[0001] The present invention relates to improved X-ray image intensifying screens comprising
halide containing phosphors and to a process for producing such screens.
[0002] The commonly used X-ray intensifying screens comprise a support and a layer of fluorescent
particles dispersed in a coherent film-forming macromolecular binder medium. Normally
a protective coating is applied on top of the fluorescent layer to shield said layer
from ambient influences e.g. moisture, air and mechanical abrasion.
[0003] Usually these protective coatings are composed of cellulose derivatives or synthetic
polymers e.g. polyvinyl chloride. Vinyl fluoride polymers and copolymers are described
for that purpose in the United States Patent Specification 3,164,719 of Herbert Bauer,
issued January 5, 1965. Furthermore, in the U.S. Patent Specification 3,836,784 the
use of vinylidene fluoride polymers in the phosphor layer to counteract moisture has
been described.
[0004] Generally, layers comprising cellulose derivatives are somewhat permeable to moisture
and therefore more hydrophobic but also more costly synthetic polymers, e.g. polymers
containing fluorine atoms, are applied to shield the phosphor layer for moisture.
[0005] The protection against moisture is required not only to prevent the fluorescent layer
from staining but also to prevent water from contacting the phosphor particles since
certain phosphors such as the halide-containing phosphors may react with water and
loose thereby their fluorescence power. In the class of the halide-containing phosphors
especially the rare-earth oxyhalide phosphors are relatively easily attacked by water
so that an intensifying screen containing these phosphors without protection against
moisture becomes rapidly useless.
[0006] A.L.N. Stevels in Medicamundi 20, 13 (1975) considers the practical use of terbium-doped
lanthanum oxybromide phosphor as not being realistic for reason of its hygroscopic
character. Our own investigations proved that water reacts with rare-earth oxyhalide
phosphors and their fluorescence power becomes impaired or destroyed by hydrolysis.
Screens with terbium-doped lanthanum oxybromide phosphor have, however, the advantage
that their mainly blue luminescence make them suitable for use with standard X-ray
film and no specially matched films have to be developed.
[0007] The stabilization of halide-containing phosphors against moisture by adding certain
organic substances especially organometallic compounds and metal salts of carboxylic
acids has been described in FR 2,344,618 laid open to public inspection on October
14, 1977.
[0008] According to the present invention an X-ray image intensifying screen is provided,
which screen incorporates halide-containing phosphor particles, and wherein the phosphor
particles are afforded a high protection against the influence of moisture and loss
of fluorescence power.
[0009] The present invention includes also a process for preparing such screens.
[0010] The present X-ray image intensifying screen comprises in dispersed form in a supported
or self-supporting binder layer:
1) halide-containing phosphor particles that are admixed with, combined in contact
with or have reacted with one or more organic compounds whereby the fluorescence power
of said particles is less prone to be reduced by moisture, the said compounds being
capable of reacting with hydrogen chloride and/or with labile halogen, e.g. chlorine
or bromine, or obtain said capability in situ by hydrolysis, and
2) non-hygroscopic halide-free phosphor particles, in such a ratio by weight of 1)
to 2) that the ratio of the intensification factor of said screen to the intensification
factor of an identical screen containing, however, no non-hygroscopic phosphor particles
2) is not smaller than 1:4.
[0011] By "intensification factor" of an X-ray image intensifying screen is understood here
the quotient of the X-ray exposure required to produce without the use of an intensifying
screen an optical density of 1 on a silver halide film, divided by the X-ray exposure
required to produce the same density on the same silver halide film by means of said
X-ray image intensifying screen, the conditions of the X-ray irradiation and the conditions
of development being the same in both cases.
[0012] In general the X-ray image intensifying screens commonly used have an intensification
factor of at least 4 at 40 kV and of at least 5 at 150 kV.
[0013] One of the features of the X-ray image intensifying screen according to the present
invention is that it comprises halide-containing phosphor particles that are admixed,
combined in contact with, or have reacted with one or more organic compounds that
are capable of reacting with hydrogen chloride, e.g. hydrogen chloride scavengers,
and/or with labile halogen, e.g. labile chlorine or bromine, e.g. one or more of such
compounds containing an anion, preferably an anion with oleophilic group or containing
a chemical group, preferably a chemical group with oleophilic character, which anion
or group can take part in a displacement reaction wherein labile halogen atoms are
replaced by said anion or group.
[0014] One single stabilising compound or a mixture or combination of stabilising compounds
can be used in any screen according to the present invention. Preferably the stabilising
compound is a colourless organic compound yielding a preferably colourless reaction
product on reacting with hydrogen chloride.
[0015] A first category of stabilizing compounds for use according to the present invention
is formed by organic compounds that contain at least one metal atom and that are hydrogen
halide scavengers and/or are capable of replacing labile halogen by an organic group.
Within this category or organic compounds very good results have been obtained with
organic metal salts and organometallic compounds.
[0016] A second category of stabilizing compounds for use according to the present invention
is described in the co-pending European Patent Application 0 000 961 filed on even
date herewith and is formed by organic compounds that contain no metal atoms and that
correspond to one of the following general formulae:

wherein
R represents a monovalent organic group, preferably of at least 6 carbon atoms, e.g.
a hydrocarbon group,
R1 represents a bivalent organic group, preferably of at least 6 carbon atoms, e.g.
a bivalent hydrocarbon group, with the proviso that these groups contain no reactive
hydrogen such as contained in X, and
X represents a group containing reactive hydrogen, with which said compound by reacting
with acetyl chloride is capable of splitting off chlorine therefrom in the form of
hydrogen chloride in the circumstances of the test A below, e.g. mercapto, a primary
or secondary amino group, carboxyl or hydroxyl, and wherein said compound at 15°C
has a solubility of no more than 5 g in 100 ml of water.
[0017] In the formula X-R'-X the groups X may be the same or different chemical groups.
[0018] "Hydrocarbon" as used herein is straight-chain, branched-chain or ring-closed saturated
or unsaturated hydrocarbon.
Test A
[0019] Stoichiometric amounts of acetyl chloride and of the organic compound to be examined
are dissolved in anhydrous benzene and heated herein for 24 h in the presence of a
stoichiometric amount of pyridine. The pyridinium chloride formed is separated from
the cooled reaction mixture (20°C) by filtering or centrifuging. If pyridinium chloride
crystals happen to be contained in the cooled reaction mixture, the compound meets
the demand, viz. to be usable as a stabilising agent in the present invention.
[0020] If the organic compound to be examined is a primary or secondary amine, pyridine
may be omitted from the reaction mixture and the chlorides corresponding with these
amines form in the reaction.
[0021] Pyridine is normally used as hydrogen chloride scavenger in alcoholysis (see John
H. Billman and Elisabeth S. Cleland in Methods of Synthesis in Organic Chemistry -
Edward Brothers, Inc. Ann Arbor, Mich., U.S.A. (1951) 78). The use of pyridine as
condensing agent in the preparation of acid anhydrides starting from a carboxylic
acid chloride and a carboxylic acid has been described by Wagner and Zook, Synthetic
Organic Chemistry - John Wiley and Sons (1953) 558.
[0022] Suitable organic compounds of this second category are organic compounds according
to the above general formulae wherein X is a mercapto group, a primary or secondary
amino group, a carboxyl group or a hydroxyl group, which is linked to an aliphatic
group or aromatic nucleus.
[0023] Upon manufacturing X-ray image intensifying screens, the above mentioned compounds
with reactive hydrogen are preferably used in binder compositions containing no splittable
halogen atom, thus preferably not in combination with halogenated mono-olefinic polymers
or copolymers such as vinyl chloride homopolymers and copolymers. As is generally
known, the presence of hydrogen chloride enhances the decomposition of poly(vinyl
chloride).
[0024] Other suitable organic compounds containing no metal atoms for stabilising the halide-containing
phosphors against moisture are organic compounds from which organic compounds with
active hydrogen can be formed by hydrolysis, e.g. organic acid anhydrides, esters,
amides and nitriles. Preferably these compounds contain long chain (C
8 C
ZO) hydrocarbon groups as e.g. in hexadecenyl- succinic anhydride, lauric acid methyl
ester, stearic acid methyl ester, stearamide and stearonitrile. These compounds are
capable of forming with water in situ in the screen composition compounds within the
scope of the above general formulae.
[0025] A preferred optional feature resides in the employment of a compound or mixture of
compounds which reduce the adverse effects of moisture on the halide containing phosphor
and which protective power satisfies a certain test. This test (hereafter called the
"Standard Test") has been devised for the purpose of assessing the level of effectiveness
of any selected substance for the protection of the halide-containing phosphor in
accordance with the invention and is as follows:
Standard test
[0026]
(1) An X-ray image intensifying screen (Screen A) is prepared from the following composition:

by ball-milling to reduce the particle size to 7 NS Hegman Fineness measured with
a Hegman gauge as specified in American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) 1210,
filtering the resulting dispersion, de-aerating it and applying the composition to
a baryta-coated paper of 290 g per m2 at a coverage of 500 g/m2
(2) A second X-ray image intensifying screen (screen B) is prepared in the same way
as screen A except that the substance to be tested is omitted.
(3) Screen A is treated with moisture by applying onto the phosphor layer of the screen
a wet circular piece of filter paper having a dry weight of 1.355 g, a diameter of
15 cm and a water content of 3.100 g, air-tightly enclosing the screen A together
with the applied filter paper in a polyethylene bag, keeping the bag for 64 h at 60°C
in a ventilated cabinet and then removing the screen from the bag, removing the filter
paper and drying the screen in air for 30 min at 80°C.
(4) The screens A and B (the former having been moisture-treated as above described)
are subjected to an X-ray exposure while the phosphor layers are in contact with distinct
areas of the same silver halide emulsion layer of a photographic material having a
transparent emulsion layer support and the exposed photographic material is developed,
the X-ray exposure and development being such that in the area of the emulsion layer
which was in contact with screen B a spectral density of at least 1.00 above inherent
fog is obtained; and the composition of the silver halide material and the development
being such that gradually increasing exposures of the silver halide emulsion area
in contact with screen B would give a silver image density versus log exposure curve
having a gamma value (maximum gradient of the characteristic curve) of 3;
(5) the densities DA and DB obtained in the areas of the emulsion layer, which were exposed in contact with screens
A and B are measured;
(6) the actual loss of fluorescent light-emitting power of the moisture-treated A
is computed on the basis of the spectral densities DA and DB measured in step 5 above and the gamma value 3.
[0027] If screen B in the Standard Test were to be moisture-treated like screen A before
being subjected to the exposure and development, moisture-treated screen B would show
a fluorescent power of less than 10% relative to that of the non-moisture-treated
screen B.
[0028] A compound or combination of compounds is regarded as satisfying the above Standard
Test if the result of the determination in step 6 is that the fluorescent light-emitting
power of screen A incorporating that compound or combination of compounds is at least
25% of that of the non-moisture treated screen B. In the most preferred embodiment
of the invention the compound or compounds affording the moisture protection is or
are such that when such compound or compounds is or are used in screen A in the Standard
Test the fluorescent light-emitting power of screen A is at least 65% are most preferably
at least 75% of that of the non-moisture treated screen B.
[0029] According to one embodiment of the present invention use is made of a stabilizing
compound belonging to the first category referred to hereinabove and which is an organic
metal salt, e.g. a metal salt of a carboxylic acid, a so-called metal carboxylate.
Preference is given to water-insoluble carboxylates of an aliphatic carboxylic acid
having preferably at least 7 carbon atoms, e.g. of a bi- or tri-valent metal, e.g.
barium, lead, cadmium or zinc salts. For example lead stearate, barium stearate, barium
2-ethyl-hexaoate, cadmium laurate, zinc laurate or zinc stearate.
[0030] For the preparation of such compounds reference is made to the J. Polymer Sci. Vol.
XL (1959) P.420.
[0031] The stabilizing activity of these compounds is assumed to be in their ability to
replace labile halogen e.g. chlorine, bromine, or iodine by the acyloxy group -OCOR
where R represents an organic group that hydrophobizes the halide-containing phosphor
onto which it has been attached.
[0032] Further are to be mentioned zinc salts of acids derived from phosphorus of the type
described e.g. in the United States Patent Specification 3,396,144.
[0033] Other organic compounds for stabilizing purposes according to the present invention
and belonging to the first category referred to are water-insoluble mercaptides e.g.
a tin mercaptide corresponding to the following general formula:

wherein R is a straight-chain, branched-chain or ring-closed saturated or unsaturated
hydrocarbon group, preferably a hydrocarbon group containing at least 4 carbon atoms,
e.g. n-butyl.
[0034] It is assumed that in the stabilization the oleophilic R-S-group is chemically attached
to the halide containing phosphor particle containing labile halogen atoms in the
form of halide anions and that an exchange of halogen takes place, the mercapto group
providing a water-repelling character to the phosphor particle, to which it is chemically
bound at its surface.
[0035] Metal dialkyl mercaptides are prepared e.g. as described by Donald J. Cram and George
J. Hammond in their book Organic Chemistry 2nd ed. (1964) McGraw-Hill Book Company
Inc. New York, p.552.
[0036] According to another embodiment of the present invention use is made of organotin
compounds, organoantimony and organobismuth compounds as compounds belonging to the
first category of compounds referred to hereinbefore. Many of these compounds are
known as hydrogen chloride- or hydrogen bromide-scavengers or are known for the slow-down
of thermal degradation of poly(vinyl chloride). Examples of such compounds are triphenylantimony,
triphenylbismuth and tetraphenyltin.
[0037] A suitable class of organotin compounds corresponds to the following formula:

wherein:
R is a hydrocarbon group, e.g. an alkyl group,
X is 1 to 3 electronegative substituents e.g. oxygen in substituted form as in an
alkoxy or in a carboxylate group, or is an electronegative sulphur substituent or
a sulphur-containing substituent linked through sulphur to the tin atom e.g. a thioether,
a mercaptide or xanthate group, and
m is 1, 2 or 3, excluding X being three, two, or one halogen atom(s) when m is 1,
2 or 3 respectively.
[0038] Preferred organotin stabilizing compounds are dialkyltinmercaptides, especially the
organotin compounds that are within the scope of one of the following general formulae:

wherein
R' represents an alkyl group e.g. butyl or a substituted alkyl group such as a benzyl
or phenethyl group, each of X1 and X2, which may be the same or different, represents

or ―S―R3, wherein R2 is alkyl or substituted alkyl e.g. alkyl substituted by ―S―R4 wherein R4 is hydrogen or alkyl, and R3 is alkyl or substituted alkyl e.g. alkyl substituted by

wherein R4 has the same meaning as above;

wherein:
R1 has the same meaning as described above, and
Y represents an alkylene group e.g. an ethylene group.
[0039] Specific examples of preferred compounds are dibutyl tin bis(oxooctyl thioglycolate),
also called dibutyltin S,S'-bis(n-octyimercapto acetate) and

