FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a light-sensitive black-and-white silver halide
photographic material having a multilayer composition of light-sensitive silver halide
emulsion layers comprising negative image type tabular emulsion crystals and a method
of image formation in the field of industrial radiographic non-destructive testing
applications.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Light-sensitive black-and-white as well as color photographic silver halide materials
comprising silver halide emulsion layers having negative image type tabular silver
halide emulsion crystals or grains have become more and more important during the
last decade. Tabular silver halide grains are meanwhile well-known as crystals possessing
two parallel faces with a ratio between a diameter of a circle having the same area
as these faces, and the thickness, being the distance between the two major faces,
equal to at least 2. Tabular grains are known in the photographic art for quite some
time. As early as 1961 Berry et al. described the preparation and growth of tabular
silver bromoiodide grains in Photographic Science and Engineering, Vol 5, No 6. A
discussion of tabular grains appeared in Duffin, Photographic Emulsion Chemistry,
Focal Press, 1966, p. 66-72. Early patent literature includes Bogg, US-A 4,063,951,
Lewis US-A 4,067,739 and Maternaghan US-A's 4,150,994; 4,184,877 and 4,184,878. However
the tabular grains described therein cannot be regarded as showing a high diameter
to thickness ratio, commonly termed aspect ratio. In a number of US-Patent Applications
filed in 1981 and issued in 1984 tabular grains with high aspect ratio and their advantages
in photographic applications are described as in US-A's 4,434,226; 4,439,520, 4,425,425,
4,425,426 and in Research Disclosure, Volume 225, Jan 1983, Item 22534.
[0003] For radiographic applications the main photographic advantages of tabular grains
compared to normal globular grains are a high covering power at high forehardening
levels, a high developability and higher sharpness, especially in double side coated
spectrally sensitized materials. The thinner the tabular grains the greater these
advantages.
In the references on tabular grains cited above especially silver bromide or silver
bromoiodide emulsions having a high sensitivity are disclosed whereas the use of e.g.
emulsions with tabular grains rich in silver chloride was considered to be disadvantageous
with respect to sensitivity. For emulsions with crystals rich in silver chloride,
applications in the field of less sensitive materials as e.g. graphic arts materials,
duplicating materials, radiographic hardcopy materials, diffusion transfer reversal
materials and black-and-white or colour print materials are well-known. The advantages
of said emulsions with crystals rich in chloride regarding higher development and
fixing rates, are highly appreciated. Indeed as nowadays the tendency is present to
get materials processed in shorter processing times, it is highly appreciated to combine
said advantages with a high sensitivity for application in high-sensitive materials,
an object which can be realized as has been described in EP-A 0 678 772.
Just as in applications mentioned hereinbefore in the field of industrial radiography,
especially for non-destructive testing applications, any time saving measure is welcome:
after exposure with direct-röntgen rays, industrial non-destructive testing film is
automatically processed in a cycle, varying from 8 to 12 minutes, wherein the tendency
is to reduce the processing time to a maximum of 5 minutes. One method to reach that
goal has been described in US-A 5,397,687 wherein cubic silver halide crystals rich
in chloride are used, permitting further a decreased fixing time for the non-developed
silver halide crystals rich in silver chloride in a still acceptable short time. Rapid
processing of silver halide crystals rich in chloride however leads to high contrast
and a higher noise level (more granularity).
Otherwise silver cubic bromoiodide grains, although having a slower development rate,
are used preferably in NDT-applications for the following reason. In order to achieve
high film speed, which is an indispensible asset especially for direct-röntgen applications,
efficient absorption of the exposure radiation is a prime condition. It has been shown
empirically that for X-rays the mass absorption coefficient is proportional to a power
of the atomic number Z as has been described in the "Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Physics"
vol. 7, p. 787, eq. 10, Ed. J.Thewlis, Pergamom Press, Oxford 1957. This strongly
disfavours the use of chloride (Z=17) compared to bromide (Z=35) or iodide (Z=54).
As a consequence bromide and iodide ions released in the developer further inhibit
development of the remaining developable silver halide crystals, so that the regeneration
capacity (replenishment) of the developer should be increased resulting in consumption
of higher amounts of chemicals, a higher cost and more environmental load.
One method to reduce processing time and consumption of chemicals consists in lowering
coated amounts of silver. A reduction of sensitivity for direct-Röngten rays normally
leads to a lowering in contrast, which is in favour of image quality (especially graininess)
but makes maximum density decrease to an unacceptable level. When moreover only use
can be made of radiation sources for X-rays having a lower energy output (exposure
energies of about 100 kVp instead of the normally used 220 kVp) a higher exposure
contrast further leads to even higher contrasts and reduced speed. Although said reduced
speed can be compensated in industrial radiographic exposure techniques by application
of intensifying screens in contact with industrial non-destructive test film materials,
thereby taking profit of the combined effect of direct-Röntgen exposure and exposure
by light emitted from light-emitting phosphors present in the intensifying screens,
the problem of too high contrasts remains. Moreover as a consequence of the presence
of huge amounts of coated silver there is a tendency to sludge in the processing solutions
as a consequence of a substantial contribution of physical development.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0004] Therefore it is an object of the present invention to provide silver halide film
materials suitable for industrial non-destructive testing applications wherein said
film is exposed to X-rays having lower energy (about 100 kVp as applied e.g. in concrete
tests) offering after processing, with a reduced tendency to sludge formation, sufficiently
high speed and maximum density and a low contrast in order to provide excellent image
quality (especially low graininess).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] The above mentioned objects are realized by providing a black-and-white silver halide
photographic material, said material comprising a support and on both sides thereof
two light-sensitive emulsion layers and a protective antistress layer as an outermost
layer, wherein per side of the support a total amount of silver, expressed as equivalent
amount of silver nitrate of at least 5 g is coated, more preferably between 5 g and
15 g, wherein the light-sensitive emulsion layer more close to the said outermost
layer is provided with at least one spectrally sensitized silver halide emulsion having
tabular emulsion crystals with {111} or {100} major faces, and wherein the emulsion
layer more close to the said support is provided with at least one non-spectrally
sensitized emulsion having essentially cubic silver halide emulsion crystals, characterized
in that the said cubic emulsion crystals or the said tabular emulsion crystals or
both have a halide composition including bromide.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0006] It is understood that in the enumeration of possible halide compositions in the water-permeable
hydrophilic light-sensitive silver halide emulsion layers of the material of the present
invention the firstly called halide is present in the highest amount, expressed in
mole % , and that the following halides are further present in decreasing amounts.
