrast, calculated between the densities 0.25 and 2.0 above fog
and
- the covering power (CP), defined as the ratio of the maximum density Dmax and the
amount in grams of developed silver in the same density region, multiplied by a factor
100.
[0064] The results obtained have been summarised in Table 2.
Table 2
Developer |
Mat. |
Crystal habit |
Fog |
Speed |
Contr. |
Dmax |
CP |
DEV1 (ref.) |
A |
cubic |
0.04 |
1.67 |
1.84 |
3.40 |
50 |
|
|
[111]-tabular |
- |
- |
- |
- |
37 |
|
|
[100]-tabular |
- |
- |
- |
- |
22 |
DEV2 (inv.) |
A |
cubic |
0.05 |
1.66 |
1.77 |
3.60 |
50 |
|
B |
[111]-tabular |
0.20 |
1.50 |
2.80 |
2.97 |
36 |
|
C |
[100]-tabular |
0.09 |
1.56 |
1.49 |
2.80 |
24 |
DEV3 (inv.) |
A |
cubic |
0.05 |
1.66 |
1.79 |
3.53 |
- |
|
B |
[111]-tabular |
0.20 |
1.50 |
2.75 |
3.14 |
- |
|
C |
[100]-tabular |
0.07 |
1.62 |
1.42 |
2.65 |
- |
DEV4 (inv.) |
A |
cubic |
0.03 |
1.87 |
2.25 |
3.22 |
43 |
|
B |
[111]-tabular |
0.11 |
1.50 |
2.85 |
3.30 |
- |
|
C |
[100]-tabular |
0.06 |
1.53 |
1.46 |
2.54 |
25 |
DEV5 (inv.) |
A |
cubic |
0.03 |
1.89 |
2.32 |
3.26 |
50 |
|
B |
[111]-tabular |
0.10 |
1.51 |
2.76 |
3.25 |
35 |
|
C |
[100]-tabular |
0.05 |
1.53 |
1.51 |
2.71 |
28 |
[0065] The sensitometric results are matching those obtained with DEV1 and material A (as
described in EP-A No. 94203085, filed October 24, 1994) containing cubic AgCl emulsion
crystals as has been illustrated in Table 2 for [111]-tabular AgCl crystals and for
[100]-tabular AgCl crystals. The same sensitometric values can be obtained by using
a developer with ascorbic acid instead of hydroquinone. Moreover the high covering
power obtained with cubic crystals rich in chloride, described in the non-published
EP-A is confirmed. The covering power obtained for cubic crystals rich in chloride
is always better than for [100] and [111] tabular grains rich in chloride, but the
tendency is present that there is a relative increase in covering power, especially
for the tabular [100] grains versus the cubic grains, if developing occurs in developers
used in the method according to this invention.
1. Method of processing an exposed silver halide photographic material comprising at
least one coated hydrophilic silver halide emulsion layer comprising tabular grains
rich in chloride, bounded by [100] or [111] major faces, characterised by the steps
of developing, followed by fixing, rinsing and drying the said material, wherein developing
proceeds in a developer comprising hydroquinone in an amount from 0 to 30 g per litre,
an auxiliary developer, as silver halide complexing agents alkali metal sulphite salts
in an amount from 1 to 50 g per litre, at least 1 g of a compound corresponding to
the formula (I), a precursor thereof, a derivative thereof and/or a metal salt thereof

wherein
each of A, B and D independently represents an oxygen atom or NR1; X represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR2; CR3R4; C=O; C=NR5 or C=S;
Y represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR'2; CR'3R'4; C=O; C=NR'5 or C=S;
Z represents an oxygen atom, a sulphur atom, NR"2; CR"3R"4; C=O; C=NR"5 or C=S;
n equals 0, 1 or 2;
each of R1 to R5, R'1 to R'5 and R"1 to R"5, independently represents hydrogen, subsituted or unsubstituted alkyl, aralkyl, hydroxyalkyl,
carboxyalkyl; substituted or unsubstituted alkenyl, substituted or unsubstituted alkynyl,
substituted or unsubstituted cycloalkyl, substituted or unsubstituted cycloalkenyl,
substituted or unsubstituted aryl or substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclyl;
and wherein
R3 and R4, R'3 and R'4, R"3 and R"4, may further form together a ring; and
wherein in the case that X=CR3R4 and Y=CR'3R'4, R3 and R'3 and/or R4 and R'4 may form a ring and wherein in the case that Y=CR'3R'4 and Z=CR"3R"4 with n= 1 or 2, R'3 and R"3 and/or R'4 and R"4 may form a ring.
2. Method according to claim 1, wherein the said developer further comprises at least
one thiocyanate salt in an amount from 0.1 to 3.0 g per litre.
3. Method according to claim 1, wherein the said developer further comprises a compound
corresponding to the formula (II), accompanied by charge compensating anions, in an
amount from 0.1 to 5 g,

wherein at least R or one of the ring substituents contains at least one oxyethylene
group or wherein R is a substituted or unsubstituted aliphatic or aromatic group and
wherein Z' is composed of atoms to form a substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclic
aromatic 5- or 6-ring.
4. Method according to claim 3, wherein the said charge compensating anions of the compounds
according to the formula (II) present in the developer are at least one member selected
from the group consisting of sulphonate, toluyl sulphonate, carbamate, benzoate, glutamate,
perchlorate or sulphate anions.
5. Method according to claim 3 or 4, wherein in the formula (II) the said heterocyclic
aromatic ring is a pyridine, a pyrimidine, an imidazol, a benzimidazol, a thiazol,
a benzothiazol or a derivative thereof.
6. Method according to any of claims 1 to 5, wherein for the compound according to the
formula (I) A, B and X each represent an oxygen atom; n=0; Y=CH-(CHOH)m-CH2-R6 wherein m=1,2,3 or 4 and wherein R6 represents OH for m=1; H or OH for m=2,3 or 4.
7. Method according to any of claims 1 to 5, wherein for the compound according to the
formula (I) A and B each represent an oxygen atom; n=0 and each of X and Y represents
C(CH3)2.
8. Method according to any of claims 1 to 7, wherein the said developer has a pH value
between 9.6 and 11.
9. Method according to any of claims 1 to 8, wherein the said compound according to the
formula (I) is present in an amount between 1 g and 50 g per litre.
10. Method according to any of claims 1 to 9, wherein said auxiliary developer represents
at least one 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidine-1-one developing agent in a concentration ranging
up to 10 mmoles per litre.
11. Method according to any of claims 1 to 10, wherein an alkali metal bromide salt is
present in the developer in a concentration ranging from 0.01 to 0.4 moles per litre.
12. Method according to any of claims 1 to 11, wherein said tabular grains rich in chloride,
bounded by [100] or [111] major faces, have an average thickness over the total crystal
population of less than 0.5 µm and an average aspect ratio higher than 2:1.
13. Method according to claim 12, wherein said tabular grains have an average thickness
over the total crystal population from 0.05 µm to 0.2 µm.
14. Method according to claim 12 or 13, wherein said tabular grains have an average aspect
ratio from 5:1 to 100:1.
15. Method according to any of claims 1 to 14, wherein said tabular grains rich in chloride,
bounded by [100] or [111] major faces, have amounts of chloride of at least 50 mole
% , amounts of iodide from 0 to 2 mole %, the rest of the halide ions present being
bromide.