FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a color photographic technology, more specifically,
the present invention relates to a silver halide color photographic material capable
of coping with environmental conservation and simple and rapid processing, and further
having good color forming property, storage stability and color hue, and a color image
forming method thereof.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] In general, color photographic materials are color developed after exposure and thereby
the oxidized p-phenylenediamine derivative reacts with a coupler to form an image.
In this method, color reproduction is effected by a subtractive color process and
in order to reproduce blue, green and red colors, yellow, magenta and cyan color images
which are in a complementary relation, respectively, are formed.
[0003] The color development is achieved by dipping an exposed color photographic light-sensitive
material in an alkali aqueous solution having dissolved therein a p-phenylenediamine
derivative (color developer). However, the p-phenylenediamine derivative formed into
an alkali aqueous solution is unstable and readily subjected to aging deterioration
and in order to maintain stable development capacity, a problem is present that the
color developer needs be frequently replenished. Further, disposal of the used color
developer containing a p-phenylenediamine derivative requires cumbersome processes,
and combining with the above-described frequent replenishment, the disposal of the
used color developer discharged in a large amount raises a serious problem. Thus,
low replenishment and low discharge of the color developer are keenly demanded.
[0004] One effective means for solving the issue of low replenishment and low discharge
of the color developer is a method of incorporating an aromatic primary amine or a
precursor thereof into a hydrophilic colloid layer and examples of the aromatic primary
amine developing agent capable of incorporation and the precursor thereof include
the compounds described in U.S. Patent 4,060,418. However, since these aromatic primary
amines and precursors thereof are unstable, stains are disadvantageously generated
during a long-term storage of an unprocessed light-sensitive material or upon color
development. Another effective means is a method of incorporating a sulfonylhydrazine-type
compound described, for example, in EP-A-0545491 and EP-A-565165, into a hydrophilic
colloid layer. However, the sulfonylhydrazine-type compounds described in these patent
publications are not sufficiently stable and stains due to high temperature/high humidity
or light during a long-term storage after the processing still lies on a problematic
level. Further, the sulfonylhydrazine-type compound is bound to a problem that when
a 2-equivalent coupler is used, almost no color formation is achieved. The 2-equivalent
coupler is advantageous as compared to the 4-equivalent coupler in that stains ascribable
to the coupler can be reduced, activity of the coupler is easy to control and various
functions can be imparted to the splitting-off group.
[0005] To overcome the above-described problems, a technique for increasing the coloring
property and a technique for allowing the use of a 2-equivalent coupler has been demanded
to be developed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] The object of the present invention is to provide a light-sensitive material capable
of low replenishment and low discharge, exhibiting a good color forming property and
further reduced in stains due to high temperature/high humidity or light during a
long-term storage of the light-sensitive material.
[0007] The object of the present invention can be achieved by the following constitution:
(1) a silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material comprising a support
having thereon at least one photographic constituent layer, wherein any one of said
photographic constituent layer contains at least one reducing agent for color formation
represented by formula (I):
R11-NHNH-X-R12 (I)
wherein R11 represents an aryl group or a heterocyclic group, R12 represents an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, an alkynyl group, an aryl group or a
heterocyclic group, and X represents -SO2-, -CO-, -COCO-, -CO-O-, -CON(R13)-, -COCO-O-, -COCO-N(R13)- or -SO2-N(R13)-, wherein R13 represents a hydrogen atom or a group described for R12, at least one dye-forming coupler and at least one compound having a quenching velocity
constant (Kq) to a singlet oxygen of 1×107 M-1·sec-1 or more;
(2) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
item (1), wherein the compound represented by formula (I) is represented by formula
(II) or (III):

R3-NHNH-Z2 (III)
wherein Z1 represents an acyl group, a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group or an aryloxycarbonyl
group, Z2 represents a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group or an aryloxycarbonyl group,
X1, X2, X3, X4 and X5 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent, provided that the sum of the Hammett's
substituent constant σp values of X1, X3 and X5 and the Hammett's substituent constant σm values of X2 and X4 is from 0.80 to 3.80, and R3 represents a heterocyclic group;
(3) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
item (2), wherein the compounds represented by formulae (II) and (III) are represented
by formulae (IV) and (V), respectively:

wherein R1 and R2 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent, X1, X2, X3, X4 and X5 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent, provided that the sum of the Hammett's
substituent constant σp values of X1, X3 and X5 and the Hammett's substituent constant σm values of X2 and X4 is from 0.80 to 3.80, and R3 represents a heterocyclic group;
(4) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
item (3), wherein the compounds represented by formulae (IV) and (V) are represented
by formulae (VI) and (VII), respectively:

wherein R4 and R5 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent, X6, X7, X8, X9 and X10 each represents a hydrogen atom, a cyano group, a sulfonyl group, a sulfinyl group,
a sulfamoyl group, a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group, an aryloxycarbonyl
group, an acyl group, a trifluoromethyl group, a halogen atom, an acyloxy group, an
acylthio group or a heterocyclic group, provided that the sum of the Hammett's substituent
constant σp values of X6, X8 and X10 and the Hammett's substituent constant σm values of X7 and X9 is from 1.20 to 3.80, and Q1 represents a nonmetallic atom group necessary for forming a nitrogen-containing 5-,
6-, 7- or 8-membered heterocyclic ring together with C;
(5) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
any one of items (1) to (4), wherein the compound having a quenching velocity constant
(Kq) to a singlet oxygen of 1×107 M-1·sec-1 or more is represented by formula (A):
Ra-Xa-L-Xb-Rb (A)
wherein L represents a single bond or an arylene group, Xa and Xb, which may be the
same or different, each represents -O- or -N(Rc)-, Ra, Rb and Rc, which may be the
same or different, each represents an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, an aryl group
or a heterocyclic group, and Ra and L, Ra and Rc, Rb and Rc, or Rc and L may be combined
with each other to form a 5- or 6-membered ring, provided that when Xa and Xb are
-O- at the same time, L is an arylene group, and when Xa is -N(Rc)- and L is an arylene
group, -XbRb itself may be a hydrogen atom;
(6) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
any one of items (1) to (5), wherein the total coated silver amount of all coated
layers is, in terms of silver, form 0.003 to 0.3 g/m2; and
(7) the silver halide color photographic light-sensitive material as described in
any one of items (1) to (6), which is scan exposed for an exposure time of from 10-8 to 10-4 second per one pixel.
[0008] The reducing agent for color formation for use in the present invention is dispersed
in the same layer with or a different layer from the above-described compound having
a specific quenching velocity constant (compound for use in the present invention)
and then, it can achieve a high color forming property upon formation of a dye with
a coupler and further reduce generation of stains during a long-term storage of an
unexposed light-sensitive material (improvement of storability). In particular, the
reducing agent for color formation represented by formula (IV) or (V) is dispersed
together with the above-described compound having a specific quenching velocity constant
and thereby, it can provide higher effects on the color forming property and the storability
described above and perform good oxidation coupling reaction with not only a 4-equivalent
coupler but also a 2-equivalent coupler to form a dye having a high color density.
[0009] Above all, when the reducing agent for color formation represented by formula (VI)
or (VII) is used, the effect resulting from use with the compound having a specific
quenching velocity constant according to the present invention is particularly large.
[0010] In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, at least one of the reducing
agent for color formation and at least one of the coupler is dispersed in the form
of an oil droplet obtained by dissolving it in an organic solvent together with the
above-described compound having a specific quenching velocity constant. In a further
preferred embodiment, the reducing agent for color formation, the coupler and the
compound having a specific quenching velocity constant are dispersed in the form of
an oil droplet obtained by dissolving them together in the above-described organic
solvent.
[0011] Further, the present invention is suitable for environmental conservation because
a good image can be obtained even with a low silver light-sensitive material having
a coated silver amount of from 0.003 to 0.3 g/m
2, and also suitable for digital processing because when an image is formed by scan
exposure, the image obtained can have a high density and be reduced in stains after
storage.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The specific constitution of the present invention is described in detail below.
[0013] The reducing agent for color formation used in the present invention is described
in detail below.
[0014] The reducing agent for color formation represented by formula (I) used in the present
invention is a compound which, in an alkali solution, directly reacts with exposed
silver halide and thereby is oxidized or causes oxidation-reduction reaction with
an auxiliary developing agent oxidized by exposed silver halide and thereby is oxidized,
and the oxidation product obtained reacts with a dye-forming coupler to form a dye.
[0015] The structure of the reducing agent for color formation represented by formula (I)
is described in detail below.
[0016] In formula (I), R
11 represents an aryl or heterocyclic group which may have a substituent. The aryl group
of R
11 is preferably an aryl group having from 6 to 14 carbon atoms and examples thereof
include phenyl and naphthyl. The heterocyclic group of R
11 is preferably a saturated or unsaturated, 5-, 6- or 7-membered ring containing at
least one of nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur and selenium. The ring may be further condensed
with a benzene ring or a heterocyclic ring. Examples of the heterocyclic group represented
by R
11 include furanyl, thienyl, oxazolyl, thiazolyl, imidazolyl, triazolyl, pyrrolidinyl,
benzoxazolyl, benzothiazolyl, pyridyl, pyridazyl, pyrimidinyl, pyrazinyl, triazinyl,
quinolinyl, isoquinolinyl, phthalazinyl, quinoxalinyl, quinazolinyl, purinyl, ptenilidinyl,
azepinyl and benzoxepinyl.
[0017] Examples of the substituent of R
11 include an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, an alkynyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic
group, an alkoxy group, an aryloxy group, a heterocyclic oxy group, an alkylthio group,
an arylthio group, a heterocyclic thio group, an acyloxy group, an acylthio group,
an alkoxycarbonyloxy group, an aryloxycarbonyloxy group, a carbamoyloxy group, an
alkylsulfonyloxy group, an arylsulfonyloxy group, an amino group, an alkylamino group,
an arylamino group, an amido group, an alkoxycarbonylamino group, an aryloxycarbonylamino
group, a ureido group, a sulfonamido group, a sulfamoylamino group, an acyl group,
an alkoxycarbonyl group, an aryloxycarbonyl group, a carbamoyl group, an acylcarbamoyl
group, a carbamoylcarbamoyl group, a sulfonylcarbamoyl group, a sulfamoylcarbamoyl
group, an alkylsulfonyl group, an arylsulfonyl group, an alkylsulfinyl group, an arylsulfinyl
group, an alkoxysulfonyl group, an aryloxysulfonyl group, a sulfamoyl group, an acylsulfamoyl
group, a carbamoylsulfamoyl group, a halogen atom, a nitro group, a cyano group, a
carboxyl group, a sulfo group, a phosphono group, a hydroxyl group, a mercapto group,
an imido group and an azo group.
[0018] R
12 represents an alkyl, alkenyl, alkynyl, aryl or heterocyclic group which may have
a substituent.
[0019] The alkyl group of R
12 is preferably a linear, branched or cyclic alkyl group having from 1 to 16 carbon
atoms and examples thereof include methyl, ethyl, hexyl, dodecyl, 2-octyl, t-butyl,
cyclopentyl and cyclooctyl. The alkenyl group of R
12 is preferably a chained or cyclic alkenyl group having from 2 to 16 carbon atoms
and examples thereof include vinyl, 1-octenyl and cyclohexenyl.
[0020] The alkynyl group of R
12 is preferably an alkynyl group having from 2 to 16 carbon atoms and examples thereof
include 1-butynyl and phenylethynyl. The aryl group and the heterocyclic group of
R
12 include those described for R
11. Examples of the substituent of R
12 include those described as the substituent of R
11.
[0021] X represents -SO
2-, -CO-, -COCO-, -CO-O-, -CON(R
13)-, -COCO-O-, -COCO-N(R
13)- or -SO
2-N(R
13)- (wherein R
13 represents a hydrogen atom or a group described for R
12).
[0022] Among these groups, -CO-, -CON(R
13)- and -CO-O- are preferred, and -CON(R
13)- is more preferred because of the particularly excellent coloring property.
[0023] Among the compounds represented by formula (I), the compounds represented by formula
(II) or (III) are preferred, the compounds represented by formula (IV) or (V) are
more preferred, and the compounds represented by formula (VI) or (VII) are still more
preferred.
[0024] The compounds represented by formula (II), (III), (IV), (V), (VI) or (VII) are described
in detail below.
[0025] In formulae (II) and (III), Z
1 represents an acyl group, a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group or an aryloxycarbonyl
group, Z
2 represents a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group or an aryloxycarbonyl group.
The acyl group is preferably an acyl group having from 1 to 50, more preferably from
2 to 40 carbon atoms. Specific examples thereof include an acetyl group, a 2-methylpropanoyl
group, a cyclohexylcarbonyl group, an n-octanoyl group, a 2-hexyldecanoyl group, a
dodecanoyl group, a chloroacetyl group, a trifluoroacetyl group, a benzoyl group,
a 4-dodecyloxybenzoyl group, a 2-hydroxymethylbenzoyl group and a 3-(N-hydroxy-N-methylaminocarbonyl)propanoyl
group.
[0026] The case when Z
1 and Z
2 each is a carbamoyl group, is described in detail with respect to formulae (VI) and
(VII).
[0027] The alkoxycarbonyl or aryloxycarbonyl group of Z
1 or Z
2 is preferably an alkoxycarbonyl or aryloxycarbonyl group having from 2 to 50, more
preferably from 2 to 40 carbon atoms. Specific examples thereof include a methoxycarbonyl
group, an ethoxycarbonyl group, an isobutyloxycarbonyl group, a cyclohexyloxycarbonyl
group, a dodecyloxycarbonyl group, a benzyloxycarbonyl group, a phenoxycarbonyl group,
a 4-octyloxyphenoxycarbonyl group, a 2-hydroxymethylphenoxycarbonyl group and a 2-dodecyloxyphenoxycarbonyl
group.
[0028] X
1, X
2, X
3, X
4 and X
5 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent. Examples of the substituent include
a linear or branched, chained or cyclic alkyl group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms
(e.g., trifluoromethyl, methyl, ethyl propyl, heptafluoropropyl, isopropyl, butyl,
t-butyl, t-pentyl, cyclopentyl, cyclohexyl, octyl, 2-ethylhexyl, dodecyl), a linear
or branched, chained or cyclic alkenyl group having from 2 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g.,
vinyl, 1-methylvinyl, cyclohexen-1-yl), an alkynyl group having a total carbon number
of from 2 to 50 (e.g., ethynyl, 1-propynyl), an aryl group having from 6 to 50 carbon
atoms (e.g., phenyl, naphthyl, anthryl), an acyloxy group having from 1 to 50 carbon
atoms (e.g., acetoxy, tetradecanoyloxy, benzoyloxy), a carbamoyloxy group having from
1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., N,N-dimethylcarbamoyloxy), a carbonamido group having
from 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., formamido, N-methylacetamido, acetamido, N-methylformamido,
benzamido), a sulfonamido group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., methanesulfonamido,
dodecanesulfonamido, benzenesulfonamido, p-toluenesulfonamido), a carbamoyl group
having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., N-methylcarbamoyl, N,N-diethylcarbamoyl, N-mesylcarbamoyl),
a sulfamoyl group having from 0 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., N-butylsulfamoyl, N,N-diethylsulfamoyl,
N-methyl-N-(4-methoxyphenyl)sulfamoyl), an alkoxy group having from 1 to 50 carbon
atoms (e.g., methoxy, propoxy, isopropoxy, octyloxy, t-octyloxy, dodecyloxy, 2-(2,4-di-t-pentylphenoxy)ethoxy),
an aryloxy group having from 6 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., phenoxy, 4-methoxyphenoxy,
naphthoxy), an aryloxycarbonyl group having from 7 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., phenoxycarbonyl,
naphthoxycarbonyl), an alkoxycarbonyl group having from 2 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g.,
methoxycarbonyl, t-butoxycarbonyl), an N-acylsulfamoyl group having from 1 to 50 carbon
atoms (e.g., N-tetradecanoylsulfamoyl, N-benzoylsulfamoyl), an alkylsulfonyl group
having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., methanesulfonyl, octylsulfonyl, 2-methoxyethylsulfonyl,
2-hexyldecylsulfonyl), an arylsulfonyl group having from 6 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g.,
benzenesulfonyl, p-toluenesulfonyl, 4-phenylsulfonylphenylsulfonyl), an alkoxycarbonylamino
group having from 2 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., ethoxycarbonylamino), an aryloxycarbonylamino
group having from 7 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., phenoxycarbonylamino, naphthoxycarbonylamino),
an amino group having from 0 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., amino, methylamino, diethylamino,
diisopropylamino, anilino, morpholino), a cyano group, a nitro group, a carboxyl group,
a hydroxy group, a sulfo group, a mercapto group, an alkylsulfinyl group having from
1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., methanesulfinyl, octanesulfinyl), an arylsulfinyl group
having from 6 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., benzenesulfinyl, 4-chlorophenylsulfinyl, p-toluenesulfinyl),
an alkylthio group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., methylthio, octylthio,
cyclohexylthio), an arylthio group having from 6 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., phenylthio,
naphthylthio), a ureido group having 1 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., 3-methylureido, 3,3-dimethylureido,
1,3-diphenylureido), a heterocyclic group having from 2 to 50 carbon atoms (a 3-,
4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, 10-, 11- or 12-membered monocyclic or condensed ring containing
as a hetero atom at least one of, for example, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur, e.g.,
2-furyl, 2-pyranyl, 2-pyridyl, 2-thienyl, 2-imidazolyl, morpholino, 2-quinolyl, 2-benzimidazolyl,
2-benzothiazolyl, 2-benzoxazolyl), an acyl group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms
(e.g., acetyl, benzoyl, trifluoroacetyl), a sulfamoylamino group having from 0 to
50 carbon atoms (e.g., N-butylsulfamoylamino, N-phenylsulfamoylamino), a silyl group
having from 3 to 50 carbon atoms (e.g., trimethylsilyl, dimethyl-t-butylsilyl, triphenylsilyl)
and a halogen atom (e.g., fluorine, chlorine, bromine). These substituents each may
further have a substituent and examples of the substituent include the substituents
described above. X
1, X
2, X
3, X
4 or X
5 may be combined with each other to form a condensed ring. The condensed ring is preferably
a 5-, 6- or 7- membered ring, more preferably a 5- or 6-membered ring.
[0029] The substituent preferably has 50 or less carbon atoms, more preferably 42 or less
carbon atoms, most preferably 34 or less carbon atoms, and preferably has 1 or more
carbon atoms.
[0030] With respect to X
1, X
2, X
3, X
4 and X
5, the sum of the Hammett's substituent constant σ
p values of X
1, X
3 and X
5 and the Hammett's substituent constant σ
m values of X
2 and X
4 is from 0.80 to 3.80. In formula (VI), X
6, X
7, X
8, X
9 and X
10 each represents a hydrogen atom, a cyano group, a sulfonyl group, a sulfinyl group,
a sulfamoyl group, a carbamoyl group, an alkoxycarbonyl group, an acryloxycarbonyl
group, an acyl group, a trifluoromethyl group, a halogen atom, an acyloxy group, an
acylthio group or a heterocyclic group, and these groups each may have a substituent
or may be combined with each other to form a condensed ring. Specific examples thereof
are the same as those described for X
1, X
2, X
3, X
4 and X
5. However, in formula (VI), the sum of the Hammett's substituent constant σ
p values of X
6, X
8 and X
10 and the Hammett's substituent constant σ
m values of X
7 and X
9 is from 1.20 to 3.80, preferably from 1.50 to 3.80, more preferably from 1.70 to
3.80.
[0031] If the sum of the σ
p values and the σ
m values is less than 0.80, the coloring property is insufficient, whereas if it exceeds
3.80, the compound itself is hard to synthesize and difficultly available.
[0032] The Hammett's substituent constants σ
p and σ
m are described in detail in publications, for example, in Naoki Inamoto,
Hammett Soku -Kozo to Han'no Sei- (Hammett's Rule -Structure and Reactivity-), Maruzen;
Shin Jikken Kagaku Koza 14, Yuki Kagobutsu no Gosei to Han'no V (New Experiment and Chemistry Lecture 14, Synthesis and Reaction of Organic Compound
V), page 2605, Nippon Kagaku Kai (compiler), Maruzen; Tadao Nakaya,
Riron Yuki Kagaku Kaisetsu (Theoretical Organic Chemistry Exposition), page 217, Tokyo Kagaku Dojin; and
Chemical Review, Vol. 91, pages 165 to 195 (1991).
[0033] R
1 and R
2 in formulae (IV) and (V) and R
4 and R
5 in formulae (VI) and (VII) each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent and examples
of the substituent include the same groups as described for X
1, X
2, X
3, X
4 and X
5. R
1 and R
2 in formulae (IV) and (V) and R
4 and R
5 in formulae (VI) and (VII) each is preferably a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted
alkyl group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms, a substituted or unsubstituted aryl
group having from 6 to 50 carbon atoms, a substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclic
group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms, and more preferably, at least one of R
1 and R
2 or at least one of R
4 and R
5 is a hydrogen atom.
[0034] In formulae (III) and (V), R
3 represents a heterocyclic group. The heterocyclic group is preferably a heterocyclic
group having from 1 to 50 carbon atoms, which is a 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, 10-,
11- or 12-membered (preferably, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7- or 8-membered) monocyclic or condensed
ring containing as a hetero atom at least one of, for example, nitrogen, oxygen and
sulfur, and specific examples of the heterocyclic ring include furan, pyran, pyridine,
thiophene, imidazole, quinoline, benzimidazole, benzothiazole, benzoxazole, pyrimidine,
pyrazine, 1,2,4-thiadiazole, pyrrole, oxazole, thiazole, quinazoline, isothiazole,
pyridazine, indole, pyrazole, triazole and quinoxaline. These heterocyclic groups
each may have a substituent and preferably one or more electron-withdrawing groups.
The term "electron-withdrawing group" as used herein means a group having a positive
Hammett's σ
p value.
[0035] In incorporating the reducing agent for color formation according to the present
invention into a light-sensitive material, at least one group of Z
1, Z
2, R
1 to R
5 and X
1 to X
10 preferably has a ballast group.
[0036] Examples of the heterocyclic ring completed by Q
1 are specifically shown in Compounds I-16 to I-74.
[0038] Examples of the couplers which are preferably used in the present invention include
the compounds having a structure represented by formula (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6),
(7), (8), (9), (10), (11) or (12). In general, these compounds are collectively called
active methylene, pyrazolone, pyrazoloazole, phenol, naphthol or pyrrolotriazole,
and are known in the field concerned.

