Hydrogen bond donating/accepting thermal solvents for image separation systems

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 5843618
  • Patent Number
    5,843,618
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, June 8, 1993
    31 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 1, 1998
    26 years ago
Abstract
An aqueous-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element is disclosed, wherein said element comprises radiation sensitive silver halide, a dye-providing compound that forms or releases a heat-transferable image dye upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of a primary amine developing agent, a hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent for facilitating non-aqueous diffusion transfer according to formula (I) ##STR1## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;m is 1, 2, or 3;Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;n is 1 or 2;the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;R is an alkyl, aryl and alkylaryl group of from 1 to 18 carbon atoms;the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10.
Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to chromogenic photographic imaging systems that utilize silver halide based radiation sensitive layers and associated formation of image dyes. In particular, this invention relates to such systems where the resulting dye images, when the photographic elements are substantially dry, are transferred to a polymeric receiver layer, thereby separating the developed silver and dye images.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Thermal solvents in dry photothermographic systems. Heat processable photosensitive elements can be constructed so that after exposure, they can be processed in a substantially dry state by applying heal It is known how to develop latent image in a photographic element not containing silver halide wherein organic silver salts are used as a source of silver for image formation and amplification. Such processes are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,429,706 (Shepard et al.) and 3,442,682 (Fukawa et al.). Other dry processing thermographic systems are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,152,904 (Sorenson et al.) and 3,457,075 (Morgan and Shely). A variety of compounds have been proposed as "carriers" or "thermal solvents" or "heat solvents" for such systems, whereby these additives serve as solvents for incorporated developing agents, or otherwise facilitate the resulting development or silver diffusion processes. Acid amides and carbamates have been proposed as such thermal solvents by Henn and Miller (U.S. Pat. No. 3,347,675) and by Yudelson (U.S. Pat. No. 3,438,776). Bojara and de Mauriac (U.S. Pat. No. 3,667,959) disclose the use of nonaqueous polar solvents containing thione, --SO.sub.2 -- and --CO-- groups as thermal solvents and carriers in such photographic elements. Similarly, La Rossa (U.S. Pat. No. 4,168,980) discloses the use of imidazoline-2-thiones as processing addenda in heat developable photographic materials. Takahashi (U.S. Pat. No. 5,107,454) discloses a microencapsulated base activated heat developable photographic polymerization element containing silver halide, a reducing agent, a polymerizable compound, contained in a microcapsule and separate from a base or base precursor. In addition the element contains a sulfonamide compound as a development accelerator.
Thermal solvents for use in substantially dry color photothermographic systems have been disclosed by Komamura et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,770,981), Komamura (U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,698), Aomo and Nakamaura (U.S. Pat. No. 4,952,479), and Ohbayashi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,983,502). The terms "heat solvent" and "thermal solvent" in these disclosures refer to a non-hydrolyzable organic material which is a liquid at ambient temperature or a solid at an ambient temperature but melts together with other components at a temperature of heat treatment or below but higher than 40.degree. C. Such solvents may also be solids at temperatures above the thermal processing temperature. Their preferred examples include compounds which can act as a solvent for the developing agent and compounds having a high dielectric constant which accelerate physical development of silver salts. Alkyl and aryl amides are disclosed as "heat solvents" by Komamura et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,770,981), and a variety of benzamides have been disclosed as "heat solvents" by Ohbayashi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,983,502). Polyglycols, derivatives of polyethylene oxides, beeswax, monostearin, high dielectric constant compounds having an --SO.sub.2 -- or --CO-- group such as acetamide, ethylcarbamate, urea, methylsulfonamide, polar substances described in U.S. Pat No. 3,667,959, lactone of 4-hydroxybutanoic acid, methyl anisate, and related compounds are disclosed as thermal solvents in such systems. The role of thermal solvents in these systems is not clear, but it is believed that such thermal solvents promote the diffusion of reactants at the time of thermal development. Masukawa and Koshizuka disclose (U.S. Pat. No. 4,584,267) the use of similar components (such as methyl anisate) as "heat fusers" in thermally developable light-sensitive materials. Baxendale and Wood in the Defensive Publication corresponding to U.S. application Ser. No. 825,478 filed Mar. 17, 1969 disclose water soluble lower-alkyl hydroxybenzoates as preprocessing stabilizers in silver salt heat-developable photographic elements.