In the layer arrangement of the multilayer light-sensitive silver halide photographic
negative image type material of the present invention it is clear that on both sides
of the support following layers are consecutively present, starting from the support:
a subbing layer, two light-sensitive emulsion layers of negative image type silver
halide emulsions, wherein an emulsion layer is coated with one or more silver halide
emulsions having mainly {100} cubic grains and, adjacent thereto and farther from
the support an emulsion layer coated with one or more silver halide emulsions having
mainly {100} and/or {111} tabular grains and a protective antistress layer as an outermost
layer. An essential feature with respect to the halide composition of the emulsion
crystals is that the said cubic emulsion crystals or the said tabular {100} and/or
{111} emulsion crystals or both have a halide composition including bromide. In a
preferred embodiment inclusion of bromide is such that bromide is present in the highest
amount, expressed in mole %, in the cubic emulsion crystals, in the {100} and/or {111}
tabular emulsion crystals or in both of them: the said silver bromoiodide, silver
bromochloride or silver bromochloroiodide emulsion crystals having {111} (tabular)
or {100} (cubic or tabular) major faces preferably have at least 50 mole % of bromide
and still more preferably at least 75 mole % of bromide.
[0007] Preferably in the preparation step of the cubic silver halide crystals selected from
the group consisting of silver chloride, silver chlorobromide, silver chloroiodide,
silver chlorobromoiodide, silver bromide, silver bromoiodide or silver bromochloroiodide
to be coated in the layer more close to the support of the multilayer material according
to the present invention, the pAg range for the precipitation thereof is chosen so
that the said emulsion crystals essentially have a cubic crystal habit. By "essentially
cubic" is meant a grain which either is (a) perfectly cubic, or (b) cubic with rounded
corners, or (c) cubic with small (111) faces on the corners so that in fact a tetradecahedrical
emulsion is obtained, the total area of these (111) faces however being small compared
to the total area of the (100) faces. Moreover a cubo-octahedral shape is not excluded
as the said shape depends on the effective pAg values applied during the precipitation
of the said selected silver chloride, silver chlorobromide, silver chloroiodide, silver
chlorobromoiodide, silver bromide, silver bromochloride, silver bromochloroiodide
or silver bromoiodide crystals.
[0008] The precipitation of such cubic crystals can be principally performed by one double
jet step; alternatively it may consist of a sequence of a nucleation step and at least
one growth step. In the latter case, of the total silver halide precipitated preferably
0.5 % to 5.0 mole % is formed during said nucleation step which preferably consists
of an approximately equimolecular addition of silver and halide salts. The rest of
the silver and halide salts is then added during one or more consecutive double jet
growth steps. The different steps of the precipitation can be alternated by physical
ripening steps. During the growth step(s) the flow rate of the silver salt and halide
solutions can be kept constant; alternatively an increasing flow rate of silver salt
and halide ion solutions can be established e.g. a linearly increasing flow rate.
Typically the flow rate at the end is about 3 to 5 times greater then at the start
of the growth step, without however being limited thereto. These flow rates can be
monitored by e.g. magnetic valves. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention
the essentially cubic emulsion is formed simply by one double jet step at a pAg maintained
at a constant value between 7 and 10, and more preferably between 7 and 9, without
separate nucleation step and at a constant flow rate. The constant pAg is realized
by the use of a so-called "bypass solution" the addition of which is alternatingly
switched on and off. The concentrations of the main silver salt and halide solutions
typically range between 0.5 and 3 molar, and most preferably between 1 and 2 molar.
Preferably crystals of the essentially cubic emulsion have an average crystal diameter
of from 0.1 to 1.5 µm, more preferably from 0.3 to 1.2 µm and still more preferably
from 0.3 to 0.9 µm.
Silver halide crystals used in the light-sensitive layer farther from the support
of the multilayer material, prepared for use in the material according to the present
invention, are thin tabular silver bromide, silver bromochloride, silver bromochloroiodide
or silver bromoiodide emulsions or tabular silver chlorobromide, silver chlorobromoiodide
or silver chloroiodide emulsions comprising grains rich in chloride, having at least
50 mole % of chloride and more preferably at least 75 mole % of chloride. In the light-sensitive
silver halide emulsion layers of the material according to the present invention said
tabular {111} or {100} silver halide emulsion crystals and said cubic crystals tabular
{111} or {100} silver halide emulsion crystals and said cubic crystals are containing
iodide in an amount from 0.1 to 3 mole %.
[0009] The halide distribution in the cubic and in the tabular grains may be homogeneous
over the whole crystal volume. When phases differing in silver halide composition
are present over the crystal volume said crystal is said to have a core-shell structure.
More than one shell can be present and between different phases it can be recommended
to have a phase enriched in silver iodide by applying the so-called conversion technique
during preparation. Iodide ions can be provided by using aqueous solutions of inorganic
salts thereof as e.g. potassium iodide, sodium iodide or ammonium iodide. Iodide ions
can also be provided by organic compounds releasing iodide ions as has e.g. been described
in EP-A's 0 561 415, 0 563 701, 0 563 708,0 649 052 and 0 651 284.
Tabular silver halide emulsion crystals preferably have an average aspect ratio of
at least 2:1, an average crystal thickness of less than 0.3 µm and account for at
least 50 %, more preferably at least 70 % and still more preferably at least 90 %
of the total projected area of all grains. An average aspect ratio of at least 5:1
is even more preferred for a thickness of less than 0.25 µm, wherein tabular grains
account for at least 50 %, more preferably at least 70 % and still more preferably
at least 90 % of the total projected area of all grains.
More specifically tabular silver halide grains rich in silver bromide or in silver
chloride, bounded by (100) major faces and/or the preparation method thereof and/or
materials in which said grains can be incorporated have been described in e.g. US-A's
5,024,931; 5,264,337; 5,275,930; 5,292,632; 5,310,635; 5,314,798; 5,320,938; 5,356,764;
5,491,056; 5,565,315; 5,607,828; in WO's 94/022051 and 96/013755; and in the published
EP-A's 0 534 395, 0 569 971, 0 584 815, 0 584 644, 0 602 878, 0 616 255, 0 617 317,
0 617 320, 0 617 321, 0 617 325, 0 618 492, 0 653 669, 0 670 514, 0 670 515, 0 732
616, 0 762 192 and 0 767 400.
Otherwise tabular silver halide grains rich in silver bromide or in silver chloride,
bounded by {111} major faces and/or the preparation method thereof and/or materials
in which said grains are incorporated have been described in e.g. US-A's 4,399,215;
4,400,463; 4,804,621; 5,061,617; 5,176,991; 5,176,992; 5,178,997; 5,178,998; 5,183,732;
5,185,239; 5,217,858; 5,221,602; 5,264,337; 5,272,052; 5,275,930; 5,286,621; 5,292,632;
5,298,385; 5,298,387; 5,298,388; 5,310,644; 5,320,938; 5,356,764; 5,470,698; 5,492,801;
5,494,789; 5,576,172; 5,604,085; 5,612,176; 5,629,142 and in the published EP-A's
0 481 133, 0 503 700, 0 532 801, 0 533 189, 0 647 877, 0 678 772, 0 699 944, 0 699
946, 0 699 949, 0 701 164, 0 732 616 and 0 756 198.
[0010] At least one of said tabular or cubic grains may further be doped with whatever a
dope as e.g. with group VIII metal ions like Rh
3+, Ir
4+, Ru
4+ and Co
2+ or with Cd
2+, Zn
2+ or Pb
2+ or even with a mixture thereof.
[0011] For the preparation of tabular silver bromide or bromoiodide crystals bounded by
{111} major faces and materials comprising said crystals, EP-A 0 569 075 and the corresponding
US-A 5,595,864 is useful.