which compounds are described as stabilizing agents for polyvinyl chloride by D.H.Solomon,
The Chemistry of Organic Film Formers, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. New York, p.175 to
177 (1967) and dibutyltin maleate, dibutyltin lauryl mercaptide, and di(n-octyl)-tin
S,S-bis(iso-octylmercapto acetate) which are described by Kirk-Othmer, Encyclopedia
of Chemical Technology, 2nd compl. revised edition, Vol. 21, p.390 (1965) and dibutyltin
(P-mercapto propionate) described in J. Polymer Sci. Part A Vol. 2 (1964) 1801-1813.
[0040] Organo-metallic compounds suitable for use according to the invention are further
described in the United States Patent Specifications 2,914,506 of Gerry P. Mack, Jackson
Heights and Emery Parker, issued November 24, 1959, 2,888,435 of James M. Wallace,
Jr. issued May 26, 1959, 2,801,258 of Ernest W. Johnson, issued July 30, 1957, 2,789,102
of Elliott L. Weinberg, 2,789,103 of Elliott L. Weinberg and Louis A. Tomka, 2,789,104
of Hugh E. Ramsden, Elliott L. Weinberg and Louis A. Tomka, 2,789,105 of Louis A.
Tomka and Elliott L. Weinberg, all issued April 16, 1957, 2,726,227 and 2,726,254
both of William E. Leistner and Olga H. Knoepke, issued December 6, 1955, in British
Patent Specifications 719,421 filed December 1, 1954 by Metal & Thermit Corp., 728,953
filed April 27, 1955 by Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 782,483 filed September 4, 1957
by Wacker-Chemie G.m.b.H., 838,502 filed June 22, 1960 by Argus Chemical Corp., and
1,018,111 filed April 24, 1961 .by Pure Chemicals Limited, a British Company.
[0041] Other suitable organo metallic compounds, e.g. dibutyltin sulphide, are also described
under the heading "Physical constants of organometallic compounds" in CRC Handbook
of Chemistry and Physics 55th Ed. (1974-1975) CRC Press, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
[0042] According to a further embodiment of the present invention use is made of compounds
of the second category referred to hereinbefore, in particular an organic compound
containing no metal atoms, wherein reactive hydrogen is directly bound to sulphur,
e.g. as in thiols. Preferably thiols are used that contain a hydrocarbon group of
at least 6 carbon atoms. Such thiols including aliphatic as well as aromatic representatives
have been described by Arthur I. Vogel, Textbook of Practical Organic Chemistry, Longmans
3rd ed. (1959) p.502. Excellent results are obtained with 1-n-dodecane thiol (laurylmercaptan).
[0043] In another embodiment using such second category compounds organic compounds are
employed which contain the reactive hydrogen in an amino group, i.e. primary or secondary
amines. Preferably aliphatic primary or secondary amines are used that contain a hydrocarbon
group of at least 8 carbon atoms. Good results are obtained with 1-n-dodecylamine
(laurylamine).
[0044] In a further embodiment using such second category compounds organic compounds are
employed which contain the reactive hydrogen in a carboxyl group. Preferably aliphatic
carboxylic acids are used that contain a hydrocarbon group of at least 6 carbon atoms.
Excellent results are obtained with dodecanoic acid (lauric acid), but aliphatic carboxylic
acids containing more than one carboxyl group are considered too, e.g. hexadecylenesuccinic
acid, octadecylsuccinic acid, as well as carboxylic acids substituted with a hydroxyl
group or a mercapto group, e.g. 12-hydroxystearic acid.
[0045] It is also possible to use as second category compound organic compounds which contain
the reactive hydrogen in a hydroxyl group, which is preferably linked to a hydrocarbon
group of at least 6 carbon atoms as e.g. in lauryl alcohol, p-t-amylphenol and isohexadecyl
alcohol.
[0046] The hydrocarbon groups as referred to hereinbefore may comprise substituents that
do not enhance the water-solubility of the organic compounds beyond the already given
value. Suitable substituents rendering the compounds more hydrophobic are halogen
atoms, e.g. fluorine, chlorine and bromine, such as e.g. in p-bromophenol and perfluorocaprylic
acid.
[0047] The preferred stabilizing organic compounds used according to the invention are colourless
and upon reaction with the halide-containing phosphor yield a colourless hydrophobic
reaction product at the surface of the phosphor particles.
[0048] Another essential feature of the X-ray image intensifying screen according to the
present invention is that the halide-containing phosphor particles, which are already
to some extent protected against loss of fluorescence power by moisture by the above
defined substance(s) are admixed with non-hygroscopic halide free fluorescent pigment
particles in the amount given.
[0049] These halide free fluorescent pigment particles are preferably such that after having
been stored for 64 h under conditions of 80% relative humidity and 25°C, they show
a weight increase by uptake of water of at most 0.1%.
[0050] Halide-free phosphor particles that are suited for use according to the present invention
are calcium tungstate, terbium-doped gadolinium oxysulphide (Gd
2O
2S:Tb), terbium-doped lanthanum oxysulphide (La
2O
2S:Tb) and terbium-doped yttrium oxysulphide (Y
2O
2S:Tb).
[0051] According to a preferred embodiment the halide-free phosphor particle emit in the
spectral range wherein the halide-containing phosphor emits. For example blue light
emitting calcium tungstate phosphor particles are used in admixture with blue-light
emitting rare earth oxyhalide phosphor particles.
[0052] Therefore the invention is particularly concerned with X-ray image intensifying screens
including as halide-containing phosphor particles rare-earth oxyhalide phosphor particles
containing e.g. as host metal lanthanum and/or gadolinium and one or more other rare-earth
metals as activator metal.
[0053] The activator metal is preferably terbium or thulium. Optionally cerium, ytterbium,
erbium and/or yttrium are used as activator metal preferably in combination with terbium.
[0054] Blue-light-emitting phosphors suited for use according to the present invention are
within the scope of the following general formula:

wherein:
Ln is one or more of lanthanum or gadolinium,
X is one or more of chlorine, bromine or iodine,
Tb+3 being present in activator concentration up to 30 mole % of the composition, e.g.
between 0.01 to 0.6 mole %, and Ce being present in the range of 0.1 to 1.0 mole %.
[0055] The halogen X is preferably present in the range of between the stoichiometric amount
and 2.5% deviating thereof.
[0056] Preferred rare-earth oxyhalide phosphors include ytterbium as impurity and have the
following general formula:

wherein:
M is an element selected from the group consisting of lanthanum and gadolinium,
X is an element selected from the group consisting of chlorine and bromine, and
w is from 0.0005 to 0.03 mole per mole of the selected oxyhalide, and
y is from 0.00005 to 0.005 per mole of the selected oxyhalide.
[0057] Phosphors according to the above formulae and their preparation are described in
the United States Patent Specifications 3,617,743 and reissued US Patent Specification
28,592 respectively.
[0058] Other particularly useful rare-earth oxyhalide phosphors contain lanthanum and/or
gadolinium as host metal and thulium as activator metal. Such phosphors are described
in the United States Patent Specification 3,795,814 and are stated to have a relative
speed of more than 3 with respect to calcium tungstate.
[0059] In rare-earth metal oxyhalide phosphors a part of the halide may be fluoride e.g.
as is present in a mixed crystal compound having the following general formula and
whose preparation is described in the published German Patent Application 2,329,396:

wherein:
X is halogen other than fluorine,
Ce being present in activator concentration, e.g. from 10-4 to 10-2 gram atom/mole of LaOFX, and
M is at least one of the rare-earth elements terbium and erbium in an amount of 0
to 10-2 gram atom/mole of LaOFX.
[0060] Other suitable rare-earth oxyhalide phosphors contain gadolinium as host metal and
cerium as activator metal optionally together with yttrium. These phosphors are described
in the published German Patent Application 2,540,344 and correspond to the following
general formula:

wherein:
Y is present in an amount of 0 to 10-1 gram atom/mole of GdOBr, and
Ce is present in an activating amount, preferably from 10-4 to 10-2 gram atom/mole of GdOBr.
[0061] These phosphors are less hygroscopic than the phosphors according to the first two
general formulae mentioned abpve.
[0062] Terbium-activated lanthanum oxybromide phosphors modified for the elimination of
afterglow may also be used. Such phosphors have been described in the published German
Patent Application 2,461,260. In these phosphors part of the lanthanum is replaced
by lead and/or thallium.
[0063] Other useful halide-containing phosphor particles are e.g. barium fluoride chloride
activated with europium (II) described e.g. in French Patent Specification 2,185,667,
filed May 23, 1973 by Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken N.V. and cesium iodide phosphors
e.g. cesium iodide activated with sodium or thallium (see e.g. United States Patent
Specification 3,836,784).
[0064] The amount of stabilizing compound or mixture of stabilizing compounds suitable for
a practically useful increase in stability against moisture of the applied halide-containing
phosphor particles may be determined by simple tests.
[0065] Preferably the stabilizing compound(s) is (are) combined by admixture with halide-containing
phosphor particles in a chosen phosphor binder layer combination in an amount sufficient
to maintain the fluorescent light-emitting power of the layer in a moisture treatment
as defined above for screen (A) at a level of at least 75% of the level before said
treatment.
[0066] Effective amounts of stabilizing compound(s), e.g. for use in admixture with lanthanum
oxybromide phosphors, are in the range of 0.05 to 10 g per 100 g of phosphor.
[0067] The non-hygroscopic halide free phosphor particles are admixed with the halide-containing
phosphor particles in a ratio by weight that fulfils the requirements of the intensification
factor ratio as defined hereinbefore, preferably an intensification factor ratio of
1 :1.
[0068] More particularly, X-ray image intensifying screens of the present invention preferably
contain in a phosphorbinder layer a mixture of calcium tungstate phosphor particles
and rare-earth oxyhalide phosphor particles in a weight ratio range from 60:40 to
90:10 and the phosphor binder layer has a rare-earth oxyhalide coverage between about
100 and about 250 g per sq.m. A preferred ratio by weight of rare-earth oxyhalide
phosphor to calcium tungstate phosphor is 1:2 e.g. 1 50 g of rare-earth oxyhalide
phosphor and 300 g of calcium tungstate per sq.m.
[0069] The particle size of the phosphors used in the screen of the present invention is
preferably between 0.1 um and about 20,um, more preferably between 1 um and 12 µm.
this range embodying about 80% by volume of the phosphors present in said screen.
[0070] Suitable binders for use in the preparation of the phosphor layer are, e.g., a cellulose
acetate butyrate, polyalkyl (meth)acrylates, e.g. polymethyl methacrylate, a polyvinyl-n-butyral
e.g. as described in the United States Patent Specification 3,043,710, a copoly(vinyl
acetate/vinyl chloride) and a :copoly(acrylonitrile/butadiene/styrene) or a copoly(vinyl
chloride/vinyl acetate/vinyl alcohol) or mixture thereof. The preferred binders are
halogen-free polymers or copolymers. The metal organic stabilizing substances having
hydrogen chloride-scavenging properties can be used advantageously in combination
with any type of binding agent whether it contains halide substituents or not.
[0071] To provide high X-ray efficiency it is preferably that a minimum amount of binder
be employed in the phosphor layer. However, the less binding agent the more brittle
the layer, so that a compromise has to be made.
[0072] The thickness of the supported phosphor layer is preferably in the range of 0.05
to 0.5 mm.
[0073] The coverage of the phosphor mixture is preferably in the range from about 300 to
750 g/sq.m.
[0074] For the preparation of the X-ray intensifying screen according to the present invention
the halide-containing phosphor particles, the stabilizing substance(s) and the non-hygroscopic
halide-free phosphor particles are intimately dispersed in a solution of the binder
and then coated upon a support. Alternatively, the halide-containing phosphor particles
are first allowed to come in intimate contact with said stabilizing substance(s) in
an organic liquid medium e.g. a solution of the binder, to cause the stabilizing substance
to contact the halide containing phosphor particles, this can be done by dispersing
both- ingredients in the organic liquid medium and thoroughly mixing in a ball mill.
Thereupon the dispersion is admixed with a dispersion of the non-hygroscopic halide-free
phosphor particles made in the same way. The mixture, if necessary after adjustment
of the binder content, can then be coated on the support and dried.
[0075] It is also possible to contact the halide-containing phosphor particles with the
stabilizing substance(s) before dispersing in the binder solution e.g. dispersing
the phosphor particles in an organic solution of the stabilizing substance(s) followed
by removal of the solvent(s) e.g. separating the phosphor particles from the solution
and then drying. The thus treated phosphor particles and the non-hygroscopic halide-free
phosphor particles can then be dispersed together in a binder solution or they can
be dispersed in separate binder solutions and the dispersions then mixed.
[0076] The coating of the present phosphor binder layer, which is preceded by the thorough
dispersing and mixing of the halide-containing phosphor particles and stabilizing
compound(s) and non-hygroscopic halide-free phosphor particles in a binder solution,
may proceed according to any usual technique, e.g. by spraying or dip-coating. After
coating, the solvent(s) of the coating mixture is (are) removed by evaporation, e.g.
by drying in an air current of 60°C.
[0077] An ultrasonic treatment can be applied to improve the packing density and to perform
the deaeration of the phosphor-binder combination. Before the optional application
of a protective coating the phosphor-binder layer may be calendered to improve the
packing density (i.e. the number of grams of phosphor per cm3 of dry coating).
[0078] Self-supporting screens of this invention can be prepared e.g. by means of "hot-pressing",
excluding the use of solvent(s) in the manufacture of the screens.
[0079] In preparing an intensifying screen according to the invention the phosphor-pigment
mixture binder composition may be coated on a wide variety of supports, e.g. cardboard
and plastic film, e.g. polyethylene terephthalate film. The supports used in the fluorescent
screens of the present invention may be coated with (a) subbing layer(s) for improving
the adherence of the phosphor coating thereto.
[0080] Optionally, a light-reflecting layer is provided between the phosphor-containing
layer and its support to enhance the exposure of the silver halide emulsion material.
Such light-reflecting layer may contain white pigment particles dispersed in a binder,
e.g. titanium dioxide particles, or may be made of a vapour-deposited metal layer,
e.g. an aluminium layer having a high reflection power for ultraviolet radiation and
blue light.
[0081] The image sharpness obtainable with a fluorescent screen silver halide material system
can be improved considerably by incorporating a fluorescent light-absorbing dye, called
"screening dye", into the fluorescent screen material. As oblique radiation has a
longer path in the screen material, it is attenuated by the screening dye or dyes
to a greater extent than the radiation impinging normally. The term "screening dye"
used herein includes dyestuffs (i.e. coloured substances in molecularly divided form)
as well as pigments.
[0082] Diffuse radiation reflecting from the support of the fluorescent screen material
can be mainly attenuated in an anti-reflection layer containing the screening dyes
subjacent to the fluorescent layer.
[0083] The screening dye does not have to be removed from the fluorescent screen material
and may therefore be any dye or pigment absorbing in the emission spectrum of the
fluorescent substance(s). Thus black substances such as carbon black particles of
an average size of 0.15 to 0.60 µm incorporated in said anti-reflection layer or the
phosphor layer yield quite satisfactory results.
[0084] To the phosphor-containing layer a protective coating may be applied preferably having
a thickness in the range of 5 to 25 pm and comprising a film-forming polymeric material
that is photographically inert towards a silver halide emulsion layer.
[0085] Polymeric materials suitable for that purpose include e.g. cellulose derivatives
(e.g. cellulose nitrate, cellulose triacetate, cellulose acetate propionate, cellulose
acetate butyrate), polyamides, polystyrene, polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl chloride,
silicone resins, poly(acrylic ester) and poly(methacrylic ester) resins, and fluorinated
hydrocarbon resins, and mixtures of the foregoing materials. Representative examples
of various individual members of these binder materials include the following resinous
materials: poly(methyl methacrylate), poly(n-butyl methacrylate), poly(isobutyl methacrylate),
copolymers of n-butyl methacrylate and isobutyl methacrylate, copolymers of vinylidene
fluoride and hexafluoropropylene, copolymers of vinylidene fluoride and trifluorochloroethylene,
copolymers of vinylidene fluoride and tetrafluoroethylene, terpolymers of vinylidene
fluoride, hexafluoropropylene, and tetrafluoroethylene, and poly(vinylidene fluoride).
[0086] According to another embodiment of the present X-ray image intensifying screen, a
protective layer is applied which contains a crosslinked polymer mass obtained by
an acid-catalyzed reaction of a polymer or mixture of polymers containing reactive
hydrogen atoms and a crosslinking agent, the crosslinking agent being an organic compound
containing a plurality of etherified N-methylol groups.
[0087] According to a special embodiment the outer face of the screen intended for contact
with the photographic silver halide emulsion material may contain a solid particulate
material that has a static friction coefficient (µ) at room temperature (20°C) of
less than 0.50 on steel as described in the published German Patent Application 2,616,093.
[0088] Antistatic substances can be applied to the screen to reduce the risk of electrical
potential differences resulting in sparking. For example, the screens are treated
with the "ANTI-STAT" 6 spray, which leaves an odourless transparent antistatic deposit.
ANTI-STAT is a trade name of Braun Laboratories Div. Barrett Chemical Co. Inc., Philadelphia,
Pa., U.S.A.
[0089] The fluorescent X-ray image intensifying screens of the present invention will normally
be used in conjunction with light-sensitive silver halide materials emulsion-coated
on one or both sides of a support.
[0090] In order to exclude local defects in the form of developable centres in the silver
halide film used in conjunction with an X-ray image intensifying screen containing
rare earth-metal phosphor particles e.g. rare-earth oxyhalide phosphor particles including
traces of radioactive elements, the screen may contain a light-diffusing layer or
sheet, which contains numerous discrete light-scattering volumes of a substance or
substances distributed at random in a binder medium or partially embedded therein,
such volumes having a mean size not larger than 2µ µm, said layer or sheet being located
so that fluorescent light of said phosphor particles can penetrate therethrough to
the outside of said screen.
[0091] Such screen has been described in the published German Patent Application 2,709,664.
[0092] The following examples illustrate the present invention without, however, limiting
it thereto. All parts, percentages and ratios are by weight unless otherwise stated.
Example 1
Preparation of screen P
[0093] 100 g of terbium-activated lanthanum oxybromide phosphor, 0.5 g of the stabilizing
compound dibutyltin-(A-mercapto propionate), 12.5 g of VINYLITE VAGH (registered trade
mark in the United Kingdom of Union Carbide and Carbon Corp., New York, USA) for a
copoly(vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate/vinyl alcohol) (91/3/6 by weight) dissolved in
48 g of methyl ethyl ketone were ball-milled to a fineness of grind corresponding
with 7 NS Hegman Fineness-of-Grind measured with the Hegman gauge as specified in
ASTM D1210, whereupon the dispersion obtained was filtered and after deaeration coated
onto a baryta-coated paper of 290 g per sq.m at a coverage of 150 g of phosphor per
sq.m to form screen P.
[0094] The phosphor layer was overcoated with a protective coating from a 7.5% solution
in ethyleneglycol monomethyl ether of cellulose acetate butyrate having a degree of
substitution (DS) of acetyl 1.31 and a DS of butyryl of 1.51. The dried protective
coating had a coating weight of 10 g per sq.m.
Preparation of screen Q
[0095] The X-ray image intensifying screen Q was manufactured as described for screen P
with the difference that the stabilizing compound was omitted from the composition
of the screen.
Preparation of screen R
[0096] The X-ray image intensifying screen R was manufactured as described for screen P
with the difference that, before coating, the oxybromide phosphor dispersion was mixed
with a calcium tungstate phosphor dispersion which was prepared as described for the
lanthanum oxybromide phosphor dispersion of screen P with the only difference that
the oxybromide phosphor was replaced by a same amount of calcium tungstate. The calcium
tungstate phosphor dispersion was added in an amount such that the final dispersion
contained the oxybromide phosphor and calcium tungstate phosphor in a ratio of 1:2.
[0097] The phosphor mixture dispersion was coated on the same support as described for screen
P at a phosphor mixture coverage per sq.m of 150 g of terbium-activated lanthanum
oxybromide phosphor and 300 g of calcium tungstate.
Moisture treatment
[0098] The moisture treatment of screens P, Q and R processed by incubation in a cabinet
having inside an atmosphere of 85% relative humidity at 20°C. Said incubation treatment
was effected for a period of 2 weeks. After that period the fluorescence power of
screen Q was completely lost and screen P showed randomly distributed spots and small
craters. Screen R did not show any trace of deterioration. When screens P and R were
X-ray exposed in contact with separate strips of the same silver halide emulsion film
the developed film strip exposed in combination with screen P showed more than 100
white spots per sq.dm whereas the developed film strip which was exposed in contact
with screen R did not show any spots at all and was evenly blackened.
[0099] The ratio of the intensification factors of screens P and R was 1:1.
Example 2
Preparation of screen K
[0100] This intensifying screen was prepared as screen P of example 1, with the difference
that 0.5 g of lauryl alcohol was used as stabiliser.
Preparation of screen L
[0101] This intensifying screen was prepared as screen Q of example 1, and differs from
screen K in that the stabiliser was omitted from the screen composition.
Preparation of screen M
[0102] The intensifying screen was prepared as screen K, with the difference that before
the application of the oxybromide phosphor dispersion the latter was mixed with a
calcium tungstate phosphor dispersion which was prepared as described for the lanthanum
oxybromide phosphor dispersion of screen K, with the only difference that the oxybromide
phosphor was replaced by an equal weight of calcium tungstate. Then the prepared calcium
tungstate phosphor dispersion was added in such an amount to the lanthanum oxybromide
dispersion that the final dispersion contained the oxybromide phosphor and the calcium
tungstate phosphor in a ratio by weight of 1:2.
[0103] The phosphor mixture dispersion was coated on the same support as described for screen
K at a phosphor mixture coverage of 150 g of terbium-activated lanthanum oxybromide
phosphor and 300 g of calcium tungstate per sq.m.
Moisture treatment
[0104] The moisture treatment of screens K, L and M proceeded by incubation in a cabinet
having inside an atmosphere of 85% relative humidity at 20°C. Said incubation treatment
was effected for a period of 2 weeks. After that period the fluorescence power of
screen L was completely lost and screen K showed randomly distributed spots and small
craters. Screen M did not show any trace of deterioration. When screens K and M were
X-ray exposed in contact with separate strips of the same silver halide emulsion film
the developed film strip exposed in combination with screen K showed more than 100
white spots per sq.dm, whereas the developed film strip that was exposed in contact
with screen M did not show any spots at all and was evenly blackened.
[0105] The ratio of the intensification factors of screens K and M was 1:1.
[0106] Analogous results were obtained by replacing 0.5 g of lauryl alcohol in the compositions
of screens K and M by a same amount of laurylmercaptan and lauric acid respectively.
A usable result was obtained by replacing in the compositions of screens K and M the
lauryl alcohol by a same amount of 1-n-dodecylamine.
Example 3
[0107] In order to have a quick check on the stabilizing properties of a particular compound
the following test was developed.
[0108] In a round-bottomed flask of 2 I provided with a reflux condenser and containing
a boiling chip 750 ml of water were heated up to boiling. Inside the cooling tube
of this condenser a flexible wire ending in a stainless steel hook was introduced.
A strip of intensifying screen (measuring 2.5 cm x 7 cm) to be tested was fixed to
the hook so that the test material did not touch the water surface. After a certain
treating time (30, 60, 120 and 240 min) the test strip was taken out of the flask
and dried at 80°C for 30 min. Thereupon an X-ray record was made using the thus treated
test strip together with an identical but non water vapour-treated strip in contact
with a same silver halide photographic material, the X-ray exposure and development
being the same for both of the exposed portions of the photographic material.
[0109] The photographic material used in the contact exposure with the screen strips was
a CURIX RP-1 film (CURIX is a registered trade mark of AGFA-GEVAERT N.V. for a medical
X-ray film).
[0110] The X-ray exposure proceeded for all the test strips at 80 kV tube voltage. The silver
halide film exposed in adjacent area with the fluorescent light of a pair of water-vapour-treated
and non-water-vapour-treated screen strips was subjected to development in the Agfa-Gevaert's
hardening developer G138 which contains hydroquinone and 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidinone
as developing agents and glutardialdehyde as hardening agent.
[0111] The optical densities obtained in the film area corresponding with each of the screen
strips were noted and are listed in the following table.