[0039] Couplers having a structure of formula (1), (2), (3) or (4) are called an active
methylene-base coupler. In the formulae, R
14 represents an acyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic residue, an alkoxycarbonyl
group, an aryloxycarbonyl group, a carbamoyl group, a sulfamoyl group, an alkylsulfonyl
group or an arylsulfonyl group, each of which may have a substituent, or a cyano group
or a nitro group.
[0040] In formulae (1) to (3), R
15 represents an alkyl group, an aryl group or a heterocyclic residue, each of which
may have a substituent. In formula (4), R
16 represents an aryl group or a heterocyclic residue, each of which may have a substituent.
Examples of the substituent of R
14, R
15 or R
16 include those described above for X
1 to X
5.
[0041] In formulae (1) to (4), Y represents a hydrogen atom or a group capable of splitting
off upon coupling reaction with an oxidation product of the reducing agent for color
formation. Examples of Y include a heterocyclic group (a saturated or unsaturated
5-, 6- or 7-membered monocyclic or condensed ring containing as a hetero atom at least
one of nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur, e.g., succinimido, maleinimido, phthalimido, diglycolimido,
pyrrole, pyrazole, imidazole, 1,2,4-triazole, tetrazole, indole, benzopyrazole, benzimidazole,
benzotriazole, imidazolin-2,4-dione, oxazolidin-2,4-dione, thiazolidin-2,4-dione,
imidazolidin-2-one, oxazolin-2-one, thiazolin-2-one, benzimidazolin-2-one, benzoxazolin-2-one,
benzothiazolin-2-one, 2-pyrrolin-5-one, 2-imidazolin-5-one, indolin-2,3-dione, 2,6-dioxypurine,
parabanic acid, 1,2,4-triazolidin-3,5-dione, 2-pyridone, 4-pyridone, 2-pyrimidone,
6-pyridazone, 2-pyrazone, 2-amino-1,3,4-thiazolidine, 2-imino-1,3,4-thiazolidin-4-one),
a halogen atom (e.g., chlorine, bromine), an aryloxy group (e.g., phenoxy, 1-naphthoxy),
a heterocyclic oxy group (e.g., pyridyloxy, pyrazolyloxy), an acyloxy group (e.g.,
acetoxy, benzoyloxy), an alkoxy group (e.g., methoxy, dodecyloxy), a carbamoyloxy
group (e.g., N,N-diethylcarbamoyloxy, morpholinocarbonyloxy), an aryloxycarbonyloxy
group (e.g., phenoxycarbonyloxy), an alkoxycarbonyloxy group (e.g., methoxycarbonyloxy,
ethoxycarbonyloxy), an arylthio group (e.g., phenylthio, naphthylthio), a heterocyclic
thio group (e.g., tetrazolylthio, 1,3,4-thiadiazolylthio, 1,3,4-oxadiazolylthio, benzimidazolylthio),
an alkylthio group (e.g., methylthio, octylthio, hexadecylthio), an alkylsulfonyloxy
group (e.g., methanesulfonyloxy), an arylsulfonyloxy group (e.g., benzenesufonyloxy,
toluenesulfonyloxy), a carbonamido group (e.g., acetamido, trifluoroacetamido), a
sulfonamido group (e.g., methanesulfonamido, benzenesulfonamido), an alkylsulfonyl
group (e.g., methanesulfonyl), an arylsulfonyl group (e.g., benzenesulfonyl), an alkylsulfinyl
group (e.g., methanesulfinyl), an arylsulfinyl group (e.g., benzenesulfinyl), an arylazo
group (e.g., phenylazo, naphthylazo) and a carbamoylamino group (e.g., N-methylcarbamoylamino).
[0042] Y may be substituted by a substituent and examples of the substituent of Y include
those described for X
1 to X
5.
[0043] Y is preferably a halogen atom, an aryloxy group, a heterocyclic oxy group, an acyloxy
group, an aryloxycabonyloxy group, an alkoxycarbonyloxy group or a carbamoyloxy group.
[0044] In formulae (1) to (4), R
14 and R
15 or R
14 and R
16 may be combined with each other to form a ring.
[0045] Couplers having a structure of formula (5) are called a 5-pyrazolone-base coupler.
In the formula, R
17 represents an alkyl group, an aryl group, an acyl group or a carbamoyl group and
R
18 represents a phenyl group or a phenyl group substituted by one or more halogen atoms,
alkyl groups, cyano groups, alkoxy groups, alkoxycarbonyl groups or acylamino groups.
[0046] Among the 5-pyrazolone-base couplers represented by formula (5), preferred are those
where R
17 is an aryl group or an acyl group and R
18 is a phenyl group substituted by one or more halogen atoms.
[0047] More specifically stated about these preferred groups, R
17 is an aryl group such as a phenyl group, a 2-chlorophenyl group, a 2-methoxyphenyl
group, a 2-chloro-5-tetradecanamidophenyl group, a 2-chloro-5-(3-octadecenyl-1-succinimido)phenyl
group, a 2-chloro-5-octadecylsulfonamidophenyl group and a 2-chloro-5-[2-(4-hydroxy-3-t-butylphenoxy)tetradecanamido]phenyl,
or an acyl group such as an acetyl group, a 2-(2,4-di-t-pentylphenoxy)butanoyl group,
a benzoyl group and a 3-(2,4-di-t-amylphenoxyacetamido)benzoyl group. These groups
each may further have a substituent and examples thereof include an organic substituent
linked through a carbon atom, an oxygen atom, a nitrogen atom or a sulfur atom, and
a halogen atom. Y has the same meaning as defined above.
[0048] R
18 is preferably a substituted phenyl group such as a 2,4,6-trichlorophenyl group, a
2,5-dichlorophenyl group and a 2-chlorophenyl group.
[0049] Couplers having a structure of formula (6) are called a pyrazoloazole-base coupler.
In the formula, R
19 represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent, Q
3 represents a non-metallic atom group necessary for forming a 5-membered azole ring
containing from 2 to 4 nitrogen atoms. The azole ring may have a substituent (including
a condensed ring).
[0050] Among the pyrazoloazole-base couplers represented by formula (6), preferred in view
of spectral absorption characteristics of the colored dye are imidazo[1,2-b]pyrazoles
described in U.S. Patent 4,500,630, pyrazolo[1,5-b]-1,2,4-triazoles described in U.S.
Patent 4,500,654 and pyrazolo[5,1-c]-1,2,4-triazoles described in U.S. Patent 3,725,067.
[0051] The substituent represented by R
19 and the substituent of the azole ring represented by Q
3 are described in detail, for example, in U.S. Patent 4,540,654, from column 2, line
41 to column 8, line 27. Preferred are a pyrazoloazole coupler having a branched alkyl
group directly bonded to the 2-, 3- or 6-position of the pyrazolotriazole group described
in JP-A-61-65245 (the term "JP-A" as used herein means an "unexamined published Japanese
patent application"), a pyrazoloazole coupler containing a sulfonamido group in the
molecule described in JP-A-61-65245, a pyrazoloazole coupler having an alkoxyphenylsulfonamido
ballast group described in JP-A-61-147254, a pyrazolotriazole coupler having an alkoxy
group or an aryloxy group at the 6-position described in JP-A-62-209457 and JP-A-63-307453,
and a pyrazolotriazole coupler having a carbonamido group in the molecule described
in JP-A-2-201443. Y has the same meaning as described above.
[0052] Couplers having a structure of formula (7) or (8) are called a phenol-base coupler
or a naphthol-base coupler, respectively. In the formulae, R
20 represents a hydrogen atom or a group selected from -CONR
22R
23, -SO
2NR
22R
23, -NHCOR
22, -NHCONR
22R
23 and -NHSO
2NR
22R
23 (wherein R
22 and R
23 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent). In formulae (7) and (8), R
21 represents a substituent, ℓ represents 0 or an integer of 1 or 2, and m represents
0 or an integer of from 1 to 4. When ℓ or m is 2 or greater, the R
21 groups may be the same or different. Examples of the substituent represented by R
21, R
22 or R
23 include those described above for X
1 to X
5 in formula (II) or (IV). Y has the same meaning as described above.
[0053] Preferred examples of the phenol-base coupler represented by formula (7) include
2-acylamino-5-alkylphenol-base couplers described in U.S. Patents 2,369,929, 2,801,171,
2,772,162, 2,895,826 and 3,772,002, 2,5-diacylaminophenol-base couplers described
in U.S. Patents 2,772,162, 3,758,308, 4,126,396, 4,334,011 and 4,327,173, West German
Patent Application (OLS) No. 3,329,729 and JP-A-59-166956, and 2-phenylureido-5-acylaminophenol-base
couplers described in U.S. Patents 3,446,622, 4,333,999, 4,451,559 and 4,427,767.
Y is the same as described above.
[0054] Preferred examples of the naphthol coupler represented by formula (8) include 2-carbamoyl-1-naphthol-base
couplers described in U.S. Patents 2,474,293, 4,052,212, 4,146,396, 4,282,233 and
4,296,200, and 2-carbamoyl-5-amido-1-naphthol-base couplers described in U.S. Patent
4,690,889. Y is the same as described above.
[0055] Couplers having a structure of formula (9), (10), (11) or (12) are called pyrrolotriazole.
In the formulae, R
32, R
33 and R
34 each represents a hydrogen atom or a substituent and Y has the same meaning as defined
above. Examples of the substituent represented by R
32, R
33 or R
34 include those described above for X
1 to X
5. Preferred examples of the pyrrotriazole-base couplers represented by formulae (9)
to (12) include couplers where at least one of R
32 and R
33 is an electron-withdrawing group, described in EP-A-488248, EP-A-491197 and European
Patent 545,300. Y is the same as described above.
[0056] In addition, couplers having a structure such as a condensed ring phenol, an imidazole,
a pyrrole, a 3-hydroxypyridine, an active methylene other than those described above,
an active methine, a 5,5-condensed heterocyclic ring or a 5,6-condensed heterocyclic
ring, may be used.
[0057] The condensed ring phenol-base coupler include the couplers described in U.S. Patents
4,327,173, 4,564,586 and 4,904,575.
[0058] The imidazole-base coupler include the couplers described in U.S. Patents 4,818,672
and 5,051,347.
[0059] The 3-hydroxypyridine-base coupler include the couplers described in JP-A-1-315736.
[0060] The active methylene- and active methine-base couplers include the couplers described
in U.S. Patents 5,104,783 and 5,162,196.
[0061] The 5,5-condensed heterocyclic ring-base coupler include the pyrrolopyrazole-base
couplers described in U.S. Patent 5,164,289 and the pyrroloimidazole-base couplers
described in JP-A-4-174429.
[0062] The 5,6-condensed heterocyclic ring-base coupler include the pyrazolopyrimidine-base
couplers described in U.S. Patent 4,950,585, the pyrrolotriazine-base couplers described
in JP-A-4-204730, and the couplers described in European Patent 556,700.
[0063] In addition to the above-described couplers, couplers described in West German Patents
3,819,051A and 3,823,049, U.S. Patents 4,840,883, 5,024,930, 5,051,347 and 4,481,268,
EP-A-304856, European Patent 329,036, EP-A-354549, EP-A-374781, EP-A-379110, EP-A-386930,
JP-A-63-141055, JP-A-64-32260, JP-A-64-32261, JP-A-2-297547, JP-A-2-44340, JP-A-2-110555,
JP-A-3-7938, JP-A-3-160440, JP-A-3-172839, JP-A-4-172447, JP-A-4-179949, JP-A-4-182645,
JP-A-4-184437, JP-A-4-188138, JP-A-4-188139, JP-A-4-194847, JP-A-4-204532, JP-A-4-204731
and JP-A-4-204732 can be used in the present invention.
[0065] The reducing agent for color formation according to the present invention is preferably
used, in order to obtain satisfactory color density, in an amount of from 0.01 to
10 mmol/m
2, more preferably from 0.05 to 5 mmol/m
2, still more preferably from 0.1 to 1 mmol/m
2, per one color forming layer. Within this range, satisfactory color density is advantageously
obtained.
[0066] The amount of the coupler used in the color forming layer where the reducing agent
for color formation according to the present invention is used, is preferably, as
a molar ratio to the reducing agent for color formation, from 0.05 to 20 times, more
preferably from 0.1 to 10 times, still more preferably from 0.2 to 5 times. Within
this range, satisfactory color density is advantageously obtained.
[0067] The color light-sensitive material of the present invention fundamentally comprises
a support having coated thereon at least one photographic constituent layer comprising
a hydrophilic colloid layer, and any one of the photographic constituent layer contains
a light-sensitive silver halide, a dye forming coupler and a reducing agent for color
formation.
[0068] In the most representative embodiment, the dye forming coupler and the reducing agent
for color formation used in the present invention are added to the same layer, however,
if they are in the state capable of reaction, they may be separately added to different
layers. These components are preferably added to a silver halide emulsion layer of
the light-sensitive material or a layer adjacent thereto, more preferably added to
a silver halide emulsion layer.
[0069] The reducing agent for color formation, the compound having a specific Kq value and
the coupler according to the present invention can be incorporated into a light-sensitive
material by various known dispersion methods, and an oil-in-water dispersion method
where they are dissolved in an high boiling point organic solvent (using, if desired,
a low boiling point organic solvent in combination), emulsion-dispersed in an aqueous
gelatin solution and then added to a silver halide emulsion, is preferred. The high
boiling point organic solvent which can be used in the present invention is a water-immiscible
compound having a melting point of 100°C or lower, preferably 80°C or lower, and a
boiling point of 140°C or higher, preferably 160°C or higher, more preferably 170°C
or higher, and it can be used if it is a good solvent of the reducing agent for color
formation and the coupler. The high boiling point organic solvent is described in
detail in JP-A-62-215272, from page 137, right lower column to page 144, right upper
column. In the present invention, when a high boiling point organic solvent is used,
the high boiling point organic solvent may be used in any amount, however, the ratio
of high boiling point organic solvent/reducing agent for color formation is preferably,
in terms of a weight ratio to the reducing agent for color formation, 20 or less,
more preferably from 0.02 to 5, still more preferably from 0.2 to 4.
[0070] In the present invention, a known polymer dispersion method may be used. The process
and the effect of the latex dispersion method as one of the polymer dispersion method,
and specific examples of the latex for impregnation are described in U.S. Patent 4,199,363,
West German Patent Application (OLS) Nos. 2,541,274 and 2,541,230, JP-B-53-41091 and
EP-A-029104, and a dispersion method using a water-insoluble and organic solvent-soluble
polymer is described in PCT International Patent Publication No. WO88/00723.
[0071] The average particle size of lipophilic fine particles containing the reducing agent
for color formation according to the present invention is not particularly limited,
however, in view of the color forming property, it is preferably from 0.05 to 0.3
µm, more preferably from 0.05 to 0.2 µm.
[0072] In general, in order to achieve reduction of the average particle size of lipophilic
fine particles, the kind of the surface active agent is selected, the amount of the
surface active agent used is increased, the viscosity of the hydrophilic colloid solution
is elevated, the viscosity of the lipophilic organic layer is reduced, for example,
by using a low boiling point organic solvent in combination, the shear force is intensified,
for example, the revolution number of the stirring blade of an emulsification apparatus
is increased, or the emulsification time is prolonged.
[0073] The particle size of a lipophilic fine particle can be measured by an apparatus,
for example, Nanosizer manufactured by British Coultar Company.
[0074] The compound having a quenching velocity constant to a singlet oxygen of 1×10
7 M
-1·sec
-1 or more for use in the present invention is described below.
[0075] The quenching velocity constant (Kq) to a singlet oxygen (
1O
2) can be obtained by a method described in
J. Rhys. Chem., 83(5), 591 (1979). More specifically, a chloroform solution of rubrene and a chloroform
solution of a mixture of rubrene with a compound of which Kq value is sought for,
are subjected to irradiation of equi-energy light. Assuming that the initial concentration
of rubrene is [R], the concentration of the compound of which Kq value is sought for
is [Q], the rubrene concentration in a rubrene sole solution after light irradiation
is [R]
F0, and the rubrene concentration in a mixed solution of rubrene with the compound of
which Kq value is sought for is [R]
FQ, the Kq value can be expressed by the following expression:

[0076] The compound for use in the present invention has a Kq value of 1×10
7 M
-1·sec
-1 or more, preferably 2×10
7 M
-1·sec
-1 or more, more preferably 3×10
7 M
-1·sec
-1 or more. The upper limit is preferably 1×10
11 M
-1·sec
-1 or less, more preferably 1×10
10 M
-1·sec
-1 or less. By using the compound having the above-described Kq value, the object of
the present invention can be effectively achieved.
[0077] The compound particularly preferred in view of the effect of the present invention
is represented by formula (A).
[0078] The compound represented by formula (A) for use in the present invention is described
in more detail.
[0079] The alkyl group in formula (A) is a linear, branched or cyclic alkyl group and examples
thereof include methyl, isopropyl, t-butyl, cyclohexyl, n-octyl, dodecyl, hexadecyl
and octadecyl.
[0080] The alkenyl group in formula (A) is a linear, branched or cyclic alkenyl group and
examples thereof include vinyl, allyl cyclohexenyl and oleyl.
[0081] Examples of the aryl group in formula (A) include phenyl and naphthyl. The heterocyclic
group is a 5-, 6- or 7-membered ring containing as a ring constituent atom at least
one of oxygen atom, nitrogen atom and sulfur atom and examples thereof include pyrrolidyl,
pyrazolidyl, imidazolidyl, piperazyl, thienyl, furyl and chromanyl.
[0082] Examples of the arylene group in formula (A) include phenylene and naphthylene.
[0083] Each group in formula (A) may be substituted by a substituent and examples of the
substituent include an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic
group, a halogen atom, an alkoxy group, an alkenyloxy group, an aryloxy group, a heterocyclic
oxy group, an alkylthio group, an alkenylthio group, an arylthio group, a heterocyclic
thio group, an amino group, an alkylamino group, an alkenylamino group, an arylamino
group, a heterocyclic amino group, an acylamino group, a sulfonamido group, an acyl
group, an alkoxycarbonyl group, an aryloxycarbonyl group, a heterocyclic oxycarbonyl
group, an acyloxy group, a silyloxy group, a carboxy group, a carbamoyl group, a sulfamoyl
group, a cyano group, a nitro group, a sulfo group, a sulfonyl group, a sulfinyl group
and a hydroxyl group.
[0084] The compound represented by formula (A) is more preferably a compound represented
by formula (A-I), (A-II), (A-III) or (A-IV):

wherein R
a, R
b, R
c, X
a and X
b each represents a group defined in formula (A), R represents a substituent, R' represents
a substituent other than -X
b-R
b, provided that when a plurality of R or R' groups are present, they may be the same
or different or the groups at the ortho-position to each other may be combined to
form a 5- or 6-membered ring, ℓ represents 0 or an integer of from 1 to 4, and m represents
0 or an integer of from 1 to 5.
[0085] With respect to the substituents in formulae (A-I) to (A-IV), R
a, R
b and R
c each is preferably an alkyl group, an alkenyl group or an aryl group, R is preferably
an alkyl group, an aryl group or a group represented by -X
a-R
a, and R' is preferably an alkyl group, an aryl group, an alkylthio group or an arylthio
group.
[0086] The compounds represented by any one of formulae (A-I) to (A-IV) each preferably
has a total carbon atom number of 12 or more, more preferably 15 or more, still more
preferably 20 or more.
[0087] Among the compounds represented by any one of formulae (A-I) to (A-IV), preferred
are those represented by formula (A-I), (A-II) or (A-IV), and more preferred are those
represented by formula (A-I) or (A-II).
[0088] In formula (A-I) or (A-II), more preferably, X
a and X
b both are -O- or one of X
a and X
b is -O- and the other is -N(R
c)-.
[0090] The addition amount of the compound having a quenching velocity constant to a singlet
oxygen of 1×10
7 M
-1·sec
-1 according to the present invention is not particularly restricted, however, it is
preferably added in an amount of 0.002 to 10 molar times, more preferably 0.01 to
2 molar times, still more preferably from 0.02 to 0.5 molar times, the reducing agent
for color formation according to the present invention. Within this range, the object
of the present invention can be effectively achieved.
[0091] The compound having a specific Kq value according to the present invention may be
added to either a light-sensitive layer or a light-insensitive layer, however, it
is preferably contained in the same light-sensitive layer as the reducing agent for
color formation.
[0092] In the present invention, in the case where the dye produced from the reducing agent
for color formation and the dye forming coupler is a diffusible dye, a mordant is
preferably added to the light-sensitive material. When the present invention is applied
to such a case, color formation dispenses with dipping in an alkali and therefore,
the image stability after processing is outstandingly improved. The mordant may be
used in any layer, however, when it is added to a layer where the reducing agent for
color formation for use in the present invention is contained, stability of the reducing
agent for color formation is worsened and therefore, the mordant is preferably used
in a layer where the reducing agent for color formation for use in the present invention
is not contained. The dye produced from the reducing agent for color formation and
the coupler diffuses in a gelatin layer swelled during processing to dye the mordant.
Accordingly, in order to obtain good sharpness, the diffusion distance is preferably
short. To this effect, the layer where the mordant is added, is preferably a layer
adjacent to the layer where the reducing agent for color formation is contained.
[0093] The dye produced from the reducing agent for color formation for use in the present
invention and the coupler for use in the present invention is a water-soluble dye
and therefore, the dye may flow out into the processing solution. Accordingly, in
order to prevent this, the layer where the mordant is added, is preferably positioned
on the side opposite to the support from the layer where the reducing agent for color
formation is contained. However, when a barrier layer is provided on the side opposite
to the support from the layer where the mordant is added as described in JP-A-7-168335,
the layer where the mordant is added, may be preferably provided on the same side
as the support from the layer where the reducing agent for color formation is contained.
[0094] The mordant for use in the present invention may be added to a plurality of layers
and in particular, when a plurality of layers contain the reducing agent for color
formation, the mordant may be preferably added to respective adjacent layers.
[0095] The coupler of forming a diffusible dye may be any coupler as long as the diffusible
dye formed upon coupling with the reducing agent for color formation for use in the
present invention can reach the mordant, however, the diffusible dye formed preferably
has one or more dissociation groups having a pKa (acid dissociation constant) of 12
or less, more preferably one or more dissociation groups having a pKa of 8 or less,
still more preferably a dissociation group having a pKa of 6 or less. The diffusible
dye formed preferably has a molecular weight of from 200 to 2,000, and (the molecular
weight of the dye formed/the number of dissociation groups having a pKa of 12 or less)
is preferably from 100 to 2,000, more preferably from 100 to 1,000. The pKa used herein
is measured using a solvent of dimethylformamide : water = 1:1.
[0096] The coupler of forming a diffusible dye makes coupling with the reducing agent for
color formation for use in the present invention to form a diffusible dye preferably
having a solubility such that the dye is dissolved in an alkali solution having a
pH of 11 at up to 25°C, in a concentration of 1×10
-6 mol/ℓ or more, more preferably 1×10
-5 mol/ℓ or more, still more preferably 1×10
-4 mol/ℓ. Further, the coupler of forming a diffusible dye makes coupling with the reducing
agent for color formation for use in the present invention to form a diffusible dye
preferably having a diffusion constant measured when the dye is dissolved at a concentration
of 10
-4 mol/ℓ in an alkali solution having a pH of 11 at 25°C, of 1×10
-8 m
2/s
-1 or more, more preferably 1×10
-7 m
2/s
-1 or more, still more preferably 1×10
-6 m
2/s
-1 or more.
[0097] The mordant which can be used in the present invention may be freely selected from
commonly used mordants, and among these, a polymer mordant is preferred. The term
"polymer mordant" as used herein includes a polymer having a tertiary amino group,
a polymer having a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic moiety and a polymer containing
a quaternary cation group thereof.
[0098] Specific examples of the homopolymer or copolymer containing a vinyl monomer unit
having a tertiary imidazole group include the mordants described in U.S. Patents 4,282,305,
4,115,124 and 3,148,061, JP-A-60-118834, JP-A-60-122941, JP-A-62-244043 and JP-A-62-244036,
and those described below.
[0099] Specific preferred examples of the homopolymer or copolymer containing a vinyl monomer
unit having a quaternary imidazolium salt include the mordants described in British
Patents 2,056,101, 2,093,041 and 1,594,961, U.S. Patents 4,124,386, 4,115,124 and
4,450,224, and JP-A-48-28325, and those described below.
[0100] Specific preferred examples of the homopolymer or copolymer containing a vinyl monomer
unit having a quaternary ammonium salt include the mordants described in U.S. Patents
3,709,690, 3,898,088 and 3,958,995, JP-A-60-57836, JP-A-60-60643, JP-A-60-122940,
JP-A-60-122942 and JP-A-60-235134, and those described below.
[0101] Other examples include vinylpyridine polymers and vinylpyridinium cation polymers
disclosed in U.S. Patents 2,548,564, 2,484,430, 3,148,161 and 3,756,814; polymer mordants
crosslinkable with gelatin or the like disclosed in U.S. Patents 3,625,694, 3,859,096
and 4,128,538, and British Patent 1,277,453; aqueous sol type mordants disclosed in
U.S. Patents 3,958,995, 2,721,852 and 2,798,063, JP-A-54-115228, JP-A-54-145529 and
JP-A-54-26027; water-insoluble mordants disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,898,088; reactive
mordants capable of covalent bonding with a dye disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,168,976
(corresponding to JP-A-54-137333); and the mordants disclosed in U.S. Patents 3,709,690,
3,788,855, 3,642,482, 3,488,706, 3,557,066 and 3,271,147, JP-A-50-71332, JP-A-53-30328,
JP-A-52-155528, JP-A-53-125 and JP-A-53-1024.
[0102] Still other examples include the mordants described in U.S. Patents 2,675,316 and
2,882,156.
[0103] The polymer mordant for use in the present invention suitably has a molecular weight
of from 1,000 to 1,000,000, preferably from 10,000 to 200,000.
[0104] The above-described polymer mordant for use in is usually mixed with a hydrophilic
colloid before use. The hydrophilic colloid may be a hydrophilic colloid, a highly
hygroscopic polymer or a combination thereof, however, gelatin is most representative.
The mixing ratio of the polymer mordant to the hydrophilic colloid and the coating
amount of the polymer mordant may be easily selected by one skilled in the art according
to the amount of dye to be mordanted, the kind or composition of the polymer mordant
or the image formation process used, however, the mordant/hydrophilic colloid ratio
is suitably from 20/80 to 80/20 (by weight), and the coating amount of the mordant
is suitably from 0.2 to 15 g/m
2, preferably from 0.5 to 8 g/m
2.
[0105] In the present invention, an auxiliary developing agent or a precursor thereof is
preferably used in the light-sensitive material, and these compounds are described
below.
[0106] The auxiliary developing agent for use in the present invention is a compound having
an action of accelerating transfer of electrons from the reducing agent for color
formation to silver halide during development of silver halide grains, preferably
a compound capable of developing exposed silver halide grains and oxidizing the reducing
agent for color formation by the oxidation product obtained (hereinafter referred
to as "cross-oxidation").
[0107] The auxiliary developing agent for use in the present invention is preferably a pyrazolidone,
a dihydroxybenzene, a reductone or an aminophenol, more preferably a pyrazolidone.
These compounds are preferably lower in the diffusibility in a hydrophilic colloid
layer, and, for example, the solubility (25°C) thereof in water is preferably 0.1%
or less, more preferably 0.05% or less, particularly preferably 0.01% or less.
[0108] The precursor of the auxiliary developing agent for use in the present invention
is a compound which may be stably present in the light-sensitive material, however,
once processed with a processing solution, swiftly releases the above-described auxiliary
developing agent, and also in case of using this compound, the diffusibility thereof
in a hydrophilic colloid layer is preferably lower. For example, the solubility (25°C)
thereof in water is preferably 0.1% or less, more preferably 0.05% or less, still
more preferably 0.01% or less. The auxiliary developing agent released from the precursor
is not particularly restricted on its solubility, however, the auxiliary developing
agent itself is preferably lower in the solubility.
[0109] The precursor of the auxiliary developing agent for use in the present invention
is preferably represented by formula (A):
A-(L)
n-PUG (A)
wherein A represents a block group which cleaves the bond to (L)
n-PUG upon development, L represents a linking group which cleaves the bond between
L and PUG after the cleavage of the bond between L and A, n represents 0 or an integer
of from 1 to 3, and PUG represents an auxiliary developing agent.
[0110] As the auxiliary developing agent, electron-emitting compounds according to Kendall-Perutz
law other than p-phenylenediamines are used, and the above-described pyrazolidones
are preferably used.
[0111] As the block group represented by A, the following known block groups may be used.
More specifically, the block group includes the block groups such as an acyl group
and a sulfonyl group described in U.S. Patent 3,311,476, the block groups using a
reverse Michael reaction described in JP-A-59-105642, the block groups using quinonemethide
or a compound analogous to quinonemethide by the intramolecular electron transfer
described in JP-A-2-280140, the block groups using the intramolecular nucleophilic
substitution reaction described in JP-A-63-318555 (corresponding to EP-A-0295729),
the block groups using the addition reaction of a nucleophilic agent to a conjugated
unsaturated bond described in JP-A-4-186344, the block groups using the β-elimination
reaction described in JP-A-62-163051, the block groups using the nucleophilic substitution
reaction of diarylmethanes described in JP-A-61-188540, the block groups using a Lossen
rearrangement reaction described in JP-A-62-187850, the block groups using the reaction
of an N-acyl form of thiazolidine-2-thione with an amine described in JP-A-62-147457,
and the block groups having two electrophilic groups, which react with a dinucleophile
reagent described in International Patent Publication 93/03419.
[0112] The group represented by L is a linking group capable of cleaving the bond of (L)
n-1-PUG after release from the group represented by A upon development, and the group
is not particularly limited if it has this function.
[0113] Specific examples of the auxiliary developing agent and the precursor thereof are
set forth below, but the compounds for use in the present invention are by no means
limited to these specific examples.