[0012] In one embodiment the objects of the present invention are attained by providing
tabular silver bromide and bromoiodide crystals coated in an emulsion layer more close
to the outermost protective antistress layer over a layer comprising essentially cubic
silver bromide or silver bromoiodide emulsion crystals, having a preferred crystal
size as disclosed hereinbefore.
[0013] The crystal size obtained at the end of the precipitation of silver halide grains
depends on many factors as there are the amount of silver precipitated during the
nucleation step, the initial concentration of reagents present in the reaction vessel,
the flow rate of silver salt and halide salt solutions, the temperature, pAg, the
presence of growth accelerators, etc.. The same applies to the degree of monodispersity
of the crystal distribution: preferably a variation coefficient (ratio of standard
deviation and average grain size) of not more than 0.30 and even more preferred of
at most 0.20 should be measured.
[0014] For tabular silver halide grains an average thickness over the total crystal population
of less than 0.3 µm is thus preferred.
A thickness of less than 0.25 µm is more preferred and even still more preferred is
a thickness of at most 0.20 µm. Even ultrathin crystals of from 0.06 µm up to 0.15
µm thick can be used. The average aspect ratio, defined as the ratio, calculated from
the measurements of the equivalent diameter of a circle having the same surface area
as the different individual grains, and its thickness, is preferably higher than 2:1;
more preferably higher than 5:1 and still more preferably even up to 8:1 or even up
to about 20:1.
[0015] Mixtures of the tabular crystals having {111} and/or {100} major faces can also be
used just as mixtures of crystals having a tabular habit but a different halide composition
or a cubic habit but a different halide composition, provided that crystals having
the right crystal habit are located in the right emulsion layer. The presence however
in minor amounts (up to at most 10 % by weight) of cubic crystals in the emulsion
layer substantially comprising tabular {100} and/or {111} is not excluded.
[0016] In accordance with the present invention mixtures of emulsions described hereinbefore
can thus be used in the adjacent light-sensitive emulsion layers of the photographic
material according to the present invention, provided that the layer farthest from
the support contains a mixture of essentially tabular grains spectrally sensitized
in the wavelength range comprised between 350 and 500 nm, whereas the layer more close
to the support contains a mixture of non-spectrally sensitized essentially cubic grains
and that the halide composition of the said cubic and/or of the said tabular emulsion
crystals always includes bromide in a preferred amount of at least 50 mole % and even
more preferably in an amount of at least 75 mole %. This restriction is due to the
fact that the silver halide film materials according to the present invention are
double-side coated industrial radiographic materials for non-destructive testing applications
which are exposed to X-rays having lower energy (about 100 keV) and that those film
materials should have a sufficiently high speed, maximum density and especially a
suitably low contrast in order to provide excellent image quality, especially related
with low graininess.
[0017] Emulsions having a different halide distribution over the grain volume or a different
halide composition or emulsions having the same halide composition differing from
one another in average crystal size can be mixed. The said emulsions differing from
each other in grain size only, further having the same halide composition, can be
obtained from the same fine silver halide "mother" emulsion nuclei. By addition of
different amounts of silver salt and halide salt solutions or by applying different
physical ripening times such emulsions having crystals different in size can be obtained.
[0018] In one embodiment of the present invention at the end of the emulsion preparation
process the emulsion is made free from excess of soluble inorganic salts by a conventional
wash technique e.g. flocculation by ammonium sulphate or polystyrene sulphonic acid,
followed by several washing steps and redispersion. Another well-known wash technique
is ultrafiltration. Finally extra gelatin can be added to the emulsion in order to
obtain the desired gelatin to silver ratio.
[0019] In accordance with the present invention the tabular silver halide emulsions to be
coated in a hydrophilic layer farther from the support (more close to the outermost
protective antistress layer) are chemically sensitized. The same applies to the cubic
silver halide emulsions to be coated in a hydrophilic layer more close to the support.
[0020] Chemical sensitization procedures are described e.g. in "Chimie et Physique Photographique"
by P. Glafkides, in "Photographic Emulsion Chemistry" by G.F. Duffin, in "Making and
Coating Photographic Emulsion" by V.L. Zelikman et al, and in "Die Grundlagen der
Photographischen Prozesse mit Silberhalogeniden" edited by H. Frieser and published
by Akademische Verlagsgesell-schaft (1968). As described in said literature chemical
sensitization can be carried out by effecting the ripening in the presence of small
amounts of compounds containing sulphur, selenium or tellurium e.g. thiosulphate,
thiocyanate, thioureas, selenosulphate, selenocyanate, selenoureas, tellurosulphate,
tellurocyanate, sulphites, mercapto compounds, and rhodamines. The emulsions may be
sensitized also by means of gold-sulphur ripeners or by means of reductors e.g. tin
compounds as described in GB-Patent 789,823, amines, hydrazine derivatives, formamidine-sulphinic
acids, and silane compounds. Chemical sensitization can further proceed with sensitizing
agents well-known in the art. It can proceed by means of a reduction sensitizer, a
noble metal salt such as a gold salt together with a reduction sensitizer, a sulphur
and/or a selenium sensitizer, a high pH-value and a low pAg-value.
[0021] A combination of gold salt(s), sulphur and selenium compounds may therein offer a
good fog-sensitivity relationship. Reduction sensitization causing fog can e.g. be
attained by reduction with a strong reducing agent which introduces small specks of
metallic silver onto the silver halide crystals, preferably on those having a cubic
habit. Examples of especially useful compounds having reducing properties are e.g.
thioureumdioxide, tin compounds as described in GB-A 789,823, amines, hydrazine derivatives,
formamidine sulphinic acids and silane compounds and the like.
[0022] Whereas the essentially cubic silver halide grains are not spectrally sensitized,
the tabular silver halide emulsion crystals having a large specific surface of {100}
or {111} major faces available are spectrally sensitized in the wavelength range comprised
between 350 and 500 nm as prior to chemical ripening one or more spectral sensitizer(s)
is (are) added in order to provide site-direction of the chemical sensitizers.
[0023] Spectral sensitization may proceed with methine dyes such as those described by F.M.
Hamer in "The Cyanine Dyes and Related Compounds", 1964, John Wiley & Sons. Further
a survey of useful chemical classes of spectral sensitizing dyes and specific useful
examples in connection with tabular grains is given in Research Disclosure Item 22534.
A more recent practical overview is e.g. given in EP-A 0 757 285. Particularly valuable
dyes that can be used for the purpose of spectral sensitization as cyanine dyes, merocyanine
dyes and complex merocyanine dyes are broadening the spectral region to which the
light-sensitive silver halide crystals are sensitive in order to capture the light
emitted from the light source, as non-spectrally sensitized silver halide crystals
used in the process for preparing a multilayer material according to the present invention
are only sensitive in the ultraviolet and blue region of the spectrum.
According to the present invention the spectrally sensitized tabular silver halide
crystals are sensitized in the wavelength range comprised between 350 and 500 nm.