[0112] The screens were prepared as follows:
100 g of terbium-activated lanthanum oxybromide phosphor, 0.5 g of the stabilzing
compound mentioned in the Table, 12.5 g of binder consisting of 60 parts of poly (n-butyral
methacrylate) and 40 parts of polyethyl acrylate and 48 g of ethylene glycol monomethyl
ether were ball-milled to a fineness of grind corresponding with 7 NS Hegman Fineness-of-Grind
measured with the Hegman gauge as specified in ASTM D 1210.
[0113] A calcium tungstate phosphor dispersion was prepared in the same way as the above
lanthanum oxybromide phosphor dispersion and the calcium tungstate phosphor dispersion
added in such an amount to the lanthanum oxybromide phosphor dispersion that the final
dispersion contained the lanthanum oxybromide phosphor and calcium tungstate phosphor
in a ratio of 1:2.
[0114] The phosphor mixture dispersion thus obtained was coated onto a baryta-coated paper
of 290 g per sq.m at a coverage of about 450 g of phosphor per sq.m.
[0115] The phosphor layer was overcoated with a protective coating from a 7.5% solution
in ethylene glycol monomethyl ether of cellulose acetate butyrate having a degree
of substitution (LS) of acetyl 1.31 and a Ds of butyrylrpf 1.51. The dried protective
coating had a coating weight of 10 g per sq.m.
[0116] Preferred stabilizing agents for use according to the present invention are those
that in the circumstances of the above test in Example 3 wherein said phosphor combination
is used in an intensifying screen protect the fluorescence power of that screen to
such a degree that the optical density value obtained with the water-vapour-treated
screen after the 240 min treatment is not lowered by a value larger than 0.6, most
preferably not larger than 0.3, with respect to the optical density value obtained
with the non-water-vapour-treated screen.
1. An X-ray image intensifying screen comprising in dispersed form in a supported
or self-supporting binder layer:
1) halide-containing phosphor particles that are admixed with, combined in contact
with, or have reacted with one or more organic compounds whereby the fluorescence
power of said particles is less prone to be reduced by moisture, the said compounds
being capable of reacting with hydrogen chloride and/or with labile halogen or obtaining
said capability in situ after hydrolysis, and
2) non-hygroscopic halide-free phosphor particles in such a ratio by weight of 1)
to 2) that the ratio of the intensification factor of said screen to the intensification
factor of an identical screen containing, however, no non-hygroscopic phosphor particles
2) is not smaller than 1:4, the intensification factor being the quotient of the X-ray
exposure required to produce without the use of an intensifying screen an optical
density of 1 on a silver halide film, divided by the X-ray exposure required to produce
the same density on the same silver halide film by means of said X-ray image intensifying
screen, the conditions of the X-ray irradiation and the conditions of development
being the same in both cases.
2. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 1, wherein the organic compound
is an organic metal salt or an organometallic compound.
3. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 1, wherein said organic compound
is an organic compound containing no metal atom, has at 15°C a solubility of no more
than 5 g in 100 ml of water and corresponds to one of the following general formulae:

wherein:
R represents a monovalent organic group,
-RI represents a bivalent organic group, with the proviso that these groups contain no
reactive hydrogen such as contained in X, and
X represents a group containing reactive hydrogen, with which said compound by reacting
with acetyl chloride is capable of splitting off chlorine therefrom in the form of
hydrogen chloride in the circumstances of the following test A:
stoichiometric amounts of acetyl chloride and of the organic compound to be examined
are dissolved in anhydrous benzene and heated herein for 24 h in the presence of a
stoichiometric amount of pyridine to form therewith when splitting off hydrogen chloride
pyridinium chloride that is separated from the cooled reaction mixture at 20°C by
filtering or centrifuging.
4. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to any of the preceding claims which
includes halide-containing phosphor particles that are admixed with, combined in contact
with or have reacted with at least one said organic compound, wherein said compound
when used in the circumstances of the following test is capable of maintaining the
fluorescent light-emitting power of the test-phosphor to a level of at least 25% of
its original fluorescent tight-emitting power, said test comprising the following
steps:
(1) the production of X-ray image intensifying screens (A) and (B),
(2) a moisture treatment of screen (A) by applying onto the phosphor layer of said
screen a wet circular piece of filter paper having a dry weight of 1.355 g, a diameter
of 15 cm and a water content of 3.100 g, air-tightly enclosing the screen A together
with the applied filter paper in a polyethylene bag, keeping the bag for 64 h at 60°C
in a ventilated cabinet and then removing the screen from the bag, removing the filter
paper and drying the screen in air for 30 min at 80°C,
(3) an X-ray exposure of said screens (A) and (B) in contact with distinct areas of
a photographic silver halide emulsion material and the development of said material,
(4) the measurement of the spectral densities obtained in the areas of said material
that have been exposed in contact with said screens (A) and (B), and
(5) the computation of the actual loss of fluorescent light-emitting power of the
moisture-treated screen (A) in comparison with screen (B) from the spectral density
results obtained in step (4),
the production of the X-ray image intensifying screen (A) proceeding as follows:
100 g of terbium-activated lanthanum oxybromide phosphor, 0.5 g of the compound to
be tested, 12.5 g of poly(vinyl-no-butyral) containing 12% by weight of non-acetalized
vinyl alcohol units and having an average molecular weight of 50,000 and 48 g of ethylene
glycol monomethyl ether are ball-milled to a fineness of grind corresponding with
7 NS Hegman measured with the Hegman gauge as specified in ASTM D1210. Whereupon the
dispersion obtained is filtered and after deaeration coated onto a baryta-coated paper
of 290 g per sq.m at a coverage of 500 g per sq.m to form said X-ray intensifying
screen A,
the production of the X-ray image intensifying screen (B) proceeding as described
for screen (A) with the difference that the substance to be tested is left out of
the composition of the screen,
the moisture treatment of screen (A) proceeding by covering congruently the phosphor
coating of screen (A) with a wet circular piece of filter paper having a weight of
1.355 g in dry state, a diameter of 15 cm and a water-content of 3.100 g, thereupon
air-tightly enclosing the thus covered screen (A) in a polyethylene bag and keeping
the thus packed covered screen (A) at 60°C for 64 h in a ventilated cabinet followed
by the removing of said screen (A) from the bag and after removal of the filter paper
drying in the air at 80°C for 30 min,
X-ray exposure of the thus treated screen (A) and untreated screen (B) proceeding
while having said screens with the phosphor coating in contact with the silver halide
emulsion layer side of a same photographic silver halide emulsion material with transparent
base, the X-ray exposure and the subsequent development of the silver halide material
being such that with screen (B) a spectral density of at least 1.00 above inherent
fog is obtained in the silver halide material area contacting screen (B); the silver
halide material and development are such that after gradually increasing exposures
with screen (B) a silver image is obtained whose density versus log exposure curve
has a gamma value of 3;
the measurement of the transmission spectral densities DA and DB proceeding in the areas of the developed silver halide emulsion material that during
the exposure have been in contact with screens (A) and (B) respectively;
the computing of the actual loss of fluorescent light-emitting power of the moisture
treated screen (A) in comparison with screen (B) proceeding on the basis of the spectral
density results DA and D. and the gamma 3.
5. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 2, wherein said organic metal
salt is a metal carboxylate.
6. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 2, wherein said organometallic
compound corresponds to the following formula:

wherein:
R is a straight-chain, branched chain or ring-closed, saturated or unsaturated hydrocarbon
group,
-X is 1 to 3 electronegative substituents, and
m is 1, 2 or 3, excluding X being three, two, or one halogen atom(s) when m is 1,
2 or 3 respectively.
7. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 2, wherein said organometallic
compound is a dialkyltin mercaptide or an organometallic compound corresponding to
any of the following general formulae:

wherein:
R' represents an alkyl group or a substituted alkyl group,
each of X1 and X2, which may be the same or different, represents ―O―CO―R2 or ―S―R3, wherein
R2 is alkyl or substituted alkyl, and
R3 is alkyl or substituted alkyl,

wherein:
R' has the same meaning as described above, and
Y represents an alkylene group.
8. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to claim 7, wherein said compound
is dibutyltin maleate, dibutyltin lauryl mercaptide, dibutyltin S,S'-bis-(n-octylmercapto
acetate), di-(n-octyl)-tin S,S'-bis(iso-octylmercapto acetate) or dibutyltin A-mercaptopropionate.
9. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to any of the preceding claims, wherein
the halide-free and non-hygroscopic phosphor particles consist of calcium tungstate,
terbium-doped gadolinium oxysulfide, terbium-doped lanthanum oxysulphide or terbium-doped
yttrium oxysulphide.
10. An X-ray image intensifying screen according to any of the preceding claims, wherein
the screen includes rare-earth oxyhalide phosphor particles containing as host metal
lanthanum and/or gadolinium and one or more other rare-earth metals as activator metal.
1. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques comprenant, sous une forme dispersée
dans une couche de liant déposée sur un support ou autoportante:
1) des particules d'une substance luminescente contenant un halogénure qui sont mélangées
avec, qui sont combinées en contact avec ou qui ont réagi avec un ou plusieurs composés
organiques de telle sorte que le pouvoir fluorescent de ces particules ait moins tendance
à être réduit par l'humidité, ces composés étant capables de réagir avec le chlorure
d'hydrogène et/ou avec un halogène labile ou encore, ces composés pouvant acquérir
cette aptitude in situ après hydrolyse, et
2) des particules non hygroscopiques d'une substance luminescente exempte d'halogénure,
le rapport pondéral de (1) à (2) étant tel que le rapport entre le facteur de renforcement
de cet écran et le facteur de renforcement d'un écran identique ne contenant toutefois
pas des particules non hygroscopiques d'une substance luminescente (2) ne soit pas
inférieur à 1:4, le facteur de renforcement étant le quotient de l'exposition radiographique
requise pour produire, sans utiliser un écran renforçateur, une densité optique de
1 sur une pellicule à l'halogénure d'argent, divisé par l'exposition radiographique
requise pour produire la même densité sur la même pellicule à l'halogénure d'argent
au moyen de cet écran renforçateur d'images radiographiques, les conditions de l'irradiation
radiographique et les conditions de développement étant les mêmes dans les deux cas.
2. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 1, caractérisé
en ce que le composé organique est un sel de métal organique ou un composé organométallique.
3. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 1, caractérisé
en ce que le composé organique est un composé organique ne contenant pas d'atome de
métal, il a, à 15°C, une solubilité ne dépassant pas 5 g dans 100 ml d'eau et il répond
à une des formules générales suivantes:

où
R représente un groupe organique monovalent,
R1 représente un groupe organique bivalent, à condition que ces groupes ne contiennent
pas un atome d'hydrogène réactif tel que celui contenu dans X, et
X représente un groupe contenant de l'hydrogène réactif avec lequel, par réaction
avec le chlorure d'acétyle, ce composé est capable d'en séparer du chlore sous forme
de chlorure d'hydrogène dans les conditions de l'essai A ci-après:
on dissout des quantités stoechiométriques de chlorure d'acétyle et du composé organique
à examiner dans du benzène anhydre et on les y chauffe pendant 24 heures en présence
d'une quantité stoechiométrique de pyridine pour former, avec celle-ci et lors de
la séparation du chlorure d'hydrogène, du chlorure de pyridinium qui est séparé, à
20°C, du mélange réactionnel refroidi, par filtration ou par centrifugation.
4. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant l'une quelconque des revendications
précédentes, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend des particules d'une substance luminescente
contenant un halogénure, qui sont mélangées avec, qui sont combinées en contact avec
ou qui ont réagi avec au moins un composé organique de ce type, ce composé étant capable,
lorsqu'il est utilisé dans les conditions de l'essai ci-après, de maintenir le pouvoir
d'émission de lumière fluorescente de la substance luminescente d'essai à un niveau
d'au moins 25% de son pouvoir initial d'émission de lumière fluorescente, cet essai
comprenant les étapes suivantes:
(1) la formation des écrans renforçateurs d'images radiographiques (A) et (B),
(2) un traitement de l'écran (A) à l'humidité en appliquant, sur la couche de substance
luminescente de cet écran, un morceau circulaire humide de papier filtrant pesant
1,355 g à sec, ayant un diamètre de 15 cm et une teneur en eau de 3,100 g, puis en
enfermant, à l'abri de l'air, l'écran (A) sur lequel est appliqué le papier filtrant
dans un sac en polyéthylène, en maintenant ce sac pendant 64 heures à 60°C dans une
étuve ventilée, puis en retirant 1 écran du sac, en enlevant le papier filtrant et
en séchant l'écran à l'air pendant 30 minutes à 80°C,
(3) une exposition radiographique des écrans (A) et (B) en contact avec des zones
distinctes d'un matériau photographique comportant une émulsion à l'halogénure d'argent
et ensuite, le développement de ce matériau,
(4) le mesure des densités spectrales obtenues dans les zones de ce matériau qui ont
été exposées en contact avec les écrans (A) et (B), et
(5) le calcul de la perte réelle du pouvoir d'émission de lumière fluorescente de
l'écran (A) traité à l'humidité comparativement avec l'écran (B) d'après les résultats
obtenus à l'étape (4) à propos de la densité spectrale,
la formation de l'écran renforçateur d'images radiographiques (A) se déroulant de
la manière suivante:
dans un broyeur à boulets, on broie 100 g d'une substance luminescente d'oxybromure
de lanthane activé au terbium, 0,5 g du composé devant être soumis à l'essai, 12,5
g de poly(vinyl-n-butyral) contenant 12% en poids de motifs d'alcool vinylique non
acétalisé et ayant un poids moléculaire moyen de 50.000, ainsi que 48 g d'éther monométhylique
d'éthylène-glycol jusqu'à une finesse de broyage correspondant à 7 NS Hegman, mesuré
avec la jauge de Hegman selon les spécifications de la norme ASTM D1210, après quoi
on filtre la dispersion ainsi obtenue et, après désaération, on la coule sur un papier
baryté de 290 g/m2 à raison de 500 g/m2 pour former l'écran renforçateur radiographique
A,
la formation de l'écran renforçateur d'images radiographiques (B) se déroulant comme
décrit pour l'écran (A), avec cette différence que la substance devant être soumise
à l'essai est omise dans la composition de l'écran,
le traitement de l'écran (A) à l'humidité se déroulant en recouvrant correctement
le revêtement de substance luminescente de l'écran (A) d'un morceau circulaire humide
de papier filtrant pesant 1,355 g à sec et ayant un diamètre de 15 cm, ainsi qu'une
teneur en eau de 3,100 g, puis en enfermant, à l'abri de l'air, l'écran ainsi recouvert
(A) dans un sac en polyéthylène et en maintenant l'écran ainsi recouvert et emballé
(A) à 60°C pendant 64 heures dans une étuve ventilée, puis en retirant cet écran (A)
du sac et, après enlèvement du papier filtrant, en procédant à un séchage à l'air
à 80°C pendant 30 minutes,
l'exposition radiographique de l'écran ainsi traité (A) et de l'écran non traité (B)
se déroulant alors que les écrans pourvus du revêtement de substance luminescente
sont en contact avec la face sur laquelle est appliquée une couche d'émulsion à-l'halogénure
d'argent d'un même matériau photographique d'émulsion à l'halogénure d'argent comportant
un support transparent, l'exposition radiographique et le développement ultérieur
du magériau à l'halogénure d'argent se déroulant de telle sorte qu'avec l'écran (B),
on obtienne une densité spectrale d'au moins 1,00 au-delà du voile inhérent dans la
zone du matériau à l'halogénure d'argent qui est en contact avec l'écran (B); le matériau
à l'halogénure d'argent et le développement sont conçus de telle sorte qu'après accroissement
progressif des expositions avec l'écran (B), on obtienne une image argentique dont
la courbe de la densité vis-à-vis du log d'exposition a une valeur gamma de 3;
le mesure des densités spectrales de transmission DA et DB se déroulant dans les zones du matériau développé d'émulsion à l'halogénure d'argent
qui, au cours de l'exposition, ont été en contact avec les écrans (A) et (B) respectivement;
le calcul de la perte réelle du pouvoir d'émission de luminère fluorescente le écran
(A) traité à l'humidité comparativement à l'écran (B) se déroulant sur la base des
résultats de densité spectrale DA et DB ainsi que sur la base de la valeur gamma de 3.
5. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 2, caractérisé
en ce que le sel organique d'un métal est un carboxylate d'un métal.
6. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 2, caractérisé
en ce que le composé organométallique répond à la formule suivante:

dans laquelle
R représente un group d'hydrocarbure saturé ou insaturé, à chaîne droite, à chaîne
ramifiée ou cyclisé,
X représente 1 à 3 substituants électronégatifs, et
m est égal à 1, 2 ou 3, étant exclu que X représente trois, deux ou un atome(s) d'halogène(s)
lorsque m est égal à 1, 2 ou 3 respectivement.
7. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 2, caractérisé
en ce que le composé organométallique est un mercaptide d'étain-dialkyle ou un composé
organométallique répondant à l'une ou l'autre des formules générales suivantes:

où
R' représente un groupe alkyle ou un groupe alkyle substitué,
chacun des radicaux X1 et X2, qui peuvent être identiques ou différents, représente ―O―CO―R2 ou -S-R3 où R2 est un groupe alkyle ou un groupe alkyle substitué, et R3 est un groupe alkyle, y compris un groupe alkyle substitué,

R1 a la même signification que celle définie ci-dessus, et
Y représente un groupe alkylène.
8. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant la revendication 7, caractérisé
en ce que ce composé est le maléate d'étain-dibutyle, le lauryl-mercaptide d'étain-dibutyle,
le S,S'-bis-(n-octyl- mercapto-acétate) d'étain-dibutyle, le S,S'-bis-(isooctylmercapto-acétate)
d'étain-di-(n-octyle) ou le f3-mercaptopropionate d'étain-dibutyle.
9. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant l'une quelconque des revendications
précédentes, caractérisé en ce que les particules de substance luminescente qui sont
exemptes d'halogénure et non hydroscopiques, sont constituées de tungstate de calcium,
d'oxysulfure de gadolinium dopé au terbium, d'oxysulfure de lanthane dopé au terbium
ou d'oxysulfure d'yttrium dopé au terbium.
10. Ecran renforçateur d'images radiographiques suivant l'une quelconque des revendications
précédentes, caractérisé en ce que cet écran comprend des particules d'une substance
luminescente d'un oxyhalogénure de terre rare contenant, comme métal hôte, du lanthane
et/ou du gadolinium et, comme métal activateur, un ou plusieurs autres métaux de terres
rares.
1. Rötgenbildverstärkerschirm, der in dispergierter Form in einer selbsttragenden
Bindemittelschicht oder in einer auf einen Träger angebrachten Bindemittelschicht
enthält:
1) halogenidhaltige Phosphorteilchen, die gemischt sind mit, im Kontakt kombiniert
sind mit, oder mit einer oder mehreren organischen Verbindungen reagiert haben, wobei
das Fluoreszenzvermögen dieser Teilchen weniger empfänglich dafür ist, durch Feuchtigkeit
reduziert zu werden, wobei diese Verbindungen imstande sind, mit Wasserstoffchlorid
und/oder mit labilem Halogen zu reagieren, bzw. diese Fähigkeit in situ nach der Hydrolyse
erhalten, und
2) nicht-hygroskopische, halogenidfreie Phosphorteilchen in einem derartigen Gewichtsverhältnis
von 1) zu 2), dass das Verhältnis des Verstärkungsfaktors dieses Schirms zum Verstärkungsfaktor
eines identischen Schirmes, der aber keine nicht-hygroskopischen Phosphorteilchen
2) enthält, nicht kleiner als 1:4 ist, wobei der Verstärkungsfaktor der Quotient der
erforderlichen Röntgenstrahlenbelichtung ist, um ohne Verwendung eines Verstärkungsschirmes
eine optische Densität gleich 1 auf einem Silberhalogenidfilm zu erhalten, dividiert
durch die erforderliche Röntgenstrahlenbelichtung, um die gleiche Densität auf dem
gleichen Silberhalogenidfilm mittels des genannten Röntgenbildverstäkerschirmes zu
erhalten, wobei die Bedingungen der Röntgenstrahlenebelichtung und der Entwicklung
in beiden Fällen gleich sind.
2: Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die organische
Verbindung ein organisches Metallsalz oder eine Organometallverbindung ist.
3. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die organische
Verbindung eine organische Verbindung ohne Metallatom ist, die bei 15°C eine Löslichkeit
von nicht mehr als 5 g in 100 ml Wasser hat und einer der folgenden allgemeinen Formeln
entspricht:

in denen bedeuten:
R eine einwertige organische Gruppe,
R1 eine zweiwertige organische Gruppe, unter der Bedingung, dass diese Gruppen keinen
reaktionsfähigen Wasserstoff wie in X enthalten, und
X eine Gruppe mit reaktionsfähigen Wasserstoff, womit diese Verbindung durch Reaktion
mit Acetylchlorid daraus Chlor in der Form von Wasserstoffchlorid abzuspalten vermag
unter den Bedingungen des folgenden Versuches A:
stöchiometrische Mengen von Acetylchlorid und von der zu untersuchenden organischen
Verbindung werden in wasserfreiem Benzol gelöst und darin in der Gegenwart einer stöchiometrischen
Menge Pyridin 24 h erhitzt, um damit unter Abspaltung von Wasserstoffchlorid Pyridiniumchlorid
zu bilden, das bei 20°C von dem gekühlten Reaktionsgemisch abfiltriert oder abzentrifugiert
wird.
4. Röntgenbildvers.tärkerschirm nach irgendeinem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, der
halogenidhaltige Phosphorteilchen enthält, die vermischt sind mit, im Kontakt kombiniert
sind mit oder mit mindestens einer organischen Verbindung reagiert haben, dadurch
gekennzeichnet, dass diese Verbindung bei der Verwendung unter den Umständen des folgenden
Versuches das Fluoreszenzlicht-Emissionsvermögen des Versuchsphosphors auf einem Niveau
von mindestens 25% seines ursprünglichen Fluoreszenzlicht-Emissionsvermögens aufrechtzuerhalten
vermag, wobei dieser Versuch die folgenden Stufen umfasst:
(1) die Herstellung von Röntgenbildverstärkerschirmen (A) und (B),
(2) eine Feuchtigkeitsbehandlung des Schirmes (A), indem man die Phosphorschicht des
Schirmes (A) deckungsgleich mit einem feuchten, kreisrunden Stückchen Papier mit einem
Trockengewicht von 1,355 g, einem Durchmesser von 15 cm und einem Wassergehalt von
3,100 g bedeckt, den so abgedeckten Schirm A luftdicht in einen Polyäthylenbeutel
einschliesst, den so verpackten, abgedeckten Schirm A bei 60°C 64 h in einem belüfteten
Schrank belässt, dann den Schirm A aus den Beutel nimmt und 30 min bei 80°C an der
Luft trocknet nach Abnehmen des Filtrierpapiers,
(3) eine Röntgenstrahlenebelichtung dieser Schirme (A) und (B) im Kontakt mit verschiedenen
Flächen eines photographischen Silberhalogenidemulsionsmaterials und die Entwicklung
dieses Materials,
(4) die Messung der an denjenigen Flächen dieses Materials erhaltenenen Spektraldensititäten,
die im Kontakt mit den Schirmen (A) und (B) belichtet wurden, und
(5) die Berechnung des wirklichen Verlustes des Fluoreszenzlicht-Emissionsvermögens
eines feuchtigkeit-behandelten Schirmes (A) im Vergleich mit Schirm (B) aus den in
Stufe (4) erhaltenen Resultaten der Spektraldensität,
wobei die Herstellung des Röntgenbildverstärkerschirmes (A) folgenderweise stattfindet:
100 g Phosphor aus terbium-aktiviertem Lanthanoxybromid,
0.5 g der zu prüfenden Substanz,
12,5 g Poly(vinyl-n-butyral), das 12 Gew.% nicht-acetalisierte Vinylalkoholeinheiten
enthält und ein mittleres Molekulargewicht von 50.000 hat, sowie
48 g Äthylenglykolmonomethyläther
werden in der Kugelmühle bis zu einer Mahlfeinheit gemahlen, die der mit dem Hegman-Gerät
nach ASTM D1210 gemessenen Hegman-Einheit 7 NS entspricht, wobei dann die so erhaltene
Dispersion filtriert und nach Entfernen der Luft auf ein Barytpapier von 290 g pro
m
2 im Verhältnis von 500 g pro m
2 gegossen wird, um diesen Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm A zu bilden,
wobei die Herstellung des Röntgenbildverstärkerschirmes (B) wie für den Schirm (A)
beschrieben erfolgt, jedoch mit dem Unterschied, dass in der Schirmmassa die zu prüfende
Substanz weggelassen wird,
wobei die Feuchtigkeitsbehandlung des Schirmes A dadurch erfolgt, dass man die Phosphorschicht
des Schirmes A deckungsgleich mit einem feuchten, kreisrunden Stück Filtrierpapier
mit einem Trockengewicht von 1,355 g, einem Durchmesser von 15 cm und einem Wassergehalt
von 3,100 g bedeckt, den so abgedeckten Schirm a luftdicht in einen Polyäthylenbeutel
einschliesst und den so verpackten, abgedeckten Schirm a bei 60°C 64 h in einem belüfteten
Schrank belässt, dann den Schirm A aus dem Beutel nimmt und 30 min bei 80°C an der
Luft trocknet nach Abnehmen des Filtrierpapiers,
wobei die Röntgenbestrahlung des behandelten Schirmes A und des unbehandelten Schirmes
B erfolgt, während sich diese Schirme mit der Phosphorschicht in Kontact mit der Silberhalogenidemulsionsschichtseite
eines gleichen photographischen Silberhalogenidemulsionmaterials mit transparentem
Träger befinden und die Röntgenbestrahlung sowie die nachfolgende Entwicklung des
Silberhalogenidmaterials so beschaffen sind, dass mit dem Schirm B eine Spektraldensität
von mindestens 1,00 über Eigenschleier in der mit dem Schirm B in Berührung gewesenen
Zone erhalten wird, und wobei das Silberhalogenidmaterial und die entwicklung so beschaffen
sind, dass bei allmählich zunehmender Bestrahlung mit Schirm B ein Silberbild erhalten
wird, dessen Kurve Schwärzung über log Bestrahlung einen Gammawert von 3 hat,
wobei die Messung der Durchlässigkeits-Spektraldensitäten DA und DB in den Zonen des entwickelten Silberhalogenidemulsionsmaterials erfolgt, die während
der Bestrahlung mit Schirm A bzw. Schirm B in Berührung standen, und
wobei die Berechnung des tatsächlichen Verlusts an Fluoreszenzlicht-Emissionsvermögen
des feuchtigkeitsbehandelten Schirmes A im Vergleich zum Schirm B auf der Basis der
Spektraldensitätswerte DA und DI, und des Gammawertes 3 erfolgt.
5. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass das organische
Metallsalz ein Metallcarboxylat ist.
6. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Organometallverbindung
der folgenden Formel entspricht:

in der bedeuten:
R eine geradkettige, verzweigtkettige oder cyclisierte, gesättigte oder ungesättigte
Kohlenwasserstoffgruppe,
X ein bis drei elektronegative Substituenten, und
m gleich 1, 2 oder 3 unter Ausschluss der Bedingung, dass X drei, zwei oder ein Halogenatom(e)
ist, wenn m den Wert 1 bzw. 2 bzw. 3 hat.
7. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Organometallverbindung
ein Dialkylzinnmercaptid oder eine Organometallverbindung nach einer der folgenden
allgemeinen Formeln ist:

in der bedeuten:
RI eine Alkylgruppe oder eine substituierte Alkylgruppe,
X1 und X2 (gleich oder verschieden) je eine ―O―CO―R2 oder -S-R3 Gruppe, wobei R2 eine Alkylgruppe oder eine substituierte Alkylgruppe ist, und
R3 eine Alkylgruppe, einschliesslich einer substituierten Alkylgruppe,

R' dieselbe Bedeutung hat wie oben beschrieben, und
Y eine Alkylengruppe bedeutet.
8. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach Anspruch 7, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Verbindung
Dibutylzinnmaleat, Dibutylzinnlaurylmercaptid, Dibutylzinn-S,S'-bis-(n-octylmercaptoacetat),
Di-(n-octyl)-zinn-S,S'-bis(isooctylmercaptoacetat) oder Dibutylzinn-ß-mercaptopropionat
ist.
9. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach irgendeinem der vorangehenden Ansprüche, dadurch
gekennzeichnet, dass der Schirm Seltenerdmetalloxyhalogenid-Phosphorteilchen enthält,
die als Wirtsmetall Lanthan und/oder Gadolinium und als Aktivatormetall ein oder mehrere
andere Seltenerddotiertem Yttriumoxysulfid bestehen.
10. Röntgenbildverstärkerschirm nach irgendeinem der vorangehenden Ansprüche, dadurch
gekennzeichnet, dass der Schirm Seltenerdmetalloxyhalogenid-Phosphorteilchen enthält,
die also Wirtsmetall Lanthan und/oder Gadolinium und also Aktivatormetall ein oder
mehrer andere Seltenerdmetalle enthält.