[0114] These compounds may be added to any of the light-sensitive layer, the interlayer,
the undercoat layer and the protective layer, however, when the auxiliary developing
agent is incorporated, it is preferably added to a light-insensitive layer.
[0115] The compound may be incorporated into the light-sensitive material by a method where
the compound is dissolved in a water-miscible organic solvent such as methanol and
then added directly to a hydrophilic colloid layer, a method where the compound is
formulated into an aqueous solution or colloid dispersion in the presence of a surface
active agent and then added, a method where the compound is dissolved in a substantially
water-immiscible solvent or oil, then dispersed in water or hydrophilic colloid and
then added, or by a method where the compound is added in the state of a solid fine
particle dispersion, and these conventionally known methods may be used individually
or in combination. The preparation method of a solid fine particle dispersion is described
in detail in JP-A-2-235044, page 20.
[0116] The addition amount of the auxiliary developing agent to the light-sensitive material
is, based on the reducing agent for color formation, from 1 to 200 mol%, preferably
from 5 to 100 mol%, more preferably from 10 to 50 mol%.
[0117] The support for use in the present invention may be any transparent or reflective
support as long as it is a support on which photographic emulsion layers can be coated,
such as glass, paper or plastic film. The plastic film for use in the present invention
includes a polyester film such as polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate,
cellulose triacetate and cellulose nitrate, a polyamide film, a polycarbonate film
and a polystyrene film.
[0118] The "reflective support" which can be used in the present invention means a support
increased in the reflectivity so as to render the dye image formed on the silver halide
emulsion layer sharp, and the reflective support includes a support covered with a
hydrophobic resin having dispersed therein a light-reflective substance such as titanium
oxide, zinc oxide, calcium carbonate or calcium sulfate, and a hydrophobic resin itself
having dispersed therein a light-reflective substance and used as a support. Examples
thereof include polyethylene-coated paper, polyester-coated paper, polypropylene-base
synthetic paper and a support having provided thereon a reflection layer or using
a reflective substance in combination, such as a glass plate, a polyester film (e.g.,
polyethylene terephthalate, cellulose triacetate, cellulose nitrate), a polyamide
film, a polycarbonate film, a polystyrene film and a vinyl chloride resin. As the
polyester-coated paper, the polyester-coated paper comprising polyethylene terephthalate
as a main component described in European Patent 0507489 is particularly preferred.
[0119] The reflective support for use in the present invention is preferably a paper support
of which both surfaces are covered with waterproof resin layers, with at least one
of the waterproof resin layers containing white pigment fine particles. The white
pigment particles are preferably contained at a density of 12 wt% or more, more preferably
14 wt% or more. The light-reflective white pigment is preferably obtained by thoroughly
kneading a white pigment in the presence of a surface active agent and further by
treating the surface of a pigment particle with di-, tri- or tetra-hydric alcohol.
[0120] In the present invention, a support having a surface of second-class diffuse reflection
property is preferably used. The second-class diffuse reflection property means a
diffuse reflection property obtained when the specular surface is made uneven to have
finely divided specular faces directed toward different directions. The unevenness
on the surface of second-class diffuse reflection property is preferably such that
the three-dimensional average height to the center plane is from 0.1 to 2 µm, preferably
from 0.1 to 1.2 µm, and such a support is described in detail in JP-A-2-239244.
[0121] In order to obtain colors over a wide range on the chromaticity diagram using three
primary colors of yellow, magenta and cyan, at least three silver halide emulsion
layers having sensitivity in different spectral regions are used in combination. For
example, a three-layer combination consisting of a blue-sensitive layer, a green-sensitive
layer and a red-sensitive layer or of a green-sensitive layer, a red-sensitive layer
and an infrared-sensitive layer may be coated on the above-described support. Respective
light-sensitive layers may be arranged in various orders known for usual color light-sensitive
materials. Further, each light-sensitive layer may be divided into two or more layers,
if desired.
[0122] The light-sensitive material may comprise a photographic constituent layers comprising
the above-described light-sensitive layer and various light-insensitive layers such
as a protective layer, an undercoat layer, an interlayer, an antihalation layer and
a back layer. Further, various filter dyes may be added to the photographic constituent
layer so as to improve the color separation property.
[0123] Gelatin is advantageously used as a binder or a protective colloid which can be used
in the light-sensitive material of the present invention, however, a hydrophilic colloid
other than gelatin may be used alone or in combination with gelatin. The calcium content
of gelatin is preferably 800 ppm or less, more preferably 200 ppm or less, and the
iron content of gelatin is preferably 5 ppm or less, more preferably 3 ppm or less.
Further, an antimold as described in JP-A-63-271247 is preferably added for preventing
proliferation of various molds or bacteria in the hydrophilic colloidal layer, which
deteriorate an image.
[0124] At the time when the light-sensitive material of the present invention is subjected
to printer exposure, a band stop filter described in U.S. Patent 4,880,726 is preferably
used. By using this filter, color mixing is eliminated and color reproduction is outstandingly
improved.
[0125] The light-sensitive material of the present invention is used in a print system using
a normal negative printer and in addition, it is preferably used in digital scan exposure
using a monochromatic high density light such as a gas laser, a light emitting diode,
a semiconductor laser or a second harmonic generation (SHG) light source as a combination
of a semiconductor laser or a solid state laser using a semi-conductor laser as an
excitation light source with a nonlinear optical crystal. In order to achieve a compact
and cheap system, the semiconductor laser or the second harmonic generation (SHG)
light source as a combination of a semi-conductor laser or a solid state laser with
a nonlinear optical crystal is preferably used. In particular, in order to design
a compact and cheap apparatus having a long life and high stability, the semiconductor
laser is preferably used and at least one of light sources for exposure is preferably
a semiconductor laser.
[0126] In using the above-described light source for scan exposure, the spectral sensitivity
maximum of the light-sensitive material of the present invention can be freely selected
depending upon the wavelength of the light source used for scan exposure. In the case
of an SHG light source obtained by combining a solid state laser using a semiconductor
laser as an excitation light source or a semiconductor laser with a nonlinear optical
crystal, the oscillation wavelength of the laser can be reduced to a half and therefore,
blue light and green light can be obtained. Accordingly, the light-sensitive material
can have a spectral sensitivity maximum in normal three regions of blue, green and
red. When a semiconductor laser is used as a light source for achieving a cheap, highly
stable and compact apparatus, it is preferred that at least two layers have a spectral
sensitivity maximum at 670 nm or more. This is because the semiconductor laser of
Group III-V series, which is available, cheap and stable, has an emission wavelength
region in the region of from red to infrared at present. However, on a laboratory
level, oscillation of Group II-VI series semiconductor laser in green and blue regions
is confirmed and it is well expected that if the production technique of semiconductor
lasers is developed, the above-described semiconductor laser could be used cheaply
and stably. If so, the necessity that at least two layers must have a spectral sensitivity
maximum at 670 nm or more would be diminished.
[0127] In the scan exposure, the exposure time of the silver halide in a light-sensitive
material is a time period required to expose a certain fine area. The fine area is
generally a minimum unit capable of controlling the quantity of light from respective
digital data and called a pixel. Accordingly, the exposure time per pixel varies depending
on the size of the pixel. The size of the pixel depends on the pixel density which
is practically in the range of from 50 to 2,000 dpi. If the exposure time is defined
as the time required to expose a pixel in a size such that the pixel density is 400
dpi, the exposure time is preferably 10
-4 second or less, more preferably 10
-6 second or less.
[0128] The silver halide grain for use in the present invention is silver bromide, silver
chloride, silver iodide, silver chlorobromide, silver chloroiodide, silver iodobromide
or silver chloroiodobromide. A silver salt other than these, for example, silver rhodanide,
silver sulfide, silver selenide, silver carbonate, silver phosphate or organic acid
silver, may be contained as a separate grain or a part of silver halide grains. When
rapid development and desilvering (e.g., bleaching, fixing, bleach-fixing) are desired,
a so-called high silver chloride grain having a silver chloride content of 90 mol%
or more is preferred. Further, when the development is appropriately suppressed, silver
iodide is preferably contained. The preferred silver iodide content varies depending
upon the light-sensitive material as an objective.
[0129] The high silver chloride emulsion for use in the present invention preferably has
a structure such that a silver bromide localized phase in the layer or non-layer form
is present in the inside and/or on the surface of a silver halide grain. The halogen
composition of the above-described localized phase preferably has a silver bromide
content of at least 10 mol%, more preferably exceeding 20 mol%. The silver bromide
content in the silver bromide localized phase can be analyzed using an X-ray diffraction
method (described, for example, in Nippon Kagaku-kai (compiler),
Shin Jikken Kagaku Koza 6, Kozo Kaiseki (New Experiment and Chemistry Lecture 6, Analysis of Structure), Maruzen). The localized
phase may be present in the inside of a grain, or at edges, corners or on planes of
a grain surface. One preferred example is a localized phase epitaxially grown at corners
of a grain.
[0130] Also, it is effective to further increase the silver chloride content of the silver
halide emulsion so as to reduce the replenishing amount of development processing
solution. If the case is so, an almost pure silver chloride emulsion having a silver
chloride content of from 98 to 100 mol% is also preferably used.
[0131] The silver halide emulsion for use in the present invention preferably has a distribution
or a structure with respect to the halogen composition in the grain. Typical examples
thereof are disclosed in JP-B-43-13162 (the term "JP-B" as used herein means an "examined
Japanese patent publication"), JP-A-61-215540, JP-A-60-222845, JP-A-60-143331, JP-A-61-75337
and JP-A-60-222844.
[0132] In order to let the inside of a grain have a structure, not only the wrapped structure
as described above but also a so-called junction structure may be formed in the grain.
Examples thereof are described in JP-A-59-133540, JP-A-58-108526, EP-A-199290, JP-B-58-24772
and JP-A-59-16254.
[0133] In the case of the junction structure, a silver halide and a silver halide can of
course be combined but a silver salt compound not having a rock-salt structure, such
as silver rhodanide and silver carbonate, can be combined with silver halide to provide
a junction structure.
[0134] In the case of a silver iodobromide grain or the like having a structure described
above, the silver iodide content of the core part is preferably higher than that of
the shell part. On the contrary, in some cases, it is preferred that the silver iodide
content of the core part is low and that of the shell part is high. Similarly, in
the case of a grain having a junction structure, the host crystal may have a high
silver iodide content and the joined crystal may have a relatively low silver iodide
content, and the reverse thereof may also be used. The boundary between portions different
in the halogen composition of a grain having the above-described structure may be
either clear or unclear. Also, it is a preferred embodiment to positively provide
a continuous change in the composition.
[0135] In the case of a silver halide grain where two or more silver halides are present
as a mixed crystal or to form a structure, control of the halogen composition distribution
among grains is important. The measuring method of the halogen composition distribution
among grains is described in JP-A-60-254032. In particular, an emulsion having a high
uniformity such that the coefficient of variation is 20% or less is preferred.
[0136] Control of the halogen composition in the vicinity of the grain surface is important.
To increase the silver iodide content or silver chloride content in the vicinity of
the surface is accompanied by change in the adsorptivity of a dye or in the developing
rate and therefore, the control may be selected depending upon the purpose.
[0137] The silver halide grain for use in the present invention may be a regular crystal
free of twin planes or a crystal described in Nippon Shashin Gakkai (compiler),
Shashin Kogyo no Kiso, Gin-en Shashin Hen (Primary Study of Photographic Industry, Silver Salt Photograph), p. 163 (Corona
Sha)(1979), such as a parallel multiple twin crystal containing two or more parallel
twin planes or a non-parallel multiple twin crystal containing two or more non-parallel
twin planes, and these crystals may be selected depending upon the purpose. An example
of the method of mixing grains having different forms is disclosed in U.S. Patent
4,865,964. In the case of a regular crystal, a cubic grain comprising a (100) face,
an octahedral grain comprising a (111) face or a dodecahedral grain comprising a (110)
face disclosed in JP-B-55-42737 and JP-A-60-222842 may be used. Further, as reported
in
Journal of Imaging Science, Vol. 30, p. 247 (1986), a (hlm) face grain may also be selected. A grain having
two kinds of or a plurality kinds of faces together may also be selected and used
depending on the purpose, and examples thereof include a tetradecahedral grain having
a (100) face and a (111) face together in one grain, a grain having (100) face and
a (110) face together and a grain having a (111) face and a (110) face together.
[0138] The value obtained by dividing a circle-corresponding diameter of a projected area
by a grain thickness is called an aspect ratio and the form of a tabular grain is
defined by the aspect ratio. Tabular grains having an aspect ratio of 1 or more can
be used in the present invention. The tabular grain can be prepared according to the
methods described in Cleve,
Photography Theory and Practice, p. 131 (1930), Gutoff,
Photographic Science and Engineering, Vol. 14, pp. 248-257 (1970), U.S. Patents 4,434,226, 4,414,310, 4,433,048 and 4,439,520
and British Patent 2,112,157. Use of a tabular grain is advantageous in that the covering
power is elevated or the spectral sensitization efficiency by a sensitizing dye is
increased, and U.S. Patent 4,434,226 cited above describes this in detail. The average
aspect ratio of 80% or more of the total projected area of grains is preferably from
1 to less than 100, more preferably from 2 to less than 20, particularly preferably
from 3 to less than 10. The form of the tabular grain may be selected from a triangle,
a hexagon or a circle. A equilateral hexagon consisting of six sides having nearly
the same length described in U.S. Patent 4,797,354 is a preferred embodiment.
[0139] A circle-corresponding diameter of a projected area is often used as a grain size
of a tabular grain, and grains having an average diameter of 0.6 µm or less described
in U.S. Patent 4,748,106 are preferred to achieve high image quality. Also, an emulsion
having a narrow grain size distribution described in U.S. Patent 4,775,617 is preferred.
With respect to the shape of a tabular grain, the grain thickness is preferably reduced
to 0.5 µm or less, more preferably 0.3 µm or less, so as to increase the sharpness.
An emulsion having high uniformity such that the coefficient of variation of the grain
thickness is 30% or less is also preferred. Further, a grain of which grain thickness
and face-to-face dimension of the twin planes are prescribed, as described in JP-A-63-163451,
is also preferred.
[0140] It is preferred to select a grain containing no dislocation line, a grain containing
several dislocation lines or a grain containing a large number of dislocation lines
depending upon the purpose. Also, a grain containing dislocation lines which are integrated
linearly into or distorted toward a specific direction of the crystal orientation
may also be selected. The dislocation lines may be integrated throughout the grain
or may be integrated into a specific part of the grain, for example, the dislocation
lines may be integrated only to a fringe part of the grain. The dislocation lines
are preferably integrated not only to a tabular grain but also to a regular crystal
grain or an amorphous grain represented by a pebble-like grain.
[0141] The silver halide emulsion for use in the present invention may be subjected to treatment
for rounding a grain as disclosed in EP-B-96727 and EP-B-64412 or may be subjected
to surface modification as disclosed in West German Patent 2,306,447C2 and JP-A-60-221320.
[0142] The grain surface generally has a flat structure but in some cases, unevenness is
preferably provided thereon with intention. This is described in JP-A-58-106532, JP-A-60-221320
and U.S. Patent 4,643,966.
[0143] The grain size of the emulsion for use in the present invention can be verified by
a circle-corresponding diameter of a projected area measured using an electron microscope,
a sphere-corresponding diameter of the grain volume calculated from the projected
area and the grain thickness, or a sphere-corresponding diameter of the volume according
to a coulter counter method. In terms of a sphere-corresponding diameter, a grain
may be selected over a wide range of from an ultrafine grain having a grain size of
0.01 µm or less to a giant grain having a grain size in excess of 10 µm. Preferably,
a grain having a grain size of from 0.1 to 3 µm is used as a light-sensitive silver
halide grain.
[0144] The emulsion for use in the present invention may be selected from a so-called polydisperse
emulsion having a broad grain size distribution and a monodisperse emulsion having
a narrow size distribution, depending upon the purpose. As a measure for expressing
the size distribution, a coefficient of variation in the circle-corresponding diameter
of the projected area of a grain or in the sphere-corresponding diameter of the volume
of a grain may be used. In the case of using a monodisperse emulsion, the emulsion
used preferably has a coefficient of variation in the size distribution of 25% or
less, more preferably 20% or less, still more preferably 15% or less.
[0145] In order to satisfy the gradation required for the light-sensitive material, within
the emulsion layers having substantially the same spectral sensitivity, two or more
kinds of monodisperse silver halide emulsions having different grain sizes may be
mixed in the same layer or may be coated as separate layers by superposing one on
another. Further, two or more kinds of polydisperse silver halide emulsions or a combination
of a monodisperse emulsion and a polydisperse emulsion may be mixed or superposed.
[0146] The photographic emulsion for use in the present invention can be prepared according
to the methods described in P. Glafkides,
Chimie et Phisique Photographique, Paul Montel (1967), G.F. Duffin,
Photographic Emulsion Chemistry, The Focal Press (1966) and V.L. Zelikman et al,
Making and Coating Photographic Emulsion, The Focal Press (1964). Also, a method of forming grains in the excess of silver
ions (so-called reverse mixing process) may be used. A so-called controlled double
jet method, which is one system of the double jet method, of keeping constant the
pAg of the liquid phase where the silver halide is formed may also be used. According
to this method, the silver halide emulsion obtained can have a regular crystal form
and a nearly uniform grain size.
[0147] In some cases, a method of adding silver halide grains previously precipitated and
formed in a reaction vessel for the preparation of an emulsion described in U.S. Patents
4,334,012, 4,301,241 and 4,150,994 is preferred. The grain may be used as a seed crystal
or may be supplied as a silver halide for growth, and this is effective. Further,
in order to modify the surface, it is effective in some cases to add fine grains of
various halogen compositions.
[0148] A method of converting a majority part or merely a part of the halogen composition
of a silver halide grain by halogen conversion is disclosed in U.S. Patents 3,477,852
and 4,142,900, European Patents 273429 and 273430 and West German Patent Application
(OLS) 3,819,241. In order to effect conversion into a further difficultly soluble
silver salt, a soluble halogen solution or silver halide grains may be added.
[0149] With respect to the grain growth, in addition to the method of adding a soluble silver
salt and a halogen salt at a constant concentration and at a constant flow rate, a
method of forming grains by varying the concentration or varying the flow rate as
described in British Patent 1,469,480 and U.S. Patents 3,650,757 and 4,242,445 is
preferred. By increasing the concentration or increasing the flow rate, the amount
of silver halide supplied can be varied according to linear function, secondary function
or more complicated function of the addition time.