Specifically preferred blue sensitizers for tabular silver halide grains as zeromethinemerocyanine
dyes and/or monomethine cyanine dyes have been disclosed e.g. in EP-A's 0 622 665
and 0 712 034, wherein the film has been combined with a ultra violet-blue emitting
conversion screen or panel. When combined with an intensifying screen emitting ultraviolet-blue
radiation the direct-X-rays together with the ultraviolet-blue light from the intensifying
screens provides illumination of the film material of the present invention and allows
lower total coating amounts of silver in order to reach the same speed, if compared
with films which are only sensitive to direct X-rays, although an enhanced speed has
therefore also been provided by making use of a lead foils or screens. Specific intensifying
screens emitting ultraviolet-blue radiation suitable for use in the present invention
have e.g. been disclosed in US-A's 4,225,653; 4,387,141; 4,710,637; 5,112,700; 5,173,611
and 5,432,351; in EP-A's 0 650 089; 0 658 613;
in PCT-Applications WO 93/11457 and WO 95/15514.
Typical blue-UV emitting phosphors therein are tantalates as described in PCT-Applications
WO 93/1521 and 93/1522, hafnates as described in US-A 5,173,611 and fluorohalides
(fluorobromides) of barium and strontium as in WO 91/1357 and US-P 5,629,125, doped
with europium and co-doped with samarium as in US-A's 5,422,220 and 5,547,807 and
even mixtures of tantalates and fluorohalides as in US-A 5,077,145 and EP-A 0 533
234, replacing CaWO
4 as representative for an older well-known generation of luminescent phosphors.
In EP-A 0 820 069 particles of niobium doped, monoclinic M, yttriumtantalate phosphor
and particles of an europium doped bariumfluorohalide phosphor are composing the screen.
[0024] As already set forth hereinbefore spectral sensitization, in connection with tabular
grains used in emulsions coated in the light-sensitive layer farthest from the support,
may occur simultaneously with or may even precede completely the chemical sensitisation
step as in that case the chemical sensitization occurring after spectral sensitisation
is believed to take place at one or more ordered discrete sites of tabular grains.
This may also be done with the emulsions used in materials of the present invention,
wherein the chemical sensitization proceeds in the presence of one or more phenidone
and/or derivatives, a dihydroxy benzene as hydroquinone, resorcinol, catechol and/or
a derivative(s) therefrom, one or more stabilizer(s) or antifoggant(s), one or more
spectral sensitiser(s) or combinations of said ingredients. Especially 1-p-carboxy-phenyl,
4,4' dimethyl-3-pyrazolidine-1-one may be added as a preferred auxiliary agent.
[0025] Other dyes, which per se do not have any spectral sensitizing activity, or certain
other compounds, which do not substantially absorb visible radiation, can have a supersensitization
effect when they are incorporated together with said spectral sensitizing agents into
the emulsion. Suitable supersensitizers are, i.a., heterocyclic mercapto compounds
containing at least one electronegative substituent as described e.g. in US-A 3,457,078,
nitrogen-containing hetero-cyclic ring-substituted aminostilbene compounds as described
e.g. in US-A 2,933,390 and in US-A 3,635,721, aromatic organic acid/formaldehyde condensation
products as described e.g. in US-A 3,743,510, cadmium salts, and azaindene compounds.
[0026] At least one non-spectrally sensitizing dye can be added as a filter dye to at least
one of the adjacent emulsion layers of the materials according to this invention,
or to one or more non-light-sensitive hydrophilic layers. The presence of said dye(s)
in adapted amounts in at least one hydrophilic layer is not only recommended to adjust
the sensitivity of the different emulsion layers and the required contrast, but also
in order to reduce scattering of exposure radiation and thus to enhance sharpness.
Preferred dyes are those that can be removed relatively easily in aqueous alkaline
processing liquids and that can diffuse sufficiently fast throughout hydrophilic colloid
layers in said processing. During coating of the hydrophilic layers comprising said
dye(s), it is clear that said dye(s) should be non-diffusable. Said dyes are also
called antihalation or filter dyes and are widely used in photographic elements in
order to absorb reflected and scattered light. Examples of the said dyes have been
described e.g. in US-A's 3,560,214; 3,647,460, 4,288,534, 4,311,787.4,857,446; 5,344,749;
5,478,708 and 5,502,205.
[0027] Once a filter dye has been selected, the problem is how to get the filter dye in
a coated layer so that all the requirements mentioned previously are met. One of the
preferred possibilities is to make use of solid particle dispersions of water insoluble
dyes as has been described in EP-A's 0 586 748, 0 587 230 and 0 656 401, 0 401 709;
0 384 633; 0 323 729; 0 274 723; 0 276 566; 0 351 593; in US-A's 4,900,653; 4,904,565;
4,949,654; 4,940,654; 4,948,717; 4,988,611; 4,803,150 and 5,344,749 and in Research
Disclosure 19551 (July 1980), wherein these examples should not considered to be limitative.
Another possibility consists in preparing said dyes in the form of a solid silica
particle dispersion as disclosed in EP-A 569 074. Still another possibility to obtain
ultra fine dye dispersions consists in acidifying a slightly alkaline coating composition
"in situ" just before coating it onto the supporting layer. It has been found that
the application of this dosage technique allows us to obtain the dyes in a very fine
solid particle form, homogeneously divided into the coated layer so that solid particles
can hardly be observed even by means of microscopic techniques.
[0028] Monomethine dyes have an absorption spectrum of which the maximum is in the shorter
wavelength range of the visible spectrum so that normally a second filter dye is needed
to block or absorb green light and even a third one to absorb radiations of longer
wavelengths e.g. radiations in the red or even in the infrared region. The non-diffusing
dyes added to a hydrophilic layer of a photographic element as a solid particle has
a mean diameter of less than 10 µm, more preferably less than 1 µm and still more
preferably less than 0.1 µm. At a pH of at least 10 the dispersed filter dyes are
easily solubilized so that they are removed almost completely from a hydrophilic water-permeable
colloid layer of a photographic silver halide emulsion material by its common alkaline
aqueous liquid processing and leave almost no residual stain. The presence of sulphite
in the processing solution contributes to a more rapid discoloration of the filter
dyes. The dye(s) incorporated in the emulsion layer(s) of the multilayer material
prepared according with the present invention preferably have the general structure
(I)

in which
R1 is hydrogen, alkyl, substituted alkyl, aryl, substituted aryl, aralkyl or substituted
aralkyl,
R2 is carboxy, alkoxycarbonyl, aryloxycarbonyl, carbamoyl, ureido, sulphamoyl or one
of the groups represented by R1; at least one of R1 and R2 being or containing carboxy or carbamoyl,
R3 is hydrogen, C1-C4 alkyl or C1-C4 alkoxy, and when R3 is alkyl or alkoxy it stands in ortho or para in respect of the hydroxy group, which
itself is in ortho or para in respect of the methine group; said merostyryl dye containing
further no group that renders the dye soluble in the hydrophilic colloid layer.