[0150] The mixing vessel used on reaction of a soluble silver salt with a soluble halogen
salt solution may be selected from those used in the methods described in U.S. Patents
2,996,287, 3,342,605, 3,415,650 and 3,785,777 and West German Patent Applications
(OLS) 2,556,885 and 2,555,364.
[0151] For the purpose of accelerating the ripening, a silver halide solvent is useful.
For example, it is known to let an excessive amount of halogen ions be present in
a reaction vessel so as to accelerate ripening. Other ripening agent may also be used.
The ripening agent may be wholly blended into a dispersion medium in the reaction
vessel before adding a silver salt and a halide salt or may be introduced into the
reaction vessel together with the addition of a halide salt, a silver salt or a deflocculant.
[0152] Examples thereof include ammonia, thiocyanates (e.g., potassium thiocyanate, ammonium
thiocyanate), organic thioether compounds (e.g., compounds described in U.S. Patents
3,574,628, 3,021,215, 3,057,724, 3,038,805, 4,276,374, 4,297,439, 3,704,130 and 4,782,013,
JP-A-57-104926), thione compounds (e.g., tetra-substituted thiourea described in JP-A-53-82408,
JP-A-55-77737 and U.S. Patent 4,221,863, compounds described in JP-A-53-144319), mercapto
compounds capable of accelerating growth of silver halide grains described in JP-A-57-202531,
and amine compounds (e.g., those described in JP-A-54-100717). Gelatin is advantageous
as a protective colloid for use in the preparation for use in the emulsion for use
in the present invention or as a binder in other hydrophilic colloid layers, however,
a hydrophilic colloid other than gelatin may also be used.
[0153] Examples thereof include proteins such as gelatin derivatives, graft polymers of
gelatin to other polymer, albumin and casein; saccharide derivatives such as cellulose
derivatives (e.g., hydroxyethyl cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose and cellulose sulfate),
sodium arginates and starch derivatives; and various synthetic hydrophilic polymer
materials such as homopolymers and copolymers of polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinyl alcohol
partial acetal, poly-N-vinylpyrrolidone, polyacrylic acid, polymethacrylic acid, polyacrylamide,
polyvinyl imidazole or polyvinyl pyrazole.
[0154] The gelatin may be a lime-processed gelatin, an acid-processed gelatin or an enzyme-processed
gelatin as described in
Bull. Soc. Sci. Photo. Japan, No. 16, p. 30 (1966), and a hydrolysate or enzymolysate of gelatin may also be used.
A low molecular weight gelatin described in JP-A-1-158426 is preferably used in the
preparation of tabular grains.
[0155] The silver halide emulsion is preferably washed with water to remove salts and prepared
into a new protective colloid dispersion. The temperature for water washing may be
selected depending upon the purpose, but it is preferably from 5 to 50°C. The pH at
the time of water washing may be also selected depending upon the purpose, but it
is preferably from 2 to 10, more preferably from 3 to 8. The pAg at the time of water
washing may also be selected depending upon the purpose, but it is preferably from
5 to 10. The method of water washing may be selected from a noodle water washing method,
a dialysis method using a semipermeable membrane, a centrifugal separation method,
a coagulation precipitation method and an ion exchange method. The coagulation precipitation
method may be selected from a method using a sulfate, a method using an organic solvent,
a method using a water-soluble polymer and a method using a gelatin derivative.
[0156] It is preferred depending on the purpose to let a metal ion salt be present at the
time of preparing a silver halide emulsion, for example, during grain formation, at
desilvering, at chemical sensitization or before coating. The metal ion salt is preferably
added during grain formation when it is doped to a grain, and between after grain
formation and before completion of the chemical sensitization when it is used for
modification of the grain surface or as a chemical sensitizer. The metal ion salt
may be doped to the entire of a grain, only to the core, shell or epitaxial part of
a grain, or only to the substrate grain. Examples of the metal include Mg, Ca, Sr,
Ba, Al, Sc, Y, La, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Ga, Ru, Rh, Pd, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, Au,
Cd, Hg, Tl, In, Sn, Pb and Bi. These metals may be added if it is in the form of a
salt capable of dissolution during grain formation, such as an ammonium salt, an acetate,
a nitrate, a sulfate, a phosphate, a hydroxy salt, a 6-coordinated complex salt or
a 4-coordinated complex salt. Examples thereof include CdBr
2, CdCl
2, Cd(NO
3)
2, Pb(NO
3)
2, Pb(CH
3COO)
2, K
3[Fe(CN)
6], (NH
4)
4[Fe(CN)
6], K
3IrCl
6, (NH
4)
3RhCl
6 and K
4Ru(CN)
6. The ligand of the coordination compound can be selected from halogen, H
2O, cyano, cyanate, thiocyanate, nitrosyl, thionitrosyl, oxo and carbonyl. These metal
compounds may be used individually or in combination of two or more.
[0157] A method of adding a chalcogen compound during preparation of an emulsion described
in U.S. Patent 3,772,031 is also useful in some cases. Other than S, Se and Te, a
cyanate, a thiocyanate, a selenocyanate, a carbonate, a phosphate or an acetate may
also be present.
[0158] The silver halide grain for use in the present invention may be subjected to at least
one of sulfur sensitization, selenium sensitization, tellurium sensitization (these
three sensitizations are collectively called chalcogen sensitization), noble metal
sensitization and reduction sensitization at any step during preparation of a silver
halide emulsion. A combination of two or more sensitization methods is preferred.
By selecting the step when the chemical sensitization is performed, various types
of emulsions may be prepared. The chemical sensitization specks are, in one type,
embedded inside the grain, in another type, embedded in the shallow part from the
grain surface, and in still another type, formed on the grain surface. In the emulsion
for use in the present invention, the site of chemical sensitization specks may be
selected according to the purpose.
[0159] The chemical sensitization which can be preferably used in the present invention
is chalcogen sensitization, noble metal sensitization or a combination thereof, and
it may be performed using an active gelatin as described in T.H. James,
The Theory of the Photographic Process, 4th ed. Macmillan, pp. 67-76 (1977), or using sulfur, selenium, tellurium, gold,
platinum, palladium, iridium or a combination of these sensitizers in plurality at
a pAg of from 5 to 10, a pH of from 5 to 8 and a temperature of from 30 to 80°C as
described in
Research Disclosure, Item 12008 (April, 1974),
ibid., Item 13452 (June, 1975),
ibid., Item 307105 (November, 1989), U.S. Patents 2,642,361, 3,297,446, 3,772,031, 3,857,711,
3,901,714, 4,266,018 and 3,904,415 and British Patent 1,315,755.
[0160] In the sulfur sensitization, a labile sulfur compound is used and specific examples
thereof include thiosulfates (e.g., hypo), thioureas (e.g., diphenylthiourea, triethylthiourea,
allylthiourea), rhodanines, mercaptos, thioamides, thiohydantoins, 4-oxo-oxazolidine-2-thiones,
disulfides, polysulfides, polythionates, elemental sulfur and known sulfur-containing
compounds described in U.S. Patents 3,857,711, 4,266,018 and 4,054,457. The sulfur
sensitization is used in many cases in combination with noble metal sensitization.
[0161] The amount of the sulfur sensitizer used is, based on the silver halide grain, preferably
from 1×10
-7 to 1×10
-3 mol, more preferably 5×10
-7 to 1×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide.
[0162] In the selenium sensitization, a known labile selenium compound is used, such as
selenium compounds described in U.S. Patents 3,297,446 and 3,297,447, and specific
examples thereof include colloidal metal selenium, selenoureas (e.g., N,N-dimethylselenourea,
tetramethylselenourea), selenoketones (e.g., selenoacetone), selenoamides (e.g., selenoacetamide),
selenocarboxylic acids and esters, isoselenocyanates, selenides (e.g., diethyl selenide,
triphenylphosphine selenide) and selenophosphates (e.g., tri-p-tolylselenophosphate).
The selenium sensitization is preferably used in some cases in combination with sulfur
sensitization, noble metal sensitization or both of these sensitizations.
[0163] The use amount of the selenium sensitizer varies depending on the kind of the selenium
compound or the silver halide grain used, or on chemical ripening conditions, but
it is usually from 10
-8 to 10
-4 mol, preferably on the order of from 10
-7 to 10
-5 mol, per mol of silver halide.
[0164] As the tellurium sensitizer for use in the present invention, the compounds described
in Canadian Patent 800,958, British Patents 1,295,462 and 1,396,696, JP-A-4-204640
and JP-A-4-333043 can be used.
[0165] In the noble metal sensitization, a noble metal salt such as gold, platinum, palladium
or iridium may be used and in particular, gold sensitization, palladium sensitization
and a combination use of these two sensitizations are preferred. In the case of gold
sensitization, a known compound such as chloroaurate, potassium chloroaurate, potassium
aurithiocyanate, gold sulfide or gold selenide may be used. The palladium compound
means a palladium divalent salt or tetravalent salt. The preferred palladium compound
is represented by R
2PdX
6 or R
2PdX
4, wherein R represents a hydrogen atom, an alkali metal atom or an ammonium group,
and X represents a halogen atom such as chlorine, bromine or iodine.
[0166] More specifically, K
2PdCl
4, (NH
4)
2PdCl
6, Na
2PdCl
4, (NH
4)
2PdCl
4, Li
2PdCl
4, Na
2PdCl
6 and K
2PdBr
4 are preferred. The gold compound and the palladium compound each is preferably used
in combination with a thiocyanate or a selenocyanate.
[0167] To the emulsion for use in the present invention, the gold sensitization is preferably
applied in combination. The amount of the gold sensitizer is preferably from 1×10
-7 to 1×10
-3 mol, more preferably from 5×10
-7 to 5×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide. The amount of the palladium compound is preferably
from 5×10
-7 to 1×10
-3 mol per mol of silver halide. The amount of the thiocyanate compound or the selenocyanate
compound is preferably from 1×10
-6 to 5×10
-2 mol per mol of silver halide.
[0168] The silver halide emulsion is preferably subjected to reduction sensitization during
grain formation, before or during chemical sensitization after grain formation, or
after chemical sensitization.
[0169] The reduction sensitization may be performed by any of a method of adding a reduction
sensitizer to the silver halide emulsion, a method called silver ripening, of growing
or ripening the emulsion in a low pAg atmosphere at a pAg of from 1 to 7, and a method
called high pH ripening, of growing or ripening the emulsion in a high pH atmosphere
at a pH of from 8 to 11. Two or more of the above-described methods may also be used
in combination.
[0170] The reduction sensitizer may be selected from known reduction sensitizers such as
a stannous salt, an ascorbic acid and a derivative thereof, amines and polyamines,
a hydrazine and a derivative thereof, a formamidinesulfinic acid, a silane compound
and a borane compound, and these compounds may be used in combination of two or more.
Preferred compounds as the reduction sensitizer are a stannous chloride, an aminoiminomethanesulfinic
acid (common name: thiourea dioxide), a dimethylamineborane, an ascorbic acid and
a derivative thereof.
[0171] The chemical sensitization may also be performed in the presence of a so-called chemical
sensitization aid. Useful chemical sensitization aids include compounds known to suppress
fogging and at the same time, increase sensitivity during the chemical sensitization,
such as azaindene, azapyridazine and azapyrimidine. Examples of the chemical sensitization
aid are described in U.S. Patents 2,131,038, 3,411,914 and 3,554,757, JP-A-58-126526
and G.F. Duffin,
Photographic Emulsion Chemistry (cited above), pp. 138-143.
[0172] An oxidizing agent for silver is preferably used during production of the emulsion.
The oxidizing agent for silver means a compound capable of acting on a metal silver
to convert it into a silver ion. In particular, a compound which converts very fine
silver grains by-produced during grain formation and chemical sensitization of silver
halide grains into silver ions, is useful. The silver ion produced here may be in
the form of a difficultly water-soluble silver salt such as silver halide, silver
sulfide or silver selenide or in the form of an easily water-soluble silver salt such
as silver nitrate. The oxidizing agent for silver may be either an inorganic material
or an organic material. Examples of the inorganic oxidizing agent include ozone, a
hydrogen peroxide and an adduct thereof (e.g., NaBO
2·H
2O
2·3H
2O, 2NaCO
3·3H
2O
2, Na
4P
2O
7·2H
2O
2, 2Na
2SO
4·H
2O
2·2H
2O), a peroxy acid salt (e.g., K
2S
2O
8, K
2C
2O
6, K
2P
2O
8), a peroxy complex compound (e.g., K
2[Ti(O
2)C
2O
4]·3H
2O, 4K
2SO
4·Ti(O
2)OH·SO
4·2H
2O, Na
3[VO(O
2)(C
2H
4)
2·6H
2O), a permanganate (e.g., KMnO
4), an oxyacid salt such as a chromate (e.g., K
2Cr
2O
7), a halogen element such as iodine and bromine, a perhalogen acid salt (e.g., potassium
periodate), a salt of high-valence metal (e.g., potassium hexacyanoferrate) and a
thiosulfonate.
[0173] Examples of the organic oxidizing agent include quinones such as p-quinone, organic
peroxides such as peracetic acid and perbenzoic acid, and active halogen-releasing
compounds (e.g., N-bromosuccinimide, chloramine-T, chloramine-B).
[0174] The combination use of the above-described reduction sensitization with the oxidizing
agent for silver is a preferred embodiment.
[0175] Various compounds may be incorporated into the photographic emulsion for use in the
present invention so as to prevent fogging during preparation, storage or photographic
processing of the light-sensitive material or to stabilize the photographic capacity.
More specifically, a large number of compounds known as an antifoggant or a stabilizer
may be added, for example, thiazoles such as benzothiazolium salt, nitroimidazoles,
nitrobenzimidazoles, chlorobenzimidazoles, bromobenzimidazoles, mercaptothiazoles,
mercaptobenzothiazoles, mercaptobenzimidazoles, mercaptothiadiazoles, aminotriazoles,
benzotriazoles, nitrobenzotriazoles and mercaptotetrazoles (e.g., 1-phenyl-5-mercaptotetrazole,
1-(5-methylureidophenyl)-5-mercaptotetrazole); mercaptopyrimidines; mercaptotriazines;
thioketo compounds such as oxazolinethione; and azaindenes such as triazaindenes,
tetrazaindenes (in particular, 4-hydroxy-6-methyl-(1,3,3a,7)tetrazaindenes) and pentazaindenes.
For example, those described in U.S. Patents 3,954,474 and 3,982,947 and JP-B-52-28660
may be used. One of preferred compounds is the compound described in JP-A-63-212932.
The antifoggant and the stabilizer each may be added at various stages depending upon
the purpose, such as before grain formation, during grain formation, after grain formation,
at water washing, at dispersion after water washing, before chemical sensitization,
during chemical sensitization, after chemical sensitization or before coating.
[0176] The photographic emulsion for use in the present invention is preferably spectrally
sensitized by a methine dye or others. Examples of the dye used include a cyanine
dye, a merocyanine dye, a complex cyanine dye, a complex merocyanine dye, a holopolar
cyanine dye, a hemicyanine dye, a styryl dye and a hemioxonol dye. Among these, particularly
useful are dyes belonging to the cyanine dye, the merocyanine dye and the complex
merocyanine dye. To these dyes, any nucleus commonly used for cyanine dyes as a basic
heterocyclic nucleus can be applied. Examples thereof include a pyrroline nucleus,
an oxazoline nucleus, a thiazoline nucleus, a pyrrole nucleus, an oxazole nucleus,
a thiazole nucleus, a selenazole nucleus, an imidazole nucleus, a tetrazole nucleus
and a pyridine nucleus; a nucleus resulting from fusion of an alicyclic hydrocarbon
ring to the above-described nuclei; and a nucleus resulting from fusion of an aromatic
hydrocarbon ring to the above-described nuclei, e.g., indolenine nucleus, benzindolenine
nucleus, indole nucleus, benzoxazole nucleus, naphthoxazole nucleus, benzothiazole
nucleus, naphthothiazole nucleus, benzoselenazole nucleus, benzimidazole nucleus and
quinoline nucleus. These nuclei may have a substituent on the carbon atom thereof.
[0177] To the merocyanine dye or complex merocyanine dye, a 5- or 6-membered heterocyclic
nucleus such as a pyrazolin-5-one nucleus, a thiohydantoin nucleus, a 2-thioxazolidine-2,4-dione
nucleus, a thiazolidin-2,4-dione nucleus, a rhodanine nucleus or a thiobarbituric
acid nucleus may be applied as a nucleus having a ketomethylene structure.
[0178] These sensitizing dyes may be used individually or in combination thereof and the
combination of sensitizing dyes is often used for the purpose of supersensitization.
Representative examples thereof are described in U.S. Patents 2,688,545, 2,977,229,
3,397,060, 3,522,052, 3,527,641, 3,617,293, 3,628,946, 3,666,480, 3,672,898, 3,679,428,
3,703,377, 3,769,301, 3,814,609, 3,837,862 and 4,026,707, British Patents 1,344,281
and 1,507,803, JP-B-43-4936, JP-B-53-12375, JP-A-52-110618 and JP-A-52-109925.
[0179] In combination with a sensitizing dye, a dye which itself provides no spectral sensitization
effect or a material which absorbs substantially no visible light, but which exhibits
supersensitization may be contained in the emulsion.
[0180] The time when the spectral sensitizing dye is added to the emulsion may be any stage
hitherto known to be useful during preparation of the emulsion. Most commonly, the
spectral sensitization is effected between after completion of the chemical sensitization
and before coating, but the dye may be added at the same time with a chemical sensitizer
to effect spectral sensitization and chemical sensitization simultaneously as described
in U.S. Patents 3,628,969 and 4,225,666, the spectral sensitization may be effected
in advance of chemical sensitization as described in JP-A-58-113928, or the dye may
be added before completion of the precipitation and formation of silver halide grains
to start spectral sensitization. Further, the above-described compound may be added
in parts, namely, a part of the compound may be added in advance of chemical sensitization
and the remaining may be added after chemical sensitization, as described in U.S.
Patent 4,225,666, and the compound may be added at any time during formation of silver
halide grains as in the method described in U.S. Patent 4,183,756.
[0181] The addition amount of the compound may be from 4×10
-6 to 8×10
-3 mol per mol of silver halide, but in the case of silver halide grains in the size
of from 0.2 to 1.2 µm, which is a more preferred embodiment, it is effectively from
about 5×10
-5 to 2×10
-3 mol per mol of silver halide.
[0182] The light-sensitive material of the present invention uses various additives as described
above but other than those, various additives may be used according to the purpose.
[0183] These additives are described in more detail in
Research Disclosure, Item 17643 (December, 1978),
ibid., Item 18716 (November, 1979) and
ibid., No. 307105 (November, 1989), and the pertinent portions thereof are summarized in
the table below.
TABLE 1
|
Kinds of Additives |
RD17643 |
RD18716 |
RD307105 |
1. |
Chemical sensitizer |
p. 23 |
p. 648, right col. |
p. 996 |
2. |
Sensitivity increasing agent |
|
ditto |
|
3. |
Spectral sensitizer, supersensitizer |
pp. 23-24 |
p. 648, right col.-p. 649, right col. |
p. 996, right col.-p. 998, right col. |
4. |
Whitening agent |
p. 24 |
|
p. 998, right col. |
5. |
Antifoggant, stabilizer |
pp. 24-25 |
p. 649, right col. |
p. 998, right col.-p. 1,000, right col. |
6. |
Light absorbent, filter dye, UV absorbent |
pp. 25-26 |
p. 649, right col.-p. 650, left col. |
p. 1,003, left col.-p. 1,003, right col. |
7. |
Stain inhibitor |
p. 25, right col. |
p. 650, left to right cols. |
|
8. |
Dye image stabilizer |
p. 25 |
|
|
9. |
Hardening agent |
p. 26 |
p. 651, left col. |
p. 1,004, right col.-p. 1,005, left col. |
10. |
Binder |
p. 26 |
ditto |
p. 1,003, right col.-p. 1,004, right col. |
11. |
Plasticizer, lubricant |
p. 27 |
p. 650, right col. |
p. 1,006, left col.-p. 1,006, right col. |
12. |
Coating aid, surface active agent |
pp. 26-27 |
ditto |
p. 1,005, left col.-p. 1,006, left col. |
13. |
Antistatic agent |
p. 27 |
ditto |
p. 1006, right col.-p. 1,007, left col. |
[0184] The total coated silver amount of the light-sensitive material of the present invention
is preferably, in terms of silver, from 0.003 to 12 g/m
2. In the case of a transmissive material such as a color negative film, it is preferably
from 1 to 12 g/m
2, more preferably from 3 to 10 g/m
2. In the case of a reflective material such as a color paper, it is preferably from
0.003 to 1 g/m
2 in view of rapid processing and low replenishment and in this case, the addition
amount to respective layers is preferably from 0.001 to 0.4 g per one light-sensitive
layer. In particular, when the light-sensitive material of the present invention is
subjected to intensification processing, the total coated silver amount is preferably
from 0.003 to 0.3 g/m
2, more preferably from 0.01 to 0.1 g/m
2, still more preferably from 0.015 to 0.05 g/m
2. In this case, the addition amount is preferably from 0.001 to 0.1 g, preferably
from 0.003 to 0.03 g, per one light-sensitive layer.
[0185] In the present invention, if the coated silver amount of each light-sensitive layer
is less than 0.001 g/m
2, dissolution of silver salt proceeds and sufficiently high color density cannot be
obtained, and in the case of intensification process, if it exceeds 0.1 g/m
2, increase in Dmin or generation of bubbles are caused and viewing is often endurable.
[0186] The total gelatin amount of the light-sensitive material of the present invention
is from 1.0 to 30 g/m
2, preferably from 2.0 to 20 g/m
2. In swelling the light-sensitive material of the present invention using an alkali
solution having a pH of 12, the time required for reaching a half of the saturation
swollen layer thickness (corresponding to 90% of the maximum swollen layer thickness)
is preferably 15 seconds or less, more preferably 10 seconds or less. The swelling
ratio [

] is preferably from 50 to 300%, more preferably from 100 to 200%.
[0187] The processing materials and the processing method for use in the present invention
are described in detail below. In the present invention, the light-sensitive material
is processed through development (silver development/cross-oxidation of the self-contained
reducing agent), desilvering and water washing or stabilization. In some cases, the
light-sensitive material may be subjected to processing for intensifying color formation,
such as impartation of alkali, after water washing or stabilization.
[0188] In developing the light-sensitive material of the present invention, the developer
may use a compound capable of functioning as a developing agent for silver halide
and/or having a function such that the oxidation product of the developing agent generated
on silver development cross-oxidizes the reducing agent for color formation incorporated
into the light-sensitive material. Preferred examples of the compound include pyrazolidones,
dihydroxybenzenes, reductones and aminophenols, with pyrazolidones being more preferred.
[0189] The pyrazolidones are preferably 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidones and examples thereof include
1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-phenyl-4,4-dimethyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-phenyl-4-methyl-4-hydroxymethyl-3-pyrazolidone,
1-phenyl-4,4-dihydroxymethyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-phenyl-5-methyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-phenyl-5-phenyl-3-pyrazolidone,
1-p-tolyl-4-methyl-4-hydroxymethyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-p-chlorophenyl-4-methyl-4-hydroxymethyl-3-pyrazlidone,
1-phenyl-2-hydroxymethyl-4,4-dimethyl-3-pyrazolidone, 1-phenyl-2-acetyl-3-pyrazolidone
and 1-phenyl-2-hydroxymethyl-5-phenyl-3-pyrazolidone.
[0190] Examples of the dihydroxybenzenes include hydroquinone, chlorohydroquinone, bromohydroquinone,
isopropylhydroquinone, methylhydroquinone, 2,3-dichlorohydroquinone, 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone,
2,5-dimethylhydroquinone and potassium hydroquinone monosulfonate.
[0191] The reductones are preferably an ascorbic acid and a derivative thereof, and examples
thereof include the compounds described in JP-A-6-148822, pp. 3-10. In particular,
sodium L-ascorbate and sodium erythorbate are preferred.
[0192] Examples of the p-aminophenols include N-methyl-p-aminophenol, N-(β-hydroxyethyl)-p-aminophenol,
N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)glycine and 2-methyl-p-aminophenol.
[0193] These compounds are usually used individually, however, they are preferably used
in combination of two or more thereof for the purpose of increasing the development
and the cross-oxidation activity.
[0194] The amount of the above-described compound used in the developer is generally from
2.5×10
-4 to 0.2 mol/ℓ, preferably from 0.0025 to 0.1 mol/ℓ, more preferably from 0.001 to
0.05 mol/ℓ.
[0195] Examples of the preservative used in the developer include sodium sulfite, potassium
sulfite, lithium sulfite, ammonium sulfite, sodium bisulfite, potassium metabisulfite,
sodium formaldehyde bisulfite and hydroxylamine sulfate, and the amount of the compound
used is usually 0.1 mol/ℓ or less, preferably from 0.001 to 0.02 mol/ℓ. In the case
of using a high silver chloride emulsion in the light-sensitive material, the amount
of the compound used is usually 0.001 mol/ℓ or less, and preferably, the compound
is not used at all.
[0196] In the present invention, an organic preservative such as diehylhydroxylamine and
dialkylhydroxylamines described in JP-A-4-97355, is preferably contained in place
of the above-described hydroxylamine or sulfite ion.
[0197] The developer may contain halogen ions such as chlorine ion, bromine ion or iodine
ion.
[0198] The halide may be added directly to the developer or may be eluted from the light-sensitive
material into the developer during the development processing.
[0199] The developer for use in the present invention preferably has a pH of from 8 to 13,
more preferably from 9 to 12.
[0200] In order to keep the above-described pH, various buffer solutions are preferably
used. Examples thereof include carbonate, phosphate, tetraborate and hydroxybenzoate.
[0201] The amount of the buffer agent to the developer is preferably 0.05 mol/ℓ or more,
more preferably from 0.1 to 0.4 mol/ℓ.
[0202] In addition, the developer may contain various chelating agents as a precipitation
inhibitor of calcium or magnesium or for improving stability of the developer.
[0203] The addition amount of the chelating agent may suffice if it is an amount sufficiently
high to conceal metal ions in the developer and it is, for example, approximately
from 0.1 to 10 g/ℓ.
[0204] In the present invention, a freely selected antifoggant may be added, if desired.
The antifoggant includes alkali metal halides such as sodium chloride, potassium bromide
and potassium iodide, and nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds.
[0205] The addition amount of the nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compound is from 1×10
-5 to 1×10
-2 mol/ℓ, preferably from 2.5×10
-5 to 1×10
-3 mol/ℓ.
[0206] To the developer, an optional development accelerator may be added, if desired.
[0207] The developer preferably contains a brightening agent. In particular, 4,4'-diamino-2,2'-disulfostilbene-base
compounds are preferably used.
[0208] The processing temperature of the developer for use in the present invention is from
20 to 50°C, preferably from 30 to 45°C. The processing time is from 5 seconds to 2
minutes, preferably from 10 seconds to 1 minute. The replenishing amount is preferably
smaller but it is usually from 15 to 600 ml, preferably from 25 to 200 ml, more preferably
from 35 to 100 ml, per m
2 of the light-sensitive material.
[0209] The development is followed by desilvering. The desilvering may Comprise fixing or
may comprise bleaching and fixing. When it comprises bleaching and fixing, the bleaching
and the fixing may be performed separately or may be performed simultaneously (bleach-fixing).
Further, processing in a bleach-fixing bath consisting of two continuous tanks, processing
of performing fixing before bleach-fixing, or processing of performing bleaching after
bleach-fixing may be freely selected depending upon the purpose.
[0210] In some cases, it is preferred to perform stabilization after development without
effecting desilvering, to stabilize the silver salt or the dye image.
[0211] Also, an image reinforcing processing (intensification) may be performed after development,
using peroxides, halogenous acids, iodoso compounds and cobalt(III) complex compounds
described in West German Patent Applications (OLS) 1,813,920, 2,044,993 and 2,735,262,
JP-A-48-9728, JP-A-49-84240, JP-A-49-102314, JP-A-51-53826, JP-A-52-13336 and JP-A-52-73731.
In order to further intensify the image reinforcement, the above-described oxidizing
agent for image reinforcement may be added to the developer to effect the development
and the image intensification at the same time in a single bath. In particular, hydrogen
peroxide is preferred because of its high amplification factor. The above-described
image intensification method is a preferred processing method in view of environmental
conservation because the silver amount of the light-sensitive material can be greatly
reduced to dispense with bleaching and at the same time, to involve no discharge of
silver (or silver salt), for example, at stabilization.
[0212] Examples of the bleaching agent for use in the bleaching solution or the bleach-fixing
solution include compounds of a polyvalent metal such as iron(III), cobalt(III), chromium(IV)
and copper(II), peracids, quinones and nitro compounds. Among these, an aminopolycarboxylic
acid ferrate such as ethylenediaminetetraacetato ferrate complex salt and 1,3-diaminopropanetetraacetato
ferrate complex salt, hydrogen peroxide and persulfate are preferred in view of rapid
processing and prevention of environmental pollution.
[0213] The bleaching solution or the bleach-fixing solution using the aminopolycarboxylic
acid ferrate complex salt is used at a pH of from 3 to 8, preferably from 5 to 7.
The bleaching solution using persulfate or hydrogen peroxide is used at a pH of from
4 to 11, preferably from 5 to 10.
[0214] The bleaching solution, the bleach-fixing solution or a prebath thereof may use a
bleaching accelerator, if desired.
[0215] The bleaching solution, the bleach-fixing solution or the fixing solution may use
conventionally known rehalogenating agents or additives such as a pH buffer and a
metal corrosion inhibitor. In particular, the solutions each preferably contains an
organic acid having an acid dissociation constant (pKa) of from 2 to 7 to prevent
bleaching stains.
[0216] Examples of the fixing agent for use in the fixing solution or in the bleach-fixing
solution include thiosulfates, thiocyanates, thioureas, a large quantity of iodide
salts, and nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds having a sulfide group, mesoionic
compounds and thioether-base compounds described in JP-A-4-365037, pp. 11-21, JP-A-5-66540,
pp. 1,088-1,092.
[0217] As the preservative of the fixing solution or the bleach-fixing solution, sulfites,
bisulfites, carbonyl bisulfite adducts and sulfinic acid compounds described in EP-A-294769
are preferred.
[0218] Furthermore, the fixing solution or the bleach-fixing solution may contain various
brightening agents, defoaming agents, surface active agents, polyvinylpyrrolidones
or methanols.
[0219] The processing temperature in desilvering is from 20 to 50°C, preferably from 30
to 45°C. The processing time is from 5 seconds to 2 minutes, preferably from 10 seconds
to 1 minute. The replenishing amount is preferably smaller, but it is usually from
15 to 600 ml, preferably from 25 to 200 ml, more preferably from 35 to 100 ml, per
m
2 of the light-sensitive material. A processing free of replenishment but only with
compensation for the evaporation loss by water is also preferred.
[0220] The light-sensitive material of the present invention is usually subjected to water
washing after desilvering. When stabilization is performed, the water washing may
be omitted. In the stabilization, any of known methods described in JP-A-57-8543,
JP-A-58-14834, JP-A-60-220345, JP-A-58-127926, JP-A-58-127837 and JP-A-58-140741 can
be used. Water washing-stabilization as represented by the processing of a color light-sensitive
material for photographing may also be performed, where the stabilization bath containing
a dye stabilizer and a surface active agent is used as the final bath.
[0221] The water-washing solution and the stabilizing solution may contain a sulfite; a
hard water softening agent such as inorganic phosphoric acid, polyaminocarboxylic
acid and organic aminophosphonic acid; a metal salt such as Mg salt, Al salt and Bi
salt; a surface active agent; a hardening agent; a pH buffer; a brightening agent;
and a silver salt forming agent such as nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compound.
[0222] Examples of the dye stabilizer for the stabilizing solution include aldehydes such
as formalin and glutaraldehyde, N-methylol compounds, hexamethylenetetramine and aldehydesulfurous
acid adducts.
[0223] The pH of the washing water or stabilizing solution is from 4 to 9, preferably from
5 to 8. The processing temperature is generally from 15 to 45°C, preferably from 25
to 40°C. The processing time is from 5 seconds to 2 minutes, preferably from 10 to
40 seconds.
[0224] The overflow solution accompanying replenishment of the above-described washing water
and/or stabilizing solution can be re-used in other steps such as desilvering.
[0225] The amount of washing water and/or stabilizing solution may be selected over a wide
range depending upon various conditions but the replenishing amount is preferably
from 15 to 360 ml, more preferably from 25 to 120 ml, per m
2 of the light-sensitive material. In order to reduce the replenishing water amount,
it is preferred to use a plurality of tanks in a countercurrent system.
[0226] In the present invention, water resulting from treating the overflow solution or
solution inside tanks with a reverse osmosis membrane may be used for saving water.
For example, the treatment with a reverse osmosis membrane is preferably applied to
water in the second or subsequent tanks for water washing and/or stabilization in
a multi-stage countercurrent system.
[0227] In the present invention, the stirring is preferably intensified as highly as possible.
Specific examples of the method for intensifying stirring include a method of colliding
a jet stream of a processing solution against the emulsion surface of the light-sensitive
material described in JP-A-62-183460 and JP-A-62-183461, a method of increasing the
stirring effect by using a rotary means described in JP-A-62-183461, a method of increasing
the stirring effect by causing turbulence on the emulsion surface while moving the
light-sensitive material with the emulsion surface being brought into contact with
a wiper blade provided in the solution, and a method of increasing the circulative
flow rate of the entire processing solutions. Such a means for intensifying the stirring
is effective in any of the developer, the bleaching solution, the fixing solution,
the bleach-fixing solution, the stabilizing solution and the washing water. These
methods are advantageous in that the supply of effective components in the solution
to the light-sensitive material or the diffusion of unnecessary components of the
light-sensitive material is accelerated.
[0228] The present invention exhibits superior capacity whatever state the solution open
ratio [contact area with air (cm
2)/solution volume (cm
3)] of any bath is in, however, in view of stability of solution components, the solution
open ratio is preferably from 0 to 0.1 cm
-1 and in the case of a continuous processing, it is in practice preferably from 0.001
to 0.05 cm
-1, more preferably from 0.002 to 0.03 cm
-1.
[0229] The automatic developing machine used for the light-sensitive material of the present
invention preferably comprises a transportation means of a light-sensitive material
described in JP-A-60-191257, JP-A-60-191258 and JP-A-60-191259. The transportation
means can extremely decrease the amount of a processing solution carried over from
a previous bath to the post bath and provides a great effect in preventing deterioration
in capacity of the processing solution. Such an effect is particularly useful in reducing
the processing time or decreasing the replenishing amount of the processing solution,
in each step. Further, in order to reduce the processing time, the crossover time
(airing time) is preferably shortened and, for example, a method described in JP-A-4-86659,
Fig. 4, 5 or 6 and JP-A-5-66540, Fig. 4 or 5 is preferably used, where a light-sensitive
material is transferred through blades having a shielding effect.
[0230] In the case when each processing solution is concentrated due to evaporation during
continuous processing, it is preferred to correct the concentration by adding water.
[0231] The processing time in a step as used in the present invention means the time period
required from initiation of the processing of a light-sensitive material in a certain
step until initiation of the processing in the next step. The practical processing
time in an automatic developing machine is usually determined by the linear velocity
and the volume of a processing bath, and in the present invention, the linear velocity
is from 500 to 4,000 mm/min as a standard. In the case of a small-size developing
machine, the linear velocity is preferably from 500 to 2,500 mm/min.
[0232] The total processing time, in other words, the processing time from development to
drying is preferably 360 seconds or less, more preferably 120 seconds or less, still
more preferably from 30 to 90 seconds. The processing time as used herein means the
time period since the light-sensitive material is dipped in a developer until it comes
out from the drying zone of a processor.
[0233] In the processing applied to the present invention, various additives are used and
they are described in greater detail in
Research Disclosure, Item 36544 (September, 1994). The pertinent portions thereof are summarized in the
table below.
Kind of Processing Agents |
Page |
Developing agent |
536 |
Preservative of developing agent |
537, left column |
Antifoggant |
537 |
Chelating agent |
537, right column |
Buffer |
537, right column |
Surface active agent |
538, left column and 539, left column |
Bleaching agent |
538 |
Bleaching accelerator |
538, right column to 539, left column |
Chelating agent for bleaching |
539, left column |
Rehalogenating agent |
539, left column |
Fixing agent |
539, right column |
Preservative of fixing agent |
539, right column |
Chelating agent for fixing agent |
540, left column |
Surface active agent for stabilization |
540, left |
Scum inhibitor for stabilization |
540, right |
Chelating agent for stabilization |
540, right |
Antiseptic, antimold |
540, right |
Dye image stabilizer |
540, right |
[0234] The technique for saving water, which is applied to the present invention, is described
in detail in
Research Disclosure, Item 36544 (September, 1994), page 540, right column to page 541, left column.
[0235] The present invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the following
examples but the present invention should not be construed as being limited thereto.
EXAMPLE 1
[0236] The surface of a paper support having laminated on both surfaces thereof with polyethylene
was subjected to corona discharge treatment, a gelatin subbing layer containing sodium
dodecylbenzenesulfonate was provided thereon, and two kinds of photographic constituent
layers were coated thereon to prepare Photographic Printing Paper (100) having a two-layer
structure described below. The coating solutions were prepared as follows.
Coating Solution for First Layer
[0237] In ethyl acetate, 17 g of Coupler (C-76), 20 g of Reducing Agent (I-16) for color
formation and 80 g of Solvent (Solv-1) were dissolved, and the resulting solution
was emulsion-dispersed in 400 g of a 16% aqueous gelatin solution containing a 10%
sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate and a citric acid to prepare Emulsion Dispersion A.
Separately, Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A (cubic; a 3:7 mixture (by silver mol)
of Large Size Emulsion A having an average grain size of 0.88 µm and Small Size Emulsion
A having an average grain size of 0.70 µm; these emulsions having a coefficient of
variation in the grain size distribution of 0.08 and 0.10, respectively; the emulsion
of each size containing 0.3 mol% of silver bromide localized on a part of the grain
surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride) was prepared. To this emulsion,
Blue Sensitizing Dyes A, B and C shown below were added each in an amount, for Large
Size Emulsion A, of 1.4×10
-4 mol, and for Small Size Emulsion A, of 1.7×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide. The resulting emulsion was subjected to optimal chemical
ripening by adding a sulfur sensitizer and a gold sensitizer. Emulsion Dispersion
A and Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A were mixed and dissolved to prepare a coating
solution for the first layer having the following composition. The emulsion coated
amount is a coated amount calculated in terms of silver.
[0238] A coating solution for the second layer was prepared in the same manner as the coating
solution for the first layer. In each layer, 1-oxy-3,5-dichloro-s-triazine sodium
salt was added as a gelatin hardening agent.
[0239] Further, Cpd-2, Cpd-3, Cpd-4 and Cpd-5 were added to each layer to have a total coverage
of 15.0 mg/m
2, 60.0 mg/m
2, 50.0 mg/m
2 and 10.0 mg/m
2, respectively.
Sensitizing Dye A
[0240]