[0029] Although preferably present in at least one emulsion layer of the multilayer material
according to the present invention, the same or other dye(s) can be present in an
antihalation undercoat layer (e.g. between the subbing layer and the emulsion layer
having cubic emulsion grains), an intermediate layer (e.g. between light-sensitive
emulsion layers or between the emulsion layer having tabular grains and the protective
antistress layer) and/or a protective outermost layer, depending on the requirements.
The silver halide emulsion for use in the multilayer material according to the present
invention may comprise compounds preventing the formation of a high minimum density
or stabilizing the photographic characteristics during the production or storage of
photographic elements or during the photographic treatment thereof. Many known compounds
can be added as fog-inhibiting agent or stabilizer to the silver halide emulsion.
Suitable examples are i.a. the heterocyclic nitrogen-containing compounds such as
benzothiazolium salts, nitroimidazoles, nitrobenzimidazoles, chlorobenzimidazoles,
bromobenzimidazoles, mercaptothiazoles, mercaptobenzothiazoles, mercaptobenzimidazoles,
mercaptothiadiazoles, aminotriazoles, benzotriazoles (preferably 5-methyl-benzotriazole),
nitrobenzotriazoles, mercaptotetrazoles, in particular 1-phenyl-5-mercapto-tetrazole,
mercaptopyrimidines, mercaptotriazines, benzothiazoline-2-thione, oxazoline-thione,
triazaindenes, tetrazaindenes and pentazaindenes, especially those described by Birr
in Z. Wiss. Phot. 47 (1952), pages 2-58, triazolopyrimidines such as those described
in GB-A 1,203,757, GB-A 1,209,146, JP-B 77/031738, and GB-A 1,500,278, and 7-hydroxy-s-triazolo-[1,5-a]-pyrimidines
as described in US-A 4,727,017, and other compounds such as benzenethiosulphonic acid,
benzenethiosulphinic acid, benzenethiosulphonic acid amide. Other compounds that can
be used as fog-inhibiting compounds are those described in Research Disclosure (RD)
N
o 17643 (1978), Chaptre VI and in RD N
o 38957 (1996), Chapter VII. Fog-inhibiting agents or stabilizers can be added to the
silver halide emulsion prior to, during, or after the ripening thereof and mixtures
of two or more of these compounds can be used.
[0030] In the preparation of emulsions according to the present invention use can be made
of a special oxidized gelatin or of a synthetic peptiser. Conventional lime-treated
or acid treated gelatin can be used. The preparation of such gelatin types has been
described in e.g. "The Science and Technology of Gelatin", edited by A.G. Ward and
A. Courts, Academic Press 1977, page 295 and next pages. The gelatin can also be an
enzyme-treated gelatin as described in Bull. Soc. Sci. Phot. Japan, N
o 16, page 30 (1966). Before and during the formation of the silver halide grains it
is common practice to establish a gelatin concentration of from about 0.05 % to 5.0
% by weight in the dispersion medium. Additional gelatin is added in a later stage
of the emulsion preparation e.g. after washing, to establish optimal coating conditions
and/or to establish the required thickness of the coated emulsion layer. Preferably
a gelatin to silver halide weight ratio ranging from 0.3 to 1.0 is then obtained.
Another binder may also be added instead of or in addition to gelatin. Useful vehicles,
vehicle extenders, vehicle-like addenda and vehicle related addenda have been described
e.g. in Research Disclosure N
o 38957 (1996), Chapter II.
[0031] The gelatin binder of the photographic elements can be forehardened with appropriate
hardening agents such as those of the epoxide type, those of the ethylenimine type,
those of the vinylsulfone type, e.g., 1,3-vinylsulphonyl-2-propanol or di-(vinylsulphonyl)-methane,
vinylsulphonyl-ether compounds, vinylsulphonyl compounds having soluble groups, chromium
salts like e.g. chromium acetate and chromium alum, aldehydes as e.g. formaldehyde,
glyoxal, and glutaraldehyde, N-methylol compounds as e.g. dimethylolurea and methyloldimethylhydantoin,
dioxan derivatives e.g. 2,3-dihydroxy-dioxan, active vinyl compounds e.g. 1,3,5-triacryloyl-hexahydro-s-triazine,
active halogen compounds e.g. 2,4-dichloro-6-hydroxy-s-triazine, and mucohalogenic
acids e.g. mucochloric acid and mucophenoxychloric acid. These hardeners can be used
alone or in combination. The binder can also be hardened with fast-reacting hardeners
such as carbamoylpyridinium salts as disclosed in US-A 4,063,952 and with the onium
compounds as disclosed in EP-A 0 408 143.
[0032] Prior to coating any thickening agent may be used in order to regulate the viscosity
of the coating solution, provided that they do not particularly affect the photographic
characteristics of the silver halide emulsion in the coated photographic material.
Preferred thickening agents include aqueous polymers such as polystyrene sulphonic
acid, dextran, sulphuric acid esters, polysaccharides, polymers having a sulphonic
acid group, a carboxylic acid group or a phosphoric acid group as well as colloidal
silica. Polymeric thickeners well-known from the literature resulting in thickening
of the coating solution may even be used in combination with colloidal silica. Patents
concerning thickening agents are e.g. US-A 3,167,410; Belgian Patent No. 558.143 and
JP-A's 53-18687 and 58-36768. Negative effects on physical stability possibly resulting
from the addition of polymeric compounds can be avoided by exclusion of those compounds
and by restricting extra additions of colloidal silica. In order to coat hydrophilic
colloidal layer compositions on a support by slide-hopper or curtain-coating techniques,
wherein said compositions have gelatin in low amounts in order to provide a ratio
by weight of gelatin to silver halide expressed as an equivalent amount of silver
nitrate in the range from 0.05 to 0.4, thickening agents composed of synthetic clay
and anionic macromolecular polyelectrolytes wherein said synthetic clay is present
in an amount of at least 85 % by weight versus the total amount of thickening agents
are recommended as disclosed in EP-Application No. 96201653, filed June 13, 1996.
[0033] The photographic element may further comprise various kinds of coating physical property
modifying addenda as described in Research Disclosure N
o 38957 (1996), Chapter IX, wherein coating aids, plasticisers and lubricants, antistats
and matting agents have been described.
[0034] The photographic element of the present invention may comprise various kinds of surface-active
agents in the photographic emulsion layer or in at least one other hydrophilic colloid
layer. Suitable surface-active agents include non-ionic agents such as saponins, alkylene
oxides e.g. polyethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol/polypropylene glycol condensation
products, polyethylene glycol alkyl ethers or polyethylene glycol alkylaryl ethers,
polyethylene glycol esters, polyethylene glycol sorbitan esters, polyalkylene glycol
alkylamines or alkylamides, silicone-polyethylene oxide adducts, glycidol derivatives,
fatty acid esters of polyhydric alcohols and alkyl esters of saccharides; anionic
agents comprising an acid group such as a carboxy, sulpho, phospho, sulphuric or phosphoric
ester group; ampholytic agents such as aminoacids, aminoalkyl sulphonic acids, aminoalkyl
sulphates or phosphates, alkyl betaines, and amine-N-oxides; and cationic agents such
as alkylamine salts, aliphatic, aromatic, or heterocyclic quaternary ammonium salts,
aliphatic or heterocyclic ring-containing phosphonium or sulphonium salts. Such surface-active
agents can be used for various purposes e.g. as coating aids, as compounds preventing
electric charges, as compounds improving slidability, as compounds facilitating dispersive
emulsification, as compounds preventing or reducing adhesion, and as compounds improving
the photographic characteristics e.g higher contrast, sensitization, and development
acceleration.