Sensitizing Dye B
[0241]

Sensitizing Dye C
[0242]

[0243] Further, 1-(5-methylureidophenyl)-5-mercaptotetrazole was added to the first layer
in an amount of 3.0×10
-3 mol per mol of silver halide.
(Layer Structure)
[0244] The composition of each layer is shown below. The numerals show the coated amount
(g/m
2). In the case of silver halide emulsions, it is a coated amount in terms of silver.
Support
[0245] Polyethylene laminated paper
[Polyethylene on the first layer side contained a white pigment (TiO
2, 15 wt%) and a bluish dye (ultramarine).]
First Layer
[0246]
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A described above |
0.20 |
Gelatin |
1.50 |
Yellow Coupler (C-76) |
0.17 |
Reducing Agent (I-16) for color formation |
0.20 |
Solvent (Solv-1) |
0.80 |
Second Layer (Protective Layer)
[0247]
Gelatin |
1.01 |
Acryl-modified copolymer of polyvinyl alcohol (modification degree: 17%) |
0.04 |
Liquid paraffin |
0.02 |
Surface Active Agent (Cpd-1) |
0.01 |
[0248] Samples (101) to (137) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (100)
except that the yellow coupler and the reducing agent for color formation in the coating
solution for the first layer were replaced by an equimolar amount of the yellow coupler
and the reducing agent for color formation shown in Tables a-1 and a-2, respectively,
and that the compound shown in Tables a-1 and a-2 was further added to the solvent
in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing agent for color formation and co-emulsified.
[0249] Samples (200) to (237) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (100)
except that Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A in the coating solution for the first
layer was replaced by an equal amount in terms of silver of Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion
B shown below, that the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation were replaced
by an equimolar amount of the magenta coupler and the reducing agent for color formation
shown in Tables b-1 and b-2, respectively, and that the compound shown in Tables b-1
and b-2 was further added to the solvent in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing
agent for color formation and co-emulsified.
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion B:
[0250] Cubic; a 1:3 (by Ag mol) mixture of Large Size Emulsion B having an average grain
size of 0.55 µm and Small Size Emulsion B having an average grain size of 0.39 µm;
the emulsions having a coefficient of variation in the grain size distribution of
0.10 and 0.08, respectively; and the emulsion of each size containing 0.8 mol% of
AgBr localized on a part of the grain surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride.
[0251] In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion B, the following spectral sensitizing dyes were
used for respective size emulsions.
Sensitizing Dye D
[0252]

Sensitizing Dye E
[0253]

Sensitizing Dye F
[0254]

(Sensitizing Dye D was added in an amount, for the large size grain, of 3.0×10
-4 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 3.6×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide; Sensitizing Dye E was added in an amount, for the
large size grain, of 4.0×10
-5 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 7.0×10
-5 mol, per mol of silver halide; and Sensitizing Dye F was added in an amount, for
the large size grain, of 2.0×10
-4 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 2.8×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide.)
[0255] Samples (300) to (337) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (100)
except that Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A in the coating solution for the first
layer was replaced by an equal amount in terms of silver of Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion
C shown below, that the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation were replaced
by an equimolar amount of the cyan coupler and the reducing agent for color formation
shown in Tables c-1 and c-2, respectively, and that the compound shown in Tables c-1
and c-2 was further added to the solvent in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing
agent for color formation and co-emulsified.
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion C:
[0256] Cubic; a 1:4 (by Ag mol) mixture of Large Size Emulsion C having an average grain
size of 0.5 µm and a small size emulsion having an average grain size of 0.41 µm;
the emulsions having a coefficient of variation in the grain size distribution of
0.09 and 0.11, respectively; and the emulsion of each size containing 0.8 mol% of
AgBr localized on a part of the grain surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride.
[0257] In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion C, the following spectral sensitizing dyes were
used for respective size emulsions.
Sensitizing Dye G
[0258]

Sensitizing Dye H
[0259]

(Each sensitizing dye was added in an amount, for the large size emulsion, of 5.0×10
-5 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 8.0×10
-5 mol per mol of silver halide.)
Surface Active Agent (Cpd-1)
[0260] A 7:3 mixture (by weight) of:

Antiseptic (Cpd-2)
[0261]

Antiseptic (Cpd-3)
[0262]

Antiseptic (Cpd-4)
[0263] A 1:1:1:1 mixture of a, b, c and d.
|
R1 |
R2 |
a |
-Me |
-NHMe |
b |
-Me |
-NH2 |
c |
-H |
-NH2 |
d |
-H |
-NHMe |
Antiseptic (Cpd-5)
[0264]

Solvent (Solv-1)
[0265]

[0266] The thus prepared samples were immediately subjected to gradation exposure using
Model FWH Sensitometer (color temperature of light source: 3,200°K) manufactured by
Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd., through a blue filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples
(100) to (137), through a green filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples (200)
to (237), and through a red filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples (300) to
(337).
[0267] After the exposure, samples were processed through the following processing steps
using the processing solutions described below.
Processing Step |
Temperature (°C) |
Time (sec.) |
Development |
40 |
20 |
Bleach-fixing |
40 |
45 |
Rinsing |
room temperature |
45 |
Alkali treatment |
room temperature |
30 |
Developer
[0268]
Water |
600 ml |
Potassium phosphate |
40 g |
Disodium-N,N-bis(sulfonatoethyl)hydroxylamine |
10 g |
KCl |
5 g |
Hydroxyethylidene-1,1-diphosphonic acid (30%) |
4 ml |
1-Phenyl-4-methyl-4-hydroxymethyl-3-pyrazolidone |
1 g |
Water to make |
1,000 ml |
pH (at 25°C, with potassium hydroxide) |
12 |
Bleach-Fixing Solution
[0269]
Water |
600 ml |
Ammonium thiosulfate (700 g/ℓ) |
93 ml |
Ammonium sulfite |
40 g |
Ammonium ethylenediaminetetraacetato ferrate |
55 g |
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid |
2 g |
Nitric acid (67%) |
30 g |
Water to make |
1,000 ml |
pH (at 25°C, with acetic acid and aqueous solution) |
5.8 |
Rinsing Solution
[0270]
Chlorinated sodium isocyanurate |
0.02 g |
Deionized water (electric conductivity: 5 µS/cm or less) |
1,000 ml |
pH |
6.5 |
Alkali Treating Solution
[0271]
Water |
800 ml |
Potassium carbonate |
30 g |
Water to make |
1,000 ml |
pH (with 1N sulfuric acid or 1N potassium hydroxide) |
10 |
[0272] After the processing, samples were measured on the maximum color density area (Dmax),
in the case of Samples (100) to (137), with blue light, in the case of Samples (200)
to (237), with green light, and in the case of Samples (300) to (337), with red light.
The results obtained are shown in Tables a-1 and a-2, Tables b-1 and b-2, and Tables
c-1 and c-2, respectively.
[0273] Further, each of unprocessed samples was allowed to stand at a temperature of 80°C
and a humidity of 70% for one week and then, subjected to bleach-fixing, rinsing and
alkali treatment at the same temperature in the same processing time using the same
formulation as above.
[0274] After the processing, samples were measured on the density (Dmin), in the case of
Samples (100) to (137), with blue light, in the case of Samples (200) to (237), with
green light, and in the case of Samples (300) to (337), with red light. The results
obtained are shown in Tables a-1 and a-2, Tables b-1 and b-2, and Tables c-1 and c-2,
respectively.
TABLE a-1
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
100 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
- |
1.88 |
0.38 |
Comparison |
101 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.88 |
0.24 |
Invention |
102 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.88 |
0.24 |
" |
103 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.88 |
0.24 |
" |
104 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.88 |
0.24 |
" |
105 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.88 |
0.24 |
" |
106 |
I-8 |
C-77 |
- |
1.65 |
0.40 |
Comparison |
107 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.65 |
0.25 |
Invention |
108 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.65 |
0.25 |
" |
109 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.65 |
0.25 |
" |
110 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.65 |
0.25 |
" |
111 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.65 |
0.25 |
" |
112 |
I-24 |
C-76 |
- |
1.91 |
0.44 |
Comparison |
113 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.91 |
0.26 |
Invention |
114 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.91 |
0.26 |
" |
115 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.91 |
0.26 |
" |
116 |
I-32 |
C-21 |
- |
2.01 |
0.37 |
Comparison |
117 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.01 |
0.22 |
Invention |
118 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.01 |
0.22 |
" |
119 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
2.01 |
0.22 |
" |
120 |
I-27 |
" |
- |
1.93 |
0.35 |
Comparison |
TABLE a-2
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
121 |
I-27 |
C-21 |
A-17 |
1.97 |
0.24 |
Invention |
122 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.93 |
0.24 |
" |
123 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.93 |
0.24 |
" |
124 |
I-39 |
" |
- |
1.60 |
0.41 |
Comparison |
125 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.60 |
0.24 |
Invention |
126 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.60 |
0.24 |
" |
127 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.65 |
0.24 |
" |
128 |
I-6 |
C-77 |
- |
1.61 |
0.39 |
Comparison |
129 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.61 |
0.25 |
Invention |
130 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.61 |
0.25 |
" |
131 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.61 |
0.25 |
" |
132 |
I-61 |
C-14 |
- |
1.85 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
133 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.85 |
0.33 |
Invention |
134 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.85 |
0.33 |
" |
135 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.85 |
0.33 |
" |
136 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.85 |
0.33 |
" |
137 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.85 |
0.33 |
" |
TABLE b-1
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
200 |
I-16 |
C-56 |
- |
1.83 |
0.37 |
Comparison |
201 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.83 |
0.22 |
Invention |
202 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.83 |
0.22 |
" |
203 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.83 |
0.22 |
" |
204 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.83 |
0.22 |
" |
205 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.83 |
0.22 |
" |
206 |
I-8 |
C-28 |
- |
2.34 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
207 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
2.34 |
0.28 |
Invention |
208 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
2.34 |
0.28 |
" |
209 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.34 |
0.28 |
" |
210 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.34 |
0.28 |
" |
211 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.34 |
0.28 |
" |
212 |
I-24 |
C-56 |
- |
1.85 |
0.38 |
Comparison |
213 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.85 |
0.25 |
Invention |
214 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.85 |
0.25 |
" |
215 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.85 |
0.25 |
" |
216 |
I-32 |
" |
- |
1.95 |
0.38 |
Comparison |
217 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.95 |
0.25 |
Invention |
218 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.95 |
0.25 |
" |
219 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.95 |
0.25 |
" |
220 |
I-27 |
" |
- |
1.82 |
0.37 |
Comparison |
TABLE b-2
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
221 |
I-27 |
C-56 |
A-17 |
1.82 |
0.23 |
Invention |
222 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.82 |
0.23 |
" |
223 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.82 |
0.23 |
" |
224 |
I-39 |
" |
- |
1.58 |
0.40 |
Comparison |
225 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.58 |
0.26 |
Invention |
226 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.58 |
0.26 |
" |
227 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.58 |
0.26 |
" |
228 |
I-6 |
C-28 |
- |
2.32 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
229 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.32 |
0.27 |
Invention |
230 |
" |
" |
A-32 |
2.32 |
0.27 |
" |
231 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.32 |
0.27 |
" |
232 |
I-61 |
C-40 |
- |
1.42 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
233 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.42 |
0.34 |
Invention |
234 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.42 |
0.34 |
" |
235 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.42 |
0.34 |
" |
236 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.42 |
0.34 |
" |
237 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.42 |
0.34 |
" |
TABLE c-1
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
300 |
I-16 |
C-43 |
- |
1.46 |
0.36 |
Comparison |
301 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.46 |
0.20 |
Invention |
302 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.46 |
0.20 |
" |
303 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.46 |
0.20 |
" |
304 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.46 |
0.20 |
" |
305 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.46 |
0.20 |
" |
306 |
I-8 |
C-42 |
- |
1.49 |
0.44 |
Comparison |
307 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.49 |
0.22 |
Invention |
308 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.49 |
0.22 |
" |
309 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.49 |
0.22 |
" |
310 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.49 |
0.22 |
" |
311 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.49 |
0.22 |
" |
312 |
I-24 |
C-43 |
- |
1.55 |
0.40 |
Comparison |
313 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.55 |
0.23 |
Invention |
314 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.55 |
0.23 |
" |
315 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.55 |
0.23 |
" |
316 |
I-32 |
C-69 |
- |
1.71 |
0.41 |
Comparison |
317 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.71 |
0.23 |
Invention |
318 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.71 |
0.23 |
" |
319 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.71 |
0.23 |
" |
320 |
I-27 |
" |
- |
1.64 |
0.39 |
Comparison |
TABLE c-2
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
321 |
I-27 |
C-69 |
A-17 |
1.64 |
0.21 |
Invention |
322 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.64 |
0.21 |
" |
323 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.64 |
0.21 |
" |
324 |
I-39 |
" |
- |
1.42 |
0.39 |
Comparison |
325 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.42 |
0.23 |
Invention |
326 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.42 |
0.23 |
" |
327 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.42 |
0.23 |
" |
328 |
I-6 |
C-42 |
- |
1.48 |
0.39 |
Comparison |
329 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.48 |
0.24 |
Invention |
330 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.48 |
0.24 |
" |
331 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.48 |
0.24 |
" |
332 |
I-61 |
C-44 |
- |
1.41 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
333 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.41 |
0.34 |
Invention |
334 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.41 |
0.34 |
" |
335 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.41 |
0.34 |
" |
336 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.41 |
0.34 |
" |
337 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.41 |
0.34 |
" |
[0275] As is clearly seen from the results in Tables a-1 to c-2, when the reducing agent
for color formation according to the present invention was used, the unprocessed light-sensitive
material underwent increase of stains at the unexposed area upon storage for a long
period of time at a high temperature and a high humidity, however, this increase of
stains could be suppressed by using the compound according to the present invention.
It is also seen that when the compound according to the present invention was used,
the color density was not reduced.
[0276] Further, in the similar experiment under irradiation of light, stains could be suppressed
by using the compound according to the present invention.
EXAMPLE 2
[0277] The surface of a paper support having laminated on both surfaces thereof with polyethylene
was subjected to corona discharge treatment, a gelatin subbing layer containing sodium
dodecylbenzenesulfonate was provided thereon, and three kinds of photographic constituent
layers were coated thereon to prepare Photographic Color Printing Paper (400) having
a three-layer structure described below. The coating solutions were prepared as follows.
Coating Solution for Second Layer
[0278] In ethyl acetate, 17 g of Yellow Coupler (C-76), 20 g of Reducing Agent (I-16) for
color formation and 80 g of Solvent (Solv-2) were dissolved, and the resulting solution
was emulsion-dispersed in a 16% aqueous gelatin solution containing a 10% sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate
and a citric acid to prepare Emulsion Dispersion D. Emulsion Dispersion D and Silver
Chlorobromide Emulsion A used in Example 1 were mixed and dissolved to prepare a coating
solution for the second layer having the following composition. The emulsion coated
amount is a coated amount calculated in terms of silver.
[0279] The coating solutions for the first and third layers were prepared in the same manner
as the coating solution for the second layer. In each layer, 1-oxy-3,5-dichloro-s-triazine
sodium salt was used as a gelatin hardening agent.
[0280] Further, Cpd-2, Cpd-3, Cpd-4 and Cpd-5 used in Example 1 were added to each layer
to have a total coverage of 15.0 mg/m
2, 60.0 mg/m
2, 50.0 mg/m
2 and 10.0 mg/m
2, respectively.
[0281] In the silver chlorobromide emulsion of the second layer, Blue Sensitizing Dyes A,
B and C used in Example 1 were used in the same amount as used in Example 1.
[0282] Further, 1-(5-methylureidophenyl)-5-mercaptotetrazole was added to the second layer
in an amount of 3.0×10
-3 mol per mol of silver halide.
(Layer Structure)
[0283] The composition of each layer is shown below. The numerals show the coated amount
(g/m
2). In the case of silver halide emulsions, it is a coated amount in terms of silver.
Support
[0284] Polyethylene laminated paper
[Polyethylene on the first layer side contained a white pigment (TiO
2, 15 wt%) and a bluish dye (ultramarine).]
First Layer
[0285]
Gelatin |
1.12 |
1,5-Diphenyl-3-pyrazolidone (ETA-6 described above) (in the state of fine particle
solid dispersion) |
0.02 |
Second Layer
[0286]
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A described above |
0.20 |
Gelatin |
1.50 |
Yellow Coupler (C-76) |
0.17 |
Reducing Agent (I-16) for color formation |
0.20 |
Solvent (Solv-2) |
0.80 |
Third Layer (Protective Layer)
[0287]
Gelatin |
1.01 |
Acryl-modified copolymer of polyvinyl alcohol (modification degree: 17%) |
0.04 |
Liquid paraffin |
0.02 |
Surface Active Agent (Cpd-1) used in Example 1 |
0.01 |
Solvent (Solve-2)
[0288]

[0289] Samples (401) to (413) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (400)
except that the yellow coupler and the reducing agent for color formation in the coating
solution for the second layer were replaced by an equimolar amount of the yellow coupler
and the reducing agent for color formation shown in Table d, respectively, and that
the compound shown in Table d was further added to the solvent in an amount of 20
mol% based on the reducing agent for color formation and co-emulsified.
[0290] Samples (500) to (513) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (400)
except that Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A in the coating solution for the second
layer was replaced by an equal amount in terms of silver of Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion
B used in Example 1, that the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation were
replaced by an equimolar amount of the magenta coupler and the reducing agent for
color formation shown in Table e, respectively, and that the compound shown in Table
e was further added to the solvent in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing agent
for color formation and co-emulsified. In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion B, Green Sensitizing
Dyes D, E and F used in Example 1 were used in the same amount as used in Example
1.
[0291] Samples (600) to (613) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (400)
except that Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A in the coating solution for the second
layer was replaced by an equal amount in terms of silver of Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion
C used in Example 1, that the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation were
replaced by an equimolar amount of the cyan coupler and the reducing agent for color
formation shown in Table f, respectively, and that the compound shown in Table f was
further added to the solvent in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing agent for
color formation and co-emulsified. In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion C, Red Sensitizing
Dyes G and H used in Example 1 were used in the same amount as used in Example 1.
[0292] The thus prepared samples were immediately subjected to gradation exposure using
Model FWH Sensitometer (color temperature of light source: 3,200°K) manufactured by
Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd., through a blue filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples
(400) to (413), through a green filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples (500)
to (513), and through a red filter for sensitometry in the case of Samples (600) to
(613).
[0293] After the exposure, samples were processed through the following processing steps
using the processing solutions described below.
Processing Step |
Temperature (°C) |
Time (sec.) |
Development |
40 |
20 |
Bleach-fixing |
40 |
45 |
Rinsing |
room temperature |
45 |
Developer (alkali activating solution)
[0294]
Water |
600 ml |
Potassium phosphate |
40 g |
KCl |
5 g |
Hydroxyethylidene-1,1-diphosphonic acid (30%) |
4 ml |
Water to make |
1,000 ml |
pH (at 25°C, with potassium hydroxide) |
12 |
[0295] The bleach-fixing solution and the rinsing solution were the same as the bleach-fixing
solution and the rinsing solution used in Example 1.
[0296] After the processing, samples were measured on the maximum color density area, in
the case of Samples (400) to (413), with blue light, in the case of Samples (500)
to (513), with green light, and in the case of Samples (600) to (613), with red light.
The results obtained are shown in Tables d, e and f, respectively.
[0297] Further, similarly to Example 1, each of unprocessed samples was stored at a temperature
of 80°C and a humidity of 70% and then, subjected to bleach-fixing and rinsing in
the same manner as in Example 1. After the processing, samples were measured on the
density (Dmin), in the case of Samples (400) to (413), with blue light, in the case
of Samples (500) to (513), with green light, and in the case of Samples (600) to (613),
with red light. The results obtained are shown in Tables d, e and f, respectively.
TABLE d
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
400 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
- |
2.13 |
0.38 |
Comparison |
401 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
2.13 |
0.24 |
Invention |
402 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
2.13 |
0.24 |
" |
403 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.13 |
0.24 |
" |
404 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.13 |
0.24 |
" |
405 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.13 |
0.24 |
" |
406 |
I-1 |
C-77 |
- |
2.03 |
0.40 |
Comparison |
407 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.03 |
0.25 |
Invention |
408 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.03 |
0.25 |
" |
409 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
2.03 |
0.25 |
" |
410 |
I-32 |
C-21 |
- |
2.24 |
0.37 |
Comparison |
411 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.24 |
0.22 |
Invention |
412 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.24 |
0.22 |
" |
413 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.24 |
0.22 |
" |
TABLE e
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
500 |
I-16 |
C-56 |
- |
2.15 |
0.37 |
Comparison |
501 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
2.15 |
0.22 |
Invention |
502 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
2.15 |
0.22 |
" |
503 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.15 |
0.22 |
" |
504 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.15 |
0.22 |
" |
505 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.15 |
0.22 |
" |
506 |
I-8 |
C-28 |
- |
2.49 |
0.45 |
Comparison |
507 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.49 |
0.28 |
Invention |
508 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.49 |
0.28 |
" |
509 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
2.49 |
0.28 |
" |
510 |
I-32 |
C-56 |
- |
2.18 |
0.38 |
Comparison |
511 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
2.18 |
0.25 |
Invention |
512 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
2.18 |
0.25 |
" |
513 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
2.18 |
0.25 |
" |
TABLE f
Sample No. |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Coupler |
Compound |
Dmax |
Dmin |
Remarks |
600 |
I-16 |
C-43 |
- |
1.82 |
0.36 |
Comparison |
601 |
" |
" |
A-4 |
1.82 |
0.20 |
Invention |
602 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.82 |
0.20 |
" |
603 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.82 |
0.20 |
" |
604 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.82 |
0.20 |
" |
605 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.82 |
0.20 |
" |
606 |
I-1 |
C-42 |
- |
1.92 |
0.44 |
Comparison |
607 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.92 |
0.22 |
Invention |
608 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.92 |
0.22 |
" |
609 |
" |
" |
A-13 |
1.92 |
0.22 |
" |
610 |
I-32 |
C-69 |
- |
1.99 |
0.41 |
Comparison |
611 |
" |
" |
A-17 |
1.99 |
0.23 |
Invention |
612 |
" |
" |
A-25 |
1.99 |
0.23 |
" |
613 |
" |
" |
A-39 |
1.99 |
0.23 |
" |
[0298] As is clearly seen from the results in Tables d, e and f, even when an auxiliary
developing agent was incorporated into the light-sensitive material, by using the
compound according to the present invention similarly to Example 1, increase of stains
could be suppressed. Further, it is seen that also in this case, the color density
was not reduced.
[0299] Furthermore, in the similar experiment under irradiation of light, stains could be
suppressed by using the compound according to the present invention.
EXAMPLE 3
[0300] The surface of a paper support having laminated on both surfaces thereof with polyethylene
was subjected to corona discharge treatment, a gelatin subbing layer containing sodium
dodecylbenzenesulfonate was provided thereon, and various photographic constituent
layers were coated thereon to prepare Photographic Multi-Layer Color Printing Paper
(700) having a layer structure described below. The coating solutions were prepared
as follows.
Coating Solution for First Layer
[0301] In ethyl acetate, 17 g of Coupler (C-76), 20 g of Reducing Agent (I-16) for color
formation and 80 g of Solvent (Solv-2) used in Example 2 were dissolved, and the resulting
solution was emulsion-dispersed in a 16% aqueous gelatin solution containing a 10%
sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate and a citric acid to prepare Emulsion Dispersion D.
Emulsion Dispersion D and Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A used in Example 1 were mixed
and dissolved to prepare a coating solution for the first layer having the following
composition. The emulsion coated amount is a coated amount calculated in terms of
silver.
[0302] The coating solutions for the second to seventh layers were prepared in the same
manner as the coating solution for the first layer. In each layer, 1-oxy-3,5-dichloro-s-triazine
sodium salt was used as a gelatin hardening agent.
[0303] Further, Cpd-2, Cpd-3, Cpd-4 and Cpd-5 used in Example 1 were added to each layer
to have a total coverage of 15.0 mg/m
2, 60.0 mg/m
2, 50.0 mg/m
2 and 10.0 mg/m
2, respectively.
[0304] In the silver chlorobromide emulsion of the first layer, the third layer and the
fifth layer, Blue Sensitizing Dyes A, B and C, Green Sensitizing Dyes D, E and F,
and Red Sensitizing Dyes G and H, used in Example 1 were used, respectively, in the
same amount as used in Example 1.
[0305] In the fifth layer (red-sensitive layer), the following compound was further added
in an amount of 2.6×10
-2 mol per mol of silver halide.

[0306] Further, 1-(5-methylureidophenyl)-5-mercaptotetrazole was added to the blue-sensitive
emulsion layer, the green-sensitive emulsion layer and the red-sensitive emulsion
layer in an amount of 3.5×10
-4 mol, 3.0×10
-3 mol and 2.5×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide, respectively.
[0307] Furthermore, 4-hydroxy-6-methyl-1,3,3a,7-tetrazaindene was added to the blue-sensitive
emulsion layer and the green-sensitive emulsion layer in an amount of 1×10
-4 mol and 2×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide, respectively.
[0308] For the purpose of preventing irradiation, the following dyes (the coated amount
is shown in the parenthesis) was added to each emulsion layer.

(Layer Structure)
[0309] The composition of each layer is shown below. The numerals show the coated amount
(g/m
2). In the case of silver halide emulsion, it is a coated amount in terms of silver.
Support
[0310] Polyethylene laminated paper
[Polyethylene on the first layer side contained a white pigment (TiO
2, 15 wt%) and a bluish dye (ultramarine).]
First Layer (Blue-Sensitive Emulsion Layer)
[0311]
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion A described above |
0.20 |
Gelatin |
1.50 |
Yellow Coupler (C-76) |
0.17 |
Reducing Agent (I-16) for color formation |
0.20 |
Solvent (Solv-2) |
0.80 |
Second Layer (Color Mixing Preventing Layer)
[0312]
Gelatin |
1.09 |
Color Mixing Inhibitor (Cpd-6) |
0.11 |
Solvent (Solv-1) used in Example 1 |
0.19 |
Solvent (Solv-3) |
0.07 |
Solvent (Solv-4) |
0.25 |
Solvent (Solv-5) |
0.09 |
1,5-Diphenyl-3-pyrazolidone (in the state of fine particle solid dispersion) |
0.03 |
Third Layer (Green-Sensitive Emulsion Layer)
[0313]
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion B described above |
0.20 |
Gelatin |
1.50 |
Magenta Coupler (C-56) |
0.24 |
Reducing Agent (I-16) for color formation |
0.20 |
Solvent (Solv-2) |
0.80 |
Fourth Layer (Color Mixing Preventing Layer)
[0314]
Gelatin |
0.77 |
Color Mixing Inhibitor (Cpd-6) |
0.08 |
Solvent (Solv-1) |
0.14 |
Solvent (Solv-3) |
0.05 |
Solvent (Solv-4) |
0.14 |
Solvent (Solv-5) |
0.06 |
1,5-Diphenyl-3-pyrazolidone (in the state of fine particle solid dispersion) |
0.02 |
Fifth Layer (Red-Sensitive Emulsion Layer)
[0315]
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion C described above |
0.20 |
Gelatin |
0.15 |
Cyan Coupler (C-43) |
0.21 |
Reducing Agent (I-16) for color formation |
0.20 |
Solvent (Solv-2) |
0.80 |
Sixth Layer (Ultraviolet Absorbing Layer)
[0316]
Gelatin |
0.64 |
Ultraviolet Absorbent (UV-1) |
0.39 |
Solvent (Solv-6) |
0.05 |
Seventh Layer (Protective Layer)
[0317]
Gelatin |
1.01 |
Acryl-modified copolymer of polyvinyl alcohol (modification degree: 17%) |
0.04 |
Liquid paraffin |
0.02 |
Surface Active Agent (Cpd-1) used in Example 1 |
0.01 |
Color Mixing Inhibitor (Cpd-6)
[0318] A 1:1:1 (by weight) mixture of (1), (2) and (3):

Solvent (Solv-3)
[0319]

Solvent (Solve-4)
[0320]

(Solvent (Solv-5)
[0321]

Solvent (Solv-6)
[0322] C
8H
17OCO-(CH
2)
8-COOC
8H
17
Ultraviolet Absorbent (UV-1)
[0323] A 1:2:2:3:1 (by weight) mixture of (1), (2), (3), (4) and (5):

[0324] Samples (701) to (709) were prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (700)
except that the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation of Sample (700)
were replaced by an equimolar amount of the coupler and the reducing agent for color
formation shown in Table g, respectively, and that the compound shown in Table g was
further added to the solvent in an amount of 20 mol% based on the reducing agent for
color formation and co-emulsified.
[0325] The thus prepared samples all were immediately subjected to gradation exposure using
Model FWH Sensitometer (color temperature of light source: 3,200°K) manufactured by
Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd., through a three color resolution filter for sensitometry.
[0326] After the exposure, samples were processed through the following processing steps
using the processing solutions described below.
Processing Step |
Temperature (°C) |
Time (sec.) |
Color Development |
40 |
30 |
Bleach-fixing |
40 |
45 |
Rinsing |
room temperature |
90 |
[0327] The color developer, the bleach-fixing solution and the rinsing solution were the
same as the developer, the bleach-fixing solution and the rinsing solution used in
Example 2.
[0328] After the processing, samples were measured on the maximum color density area with
red light, green light or blue light. The results obtained are shown in Table g.
[0329] Further, similarly to Example 1, each of unprocessed samples was stored at a temperature
of 80°C and a humidity of 70% and then, subjected to bleach-fixing and rising in the
same manner as in Example 1.
[0330] After the processing, samples were measured on the density (Dmin) with blue light,
green light or red light. The results obtained are shown in Table g.

[0331] As is clearly seen from the results in Table g, even in the case of a multilayered
light-sensitive material where an auxiliary developing agent was incorporated into
the light-sensitive material, similarly to Example 1, increase of stains could be
suppressed by using the compound according to the present invention. Further, it is
seen that when the compound according to the present invention was used, the color
density was not reduced.
[0332] Furthermore, also in the similar experiment under light irradiation, stains could
be suppressed by using the compound according to the present invention.
EXAMPLE 4
[0333] Sample (800) was prepared thoroughly in the same manner as Sample (700) in Example
3 except that Silver Chlorobromide Emulsions A, B and C in the first, third and fifth
layers of Sample (700) were replaced by Silver Chlorobromide Emulsions D, E and F
shown below, respectively, and the coated silver amounts of respective emulsions were
0.01 g/m
2, 0.01 g/m
2 and 0.015 g/m
2.
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion D:
[0334] Cubic; a 3:7 (by Ag mol) mixture of Large Size Emulsion D having an average grain
size of 0.10 µm and Small Size Emulsion D having an average grain size of 0.08 µm;
the emulsions having a coefficient of variation in the grain size distribution of
0.08 and 0.10, respectively; and the emulsion of each size containing 0.3 mol% of
AgBr localized on a part of the grain surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride.
Chemical ripening of this emulsion was optimally performed by adding a sulfur sensitizer
and a gold sensitizer.
[0335] In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion D, Blue Sensitizing Dyes A, B and C used in Example
1 were used each in an amount, for Large Size Emulsion D, of 7.0×10
-4 mol and for Small Size Emulsion D, of 8.5×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide.
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion E:
[0336] Cubic; a 1:3 (by Ag mol) mixture of Large Size Emulsion E having an average grain
size of 0.10 µm and Small Size Emulsion E having an average grain size of 0.08 µm;
the emulsions having a coefficient of variation in the grain size distribution of
0.10 and 0.08, respectively; and the emulsion of each size containing 0.8 mol% of
AgBr localized on a part of the grain surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride.
[0337] In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion E, Green Sensitizing Dyes D, E, and F used in Example
1 were used. Sensitizing Dye D was added in an amount, for the large size emulsion,
of 1.5×10
-3 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 1.8×10
-3 mol, per mol of silver halide. Sensitizing Dye E was added in an amount, for the
large size emulsion, of 2.0×10
-4 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 3.5×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide. Sensitising Dye F was added in an amount, for the
large size emulsion, of 1.0×10
-3 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 1.4×10
-3 mol, per mol of silver halide.
Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion F:
[0338] Cubic; a 1:4 (by Ag mol) mixture of Large Size Emulsion F having an average grain
size of 0.10 µm and Small Size Emulsion F having an average grain size of 0.08 µm;
the emulsions having a coefficient of variation in the grain size distribution of
0.09 and 0.11, respectively; and the emulsion of each size containing 0.8 mol% of
AgBr localized on a part of the grain surface comprising a substrate of silver chloride.
[0339] In Silver Chlorobromide Emulsion F, Red Sensitizing Dyes G and H used in Example
1 were used each in an amount, for the large size emulsion, of 2.5×10
-4 mol and for the small size emulsion, of 4.0×10
-4 mol, per mol of silver halide.
[0340] Samples (801) to (809) were prepared in the same manner as Sample (800) except that
the reducing agent for color formation and the coupler of Sample (800) were replaced
by an equimolar amount of the coupler and the reducing agent for color formation shown
below, respectively, and the compound according to the present invention was further
added to the solvent in each of the first, third and fifth layers in an amount of
20 mol% based on the reducing agent for color formation in each layer and co-emulsified.
Sample |
Reducing Agent for Color Formation |
Yellow Coupler |
Magenta Coupler |
Cyan Coupler |
Compound |
801 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
C-56 |
C-43 |
A-4 |
802 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
C-56 |
C-43 |
A-13 |
803 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
C-56 |
C-43 |
A-17 |
804 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
C-56 |
C-43 |
A-25 |
805 |
I-16 |
C-76 |
C-56 |
C-43 |
A-39 |
806 |
I-8 |
C-77 |
C-28 |
C-42 |
- |
807 |
I-8 |
C-77 |
C-28 |
C-42 |
A-17 |
808 |
I-32 |
C-21 |
C-56 |
C-69 |
- |
809 |
I-32 |
C-21 |
C-56 |
C-69 |
A-25 |
[0341] Each sample was exposed in the same manner as in Example 3 and processed with an
intensifier which was a 0.3% aqueous solution of hydrogen peroxide having a pH of
12.0 obtained by adding hydrogen peroxide to the developer used in Example 3. Then,
even when a light-sensitive material greatly reduced in the silver amount was used,
an image having a high maximum density similarly to Example 3 could be obtained. Further,
in samples to which the compound according to the present invention was added, the
image exhibited good prevervability, whereby a sharp image reduced in stains even
after storage under high temperature and high humidity or light irradiation conditions,
could be obtained.
[0342] The light-sensitive material of the present invention was verified that it is suitable
for the image formation amplified by the intensification processing of a low silver
light-sensitive material.
EXAMPLE 5
[0343] Using Samples (700) to (709) in Example 3, the same processing and evaluation as
in Example 3 were performed except for conducting exposure as follows.
(Exposure)
[0344] The light sources used were a YAG solid laser (oscillation wavelength: 946 nm) using
a semiconductor laser GaAlAs (oscillation wavelength: 808.5 nm) as an excitation light
source and taken out after wavelength conversion by an SHG crystal of KNbO
3 to 473 nm, a YVO
4 solid laser (oscillation wavelength: 1,064 nm) using a semiconductor laser GaAlAs
(oscillation wavelength: 808.7 nm) as an excitation light source and taken out after
wavelength conversion by an SHG crystal of KTP to 532 nm, and AlGaInP (oscillation
wavelength: about 670 nm; Type No. TOLD9211, manufactured by Toshiba KK). The laser
lights each was an apparatus capable of scan exposing in sequence the photographic
color printing paper moving in the vertical direction to the scan direction, by means
of a rotating polyhedron. Using these apparatuses, the relation D-logE between the
density (D) of the light-sensitive material and the luminous energy (E) was obtained
by varying the quantity of light. In this case, the laser lights of three wavelengths
were modulated in the quantity of light using an external modulator to control the
exposure amount. The scan exposure was performed at 400 dpi and the average exposure
time per pixel was about 5×10
-8 second. The semiconductor lasers were kept at a constant temperature using a Peltier
element so as to suppress change in the quantity of light due to the temperature.
[0345] As a result, the image formed by a high-illuminance digital exposure could also have
a high maximum density and when the compound according to the present invention was
used, the image was reduced in stains even after storage under high temperature and
high humidity or light irradiation conditions.
[0346] According to the present invention, low replenishment and small discharge can be
achieved, satins after a long-term storage of the light-sensitive material are reduced,
and an image having a high color density can be obtained.
[0347] While the invention has been described in detail and with reference to specific embodiments
thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications
can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.