[0035] Development acceleration can be accomplished by incorporating in emulsion layer(s)
or adjacent layers various compounds, preferably polyalkylene derivatives having a
molecular weight of at least 400 such as those described in e.g. US-A's 3,038,805;
4,038,075 and 4,292,400 as well as in EP-A's 0 634 688 and 0 674 215.
[0036] The protective antistress layer as a non-light-sensitive layer of the material according
to the present invention may further comprise various additives like surfactants,
matting agents, lubricants, thickening agents, bactericides, antistatic agents, etc.,
most of which have already been mentioned hereinbefore. To the protective topcoat
layer(s) one or more hardening agents may be added, preferably just before coating
said layer(s). The same hardeners can be used as summarised hereinbefore. Further
one or more non-spectrally sensitizing dyes as discussed hereinbefore can be added
thereto, preferably during coating, in order to controll the sensitivity of the coated
material.
[0037] Advantages offered by the method to prepare a multilayer material according to the
present invention are related to the main object to obtain a suitable speed, gradation
and maximum density. Further the coated amount of silver, expressed as the equivalent
amount of silver nitrate, can be reduced to amounts of e.g. less than 20 g/m
2 and still more preferably from 8 to 16 g/m
2. Higher amounts are particularly preferred in materials showing a higher sensitivity
and contrast.
[0038] The support of the photographic material is a transparent resin support. It is also
possible to use an organic resin support e.g. cellulose nitrate film, cellulose acetate
film, poly(vinyl acetal) film, polystyrene film, poly(ethylene terephthalate) film,
poly(ethylene naphthalate), polycarbonate film, polyvinylchloride film or poly-α-olefin
films such as polyethylene or polypropylene film. The thickness of such organic resin
film is preferably comprised between 0.07 and 0.35 mm. These organic resin supports
are preferably coated with a subbing layer which can contain water insoluble particles
such as silica or titanium dioxide. The support of the photographic material according
to the present invention is a transparent resin, preferably a blue coloured polyester
support like polyethylene terephthalate. This blue colored support makes minimum density
enhance as a function of the amount of blue dye incorporated into said support. The
support is further provided with a substrate layer at both sides to have good adhesion
properties between the adjacent layers and said support: one or more subbing layers
known to those skilled in the art for adhering thereto a hydrophilic colloid layer
may be present. Suitable subbing layers for polyethylene terephthalate supports are
described e.g. in US-A's 3,397,988, 3,649,336, 4,123,278 and 4,478,907. The subbing
layer composition of the material according to the present invention preferably comprises
as a latex copolymer vinylidene chloride, methylacrylate and itaconic acid. In a more
preferred embodiment said subbing layer comprises a polyethylene dioxythiophene compound
as an antistating agent. Said subbing layer comprising a polythiophene compound has
a particularly suitable antistatic working as it has electronic conductive properties.
More particularly for materials according to the present invention a polyethylene
dioxythiophene compound should be present in the subbing layer coated onto the support
as disclosed e.g. in US-A's 5,312,681 and 5,391,472.
[0039] The material according to the present invention is a double-side coated industrial
radiographic material, coated with a total amount of silver, expressed as an equivalent
amount of silver nitrate, of from 5 g/m
2 up to 15 g/m
2 and is preferably exposed with an X-ray radiation source having an energy output
of from 50 keV up to 5 MeV, i.e. suitable for a dedicated application in the field
of industrial radiography. So the photographic material according to the present invention
is image-wise exposed by X-rays, by radiation originating from radioactive isotopes
from iridium and cobalt as e.g. Co
60 , by selenium-sources etc..
[0040] Specific applications for the material according to the present invention are related
with concrete testing and flash X-ray. Total amounts of silver coated coated are at
least 5g/m
2 and more preferably from 5 to 15 g/m
2.
[0041] In a preferred embodiment X-ray conversion screens are used in a film-screen system
wherein X-rays are absorbed by phosphor particles coated in the phosphor layer(s)
of the screen. Said X-rays are converted into radiation having a wavelength for which
the silver halide crystals coated in the layers of the light sensitive silver halide
film material has been made sensitive. In said film-screen system the screen(s) is(are)
brought into intimate contact with each side of the film material having emulsion
layers in order to obtain a good image quality, especially sharpness, accompanied
by low noise due to an excellent graininess offered by the specific layer composition
of the multilayer photographic material according to the present invention.
[0042] Said film-screen system can be a symmetrical or an asymmetrical system. Symmetrical
systems are well-known as these are characterized by the presence of the same emulsion
layers and other auxiliary layers at both sides of the support, in contact with the
same phosphor plates. Asymmetrical film-screen systems may be composed of identical
emulsion layers at both sides of the support but different phosphor plates e.g. phosphor
plates differing in phosphor composition, phosphor grain sizes or grain size distributions,
phosphor coating amounts, etc., and combinations of all those measures, thus leading
to different screen speeds. Examples thereof can be found in e.g. US-A's 1,925,546;
4,835,396; 5,069,982 and 5,259,016; in JP-A's 06/130575 and 06/130577 and in EP-A's
0 232 888 and 0 633 497. Asymmetrical film-screen systems may be composed of identical
screens in contact with both film sides comprising emulsion layers having different
sensitivities, due to different silver halide compositions of the respective layers,
due to differences in silver halide grain size or grain size distribution, due to
differences in coating amounts, etc., and combinations of all these measures, leading
to different speeds and/or contrasts of the emulsion layers at both sides of the film
support, provided that the required speed level is attained in combination with a
relatively low contrast as requested for this dedicated application. Examples thereof
can be found e.g. in US-A's 4,994,355; 5,021,327; 5,252,443; 5,380,636 and 5,399,470;
in JP-B 77/018580; in JP-A's 04/235545; 04/125626 and 04/145427 and in EP-A's 0 440
367; 0 449 101 and 0 530 117. Further in the screen-film system, both films and screens
may be asymmetrical as has been illustrated, e.g., in DE 1 000 687; in DD 00 237 010;
in US-A's 4,978,599; 5,070,248; 5,238,795; 5,259,016; 5,354,648 and 5,380,636; and
in EP-A's 0 384 634; 0 437 117; 0 524 650; 0 577 027; 0 581 065 and 0 627 744.
[0043] After exposure of the film, processing conditions and composition of processing solutions
may be chosen as a function of the specific type of multilayer material according
to the present invention. For example, in a preferred embodiment of materials for
X-ray diagnostic purposes, after exposure of the film-screen system by X-rays, said
material is subjected to processing. Preferably an automatically operating processing
apparatus is used provided with a system for automatic regeneration of the processing
solutions. Forehardened material may be processed using one-part package chemistry
or three-part package chemistry, depending on the processing application determining
the degree of hardening required in said processing cycle. The processing of the photographic
material according to the method of the present invention comprises the steps of developing,
fixing, rinsing and drying.
[0044] An image is thus formed by providing, according to the present invention, an image-forming
system wherein the material according to the present invention as described hereinbefore
in contact with intensifying screens at both sides of the film material is subjected
to the steps of
- exposing with an X-ray radiation source having an energy output of from 50 keV up
to 5 MeV,
- processing comprising the steps of developing, fixing, rinsing and drying.
[0045] For processing, preferably an automatically operating apparatus is used provided
with a system for automatic replenishment of the processing solutions. Processing
times may vary between 90 seconds and 12 minutes, but more preferably it takes no
longer than 5 minutes to run throughout the whole processing cycle. Non-automatic
tray development, also called dish or scale development, is however not excluded.
[0046] Film materials in accordance with the present invention may be processed in developer
solutions of different compositions as e.g. hydroquinone-1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidinone,
1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidinone-erythorbic acid, (iso)ascorbic acid, 1-ascorbic acid, reductic
acid or derivatives thereof, wherein a development composition as e.g. in US-A 5,397,687
or in EP-A 0 757 286 may be used.
An amount of potassium thiocyanate in the range of 0.1 to 10 g per liter of the developer
solution is recommended in order to obtain high gradation values. An amount of 25
to 250 mg of potassium iodide per liter is particularly recommended in order to obtain
a higher speed.
The developer solution used in the developing step according to the method of the
present invention should be replenished not only for decrease of the liquid volume
due to cross-over into the next processing solution, but also for pH-changes due to
oxidation of the developer molecules This can be done on a regular time interval basis
or on the basis of the amount of processed film or on a combination of both. The development
step can be followed by a washing step, a fixing solution and another washing or stabilization
step.
In order to reduce silver contamination to minimum levels it is recommended to add
alkylthio mercaptothiadiazoles, alkyl mercaptans, mercapto benzimidazoles, mercapto
hydroxy pyrimidines and, more preferred disulfides to the developer as has been described
in e.g. JP-A's 08-278609, 07-311430, 03-051844 and 03-055541, in EP-A's 0 768 568
and 0 593 262 and in US-A's 5,506,092 and 5,648,205. Specific products as aliphatic,
cycloaliphatic, aromatic or heterocyclic di- or trisulfides manufactured by Ciba-Geigy
under the trade name IRGAFORM (see especially 3,3' dithiobis(3,3'-diphenyl)-propionic
acid, known as IRGAFORM 1007) had already been described before in US-A 4,141,734,
for particular use in the developer.
In the alternative, the said agents can be added to the silver halide photographic
material as in JP-A 03-132649 and in US-A 4,699,873 or to both of the silver halide
photographic material and the developer as has e.g. been described in JP-A 07-056284.
[0047] It is particularly preferred that the protective antistress layer and/or to at least
one emulsion layer of the industrial radiographic material according to the present
invention comprise(s) a disulfide compound, and more preferably a compound according
to the formula

in order to prevent silver sludge formation to occur, as for those films total coated
amounts of silver from 5 g to 15 g per sq.m. are relatively high.
[0048] It is even more preferred, according to the image forming system according to the
present invention, that the developer comprises 3,3' dithiobis(3,3'-diphenyl)-propionic
acid as a disulfide.
[0049] For film materials in accordance with the present invention it is possible to use
sodium thiosulphate as a fixing agent, thus avoiding the ecologically undesired ammonium
ions normally used. When aluminum salts are used as hardening agents in the fixer
solution and when there is no rinsing step between developer and fixer unit, it is
recommended to make use of an ascorbic acid type developer as has been set forth in
EP-Application 97203096, filed October 6, 1997. A method to provide an ecologically
favourable minimization of silver content in the washing solution, which may be advantageously
applied in the context of the present invention, without impairing the processing
speed, without enhancing processing costs and without excessive regeneration has been
given in Ep-Application No. 98200319, filed February 3, 1998. Finally after the last
washing step the photographic material is dried.
The following Examples are illustrating the invention, without however limiting it
thereto.
EXAMPLES
Preparation of tabular emulsion T
[0050] To a solution of 5.5 g of oxidized gelatin (less than 30 µmole methionine per g)
in 3 l water, adjusted to a pBr of 2.4 by adding KBr and a pH of 1.7 by adding H
2SO
4, were added by a double jet method aqueous solutions of 1.96 M AgNO
3 (hereinafter referred to as S1) and 1.96 M KBr (hereinafter referred to as S2) both
at a constant flow rate of 16 ml/min during 27 seconds. During this period, the reaction
mixture was maintained at 51°C. When the addition was completed, stirring continued
during 1.5 minutes and then, temperature was increased up to 70°C over a period of
25 minutes, followed by addition of a NaOH solution over a period of one minute in
order to adjust pH to a value of 5.6. Then stirring continued for 2.5 minutes and
0.5 l of a 10 % gelatin solution kept at 70°C was added. After stirring during another
5.5 minutes, S2 was added in a single jet at 7.5 ml/min over a period of 5.5 minutes.
Then S1 at a constant flow rate of 7.5 ml/min and S2 at a flow rate, controlled in
order to maintain pAg at 8.9, were added by double jet addition over a period of 1
minute. This double jet was continued during another period of 33 minutes and 23 seconds,
while the flow rate of S1 was linearly increased up to 23.1 ml/min and pAg was maintained
at 8.9. 5 minutes after the completion of said double jet addition, S1 was added at
7.5 ml/min during 7 minutes and 20 seconds. Then another double jet started of S1
at 7.5 ml/min during 1 minute and 40 seconds and an aqueous solution of 1.93 M KBr
and 0.03 M KI at a controlled flow rate in order to maintain pAg at 7.4. This double
jet was continued during another period of 40 minutes and 56 seconds, while the flow
rate of S1 was linearly increased up to 36.8 ml/min and pAg was maintained at 7.4.
The average grain size of the emulsion thus prepared was 0.78 µm, the average thickness
was 0.22 µm and the variation coefficient was 0.30. The iodide content was 1 mole
%.
After washing, gelatin and water were added in order to obtain a silver halide content
of 245 g/kg, expressed as AgNO
3, and a gelatin content of 83 g/kg. To 2 kg of this emulsion, of which pH was adjusted
to 5.5, were consecutively added 4 ml of a 10 wt.% of a KSCN solution, 0.2 ml of a
4.76x10
-3 M solution of sodium toluene thiosulphonate in methanol, 1170 ml of a 0.25 wt.% solution
of 3-ethyl-5-[1-(4-sulfobutyl)-4-(1H)-pyridylidene] rhodanine, 9 mg sodium thiosulphate,
5.3 ml of a solution containing 1.46x10
-3 M chlorauric acid and 1.58x10
-2 M ammonium thiocyanate, and finally 10 ml of a 1 wt.% solution of 1-(p-carboxyfenyl)-5-mercapto-tetrazole
and this mixture was chemically ripened during 4 hours at 48°C. After cooling, a preservative
was added.
Preparation of cubic emulsion C
[0051] To 1 l of a solution, containing 15 g of methionine and 50 g of gelatin, adjusted
to pH 5.8 and kept at 60°C, were added in a double jet a 2.94 M AgNO
3 solution at a constant flow rate of 3.35 ml/min during 5 seconds and a solution of
2.91 M KBr and 0.03 M KI at a flow rate controlled in order to maintain pAg constant
at 7.8. Then the flow rate of the AgNO
3 solution was increased linearly up to 21 ml/min during 72 minutes and 46 seconds.
The cubic grains thus prepared consisted of 99 mole % of AgBr and 1 mole % of AgI
with an average grain size of 0.80 mm and was called emulsion C8. After washing, gelatin
and water were added in order to obtain a silver halide content of 208 g/kg, expressed
as AgNO
3, and a gelatin content of 83 g/kg. To 2.4 kg of this emulsion, of which pH was adjusted
to 6.0, were added consecutively 6 mg of sodium thiosulphate, 70 ml of a solution
containing 1.46x10
-3 M chloro auric acid and 1.58x10
-2 M ammonium thiocyanate, 2 ml of a 4.76x10
-3 M solution of sodium toluene thiosulphonate in methanol and 38 mg sodium sulphite.
This mixture was chemically ripened during 4 hours at 46°C. After cooling, a preservative
was added.
Cubic emulsions C7 and C5 were prepared according to the same procedure as described
for emulsion C8 but with adjusted flow rates during the nucleation step in order to
obtain crystals with an average grain size of 0.56 µm and 0.42 µm respectively.
Table 2
Compound |
amounts per m2 |
gelatin |
1.1 g |
polymethylmethacrylate spacing agent (average particle diameter 3 mm) |
15 mg |
chromium acetate |
5.5 mg |
4-hydroxy-6-methyl-1,3,3a,7-tetraazaindene |
82 mg |
bis-metasulphophenyl-disulphide |
4 mg |
CF3-(CF2)6-COOH.NH3 |
7.5 mg |
CF3-(CF2)6-CONH-(CH2CH2O)17-20-H |
19 mg |
phenol |
150 mg |
1-phenyl-4-methyl-3-pyrazolidone |
0.13 mg |
Mobilcer Q (a paraffin wax, trade name product from MOBIL OIL) |
25 ml |
polythioether A (a) |
5 mg |
formaldehyde (added just before coating) |
100 mg |
(a) Polythioether A is a modified poly-epichloorhydrine having an average chain length
of approximately 20 monomer units and of which about 50% of the chloride groups have
been replaced by a -S-CH2CHOH-CH2OH substituent. |
Coating of the materials
[0052] The photographic materials according to these examples comprise two emulsion layers
and one protective layer, coated symmetrically in the same way at both sides of a
blue colored polyethylene terephthalate support having a total density of 0.80. The
coating solutions of the emulsion layers were prepared by adding solutions of the
compounds indicated in Table 1 to the emulsions dissolved while warming and stirring.
The coating solution of the protective layer is given in Table 2. After adjusting
the pH to 6.7, the viscosity and surface tension of the coating solutions were optimized
according to the requirements of the coating method.
The emulsion layer(s) and the protective layer were coated simultaneously on one side
of a substrated polyester support having a thickness of 175 µm by means of conventional
coating techniques. The silver coverage of the emulsions is given in following Table
3.
Table 3
|
Emulsion coating weights (g/m2 AgNO3) |
Sensitometric results |
Example |
Upper emulsion layer B |
Lower emulsion layer A |
Av.-Grad. |
Dmin. |
Speed |
|
T1 |
C8 |
C7 |
T1 |
C8 |
C7 |
|
|
|
1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
7.5 |
- |
6.37 |
1.93 |
1.80 |
2 |
- |
3.75 |
- |
- |
- |
3.75 |
3.60 |
1.83 |
2.02 |
3 |
- |
3.75 |
- |
- |
- |
3.75* |
3.30 |
1.89 |
2.02 |
4 |
3.50 |
- |
- |
3.501 |
- |
- |
4.81 |
2.00 |
1.94 |
5 |
3.50 |
- |
- |
3.502 |
- |
- |
4.48 |
2.24 |
1.95 |
6 |
3.50 |
- |
- |
- |
3.503 |
- |
3.62 |
2.11 |
1.91 |
7 |
3.50 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
3.50 |
2.20 |
2.35 |
2.00 |
1: 12 g 2: 18 g; and 3: 4 g/mole of AgNO3 of dye according to the formula (I) given hereinbefore, wherein R1 represents p-carboxyphenyl; R2 represents CH3 and R3 represents H, with OH in para-position vs. the methine group. |
* mixture of C7 emulsion with C5 emulsion in a weight ratio amount of 1:1. |
Results
[0053] After drying and hardening, the materials were subjected to a simulation exposure
during 30 s at both sides of the film materials through a continous wedge having a
constant of 0.15 by means of white light from a tungsten lamp after a Corning 5850
filter and carbon black grey filters having a density of 1.35 and 0.95, followed by
processing. The developing step proceeded in developer G135 during 1 minute and 43
seconds at 28°C and the fixing step in fixer G335 (dilution 1 +3) during the same
time at 27°C, wherein developer G135 and fixer G335 are both trademarked products
from Agfa-Gevaert NV used for the processing of non-destructive testing materials.
[0054] Further explanation for sensitometric data is given hereinafter:
(i) Av.Grad.: the average gradation at medium densities, defined as the slope of the
line drawn by connecting the points at which the optical density is equal to Dmin+1.5
and Dmin+3.5; as described above, this parameter corresponds to the perceived diagnostic
contrast as a higher value provides better diagnostic information;
(ii) Dmin : corrected for the density of the blue coloured polyester support;
(iii) Speed : measured at a density of Dmin + 2.0 (a lower figure is representative
for a higher speed)
Table 4
|
Emulsion coating weights (g/m2 AgNO3) |
Sensitometric results |
Example |
Upper emulsion layer B |
Lower emulsion layer A |
Av.-Grad. |
Dmin. |
Speed |
|
T1 |
C8 |
T1 |
C8 |
|
|
|
1 |
3.50 |
- |
- |
3.50 |
3.74 |
1.98 |
1.87 |
2 |
- |
- |
7.00 |
- |
5.14 |
2.00 |
1.89 |
Results
[0055] After drying and hardening, the materials were subjected to exposure, followed by
processing as described hereinbefore. As can be concluded from the sensitometric results
obtained in the Tables 3 and 4, a good compromise is attained between a high sensi-tivity
(speed) and a lower average gradient (contrast: preferably between about 3.50 and
4.00) when materials are built up from a layer arrangement according to the present
invention: see e.g. Examples 4 and 6 in Table 3, illustrative for the role of the
dye (compare e.g. with Example 5) and Examples 1 and 2 in Table 4.
[0056] For the inspection of thicker samples as e.g. concretes an X-ray source having an
energy of up to 200 keV is not suitable as for such thick samples a lower energy is
required. A higher exposure contrast is then obtained normally, unless a layer arrangement
of the material as in the present invention is provided without loss in speed.