Heat developable thermal dye-diffusion transfer systems. Hirai et al. (U.S. Pat No. 4,590,154) disclose a heat developable color photographic light-sensitive material comprising silver halide, a hydrophilic binder, dye releasing compounds which release mobile dyes, and a sulfonamide compound. The compounds disclosed by Hirai et al. have, except for a very few examples, a very low octanol/water partition coefficient, or clogP value (see below). This system requires only heat to develop the latent image and to produce mobile dyes. However, the mobile dyes are affixed to an image receiving material, which must be wetted with water prior to being contacted with the heat developed donor element The subsequent dye diffusion transfer to the receiver element is therefore of the conventional wet diffusion type. Nakamine et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,017,454) disclose a heat developable photographic chromogenic system that also utilizes diffusion transfer of dyes to an image receiving (fixing) element. The dye diffusion transfer in actuality requires that the image receiving or fixing element be wetted with water prior to being affixed to the dye donor element. The resulting dye transfer, therefore, is a wet diffusion transfer of the conventional type, not dry thermal dye transfer. Kohno et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,032,499) disclose a heat developable photographic chromogenic system that also utilizes diffusion transfer of dyes to an image receiving element. The compounds taught as promoting thermal transfer are, except for one of 60 examples, ortho substituted hydroxybenzamides of very low clogP value (see below).
Hydroxybenzene Derivatives in Aqueous-developable Non-diffusion-transfer Color Photographic Systems. Okonogi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,228,235) disclose 2,6-dialkyl hydroxybenzoates as dye light-fade stabilizers in a integral photographic, or non-diffusion transfer type, element. Hirano et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,474,874) disclose 5-substituted pyrogallols with amide, acyl, sulfone, or sulfate groups as color fog preventative agents (interlayer scavengers) in an integral photographic element or in an aqueous alkali color image transfer element Takahashi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,169,742) disclose phenols with sulfone, amide and este substituents as interlayer scavengers in a integral photographic element. Waki et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,626,494) describes an aqueous alkali activated image transfer element containing coupler solvents including 2-ethylhexyl hydroxybenzoate. Takahashi et al. (European Patent Application No. 276,319) disclose image generating layers incorporating low levels of hydroxybenzoates, salicylates and o-hydroxybenzophenones as dye light-stabilizers. Thirtle and Weissberger (U.S. Pat. No. 2,835,579) disclose aqueously processable color photographic elements that contains 2,4-di-n-alkyl-, 2-n-alkyl-4-n-alkylacyl- or 2-n-alkylacyl-4-n-alkylphenols as solvents for dye forming couplers. Sakai et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,166) disclose seven classes of materials, including as members of one class, arylsulfonylphenols, arylsulfamoylphenols and arylacylphenols as coupling activity enhancing compounds employed in development processes not containing benzyl alcohol. Ishikawa and Sato (Japanese Kokai No. 62-25754) disclose hydroxybenzoates and salicylates as coupling activity enhancing compounds in color photographic elements. Kimura et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,551,422) disclose the incorporation of substituted phenols, including alkylphenols, hydroxybenzoates and acylphenols in color photographic elements as hue shifting addenda.
Physical organic characterization of thermal solvents. Materials, especially those that can be treated as substituent variations on an essential functional group, can be described by a variety of extrathermodynamic parameters that relate their activity, according to some performance measure, to their structure. As a central theme of physical-organic chemistry this approach is described in a number of organic chemistry text books, monographs, review articles and review series. Several parameters are employed here that describe the characteristics of the materials that are useful in the practice of this invention. These are the Hammett sigma (.sigma.) values, which characterize the ability of the ring substituents to effect the electronic nature of the reaction site, the octanol/water partition coefficient as either a substituent parameter or the log of the calculated partition coefficient, clogP, which characterizes the octanol/water partition equilibrium of the entire molecule, the pK.sub.a which measures the tendency of a functional group to lose or gain a proton, as referenced to an aqueous environment, and hydrogen bond donating (HBD) and the hydrogen bond accepting (HBA) character of functional groups.
The Hammett sigma constant, as the seminal member of the family of linear free energy relationships, is described in standard physical organic textbooks such as by T. H. Lowry and K. S. Richardson, "Mechanisms and Theory in Organic Chemistry", 3rd ed., Harper & Row, New York, in monographs such as Shorter, "Correlation Analysis of Organic Reactivity", Research Studies Press, Chichester, Great Britain, 1982 and in specialized series such as Progress in Physical Organic Chemistry. The primary and secondary journal literature contains numerous tabulations of Hammett sigma constants such as Hansch et. al., J. Med. Chem., 1973, 16, 1207 and Hansch et. al., Chem. Rev., 1991, 91, 165. These Hammett sigma values are well established for meta and para substituents, taken for the description of this invention, as relative to the hydrogen bond donating moiety and not involving any enhanced resonance interactions. The apparent sigma values for ortho substituents are often confounded with steric effects leading to a wide variation in the empirically derived substituent ortho sigma values. For the purposes of this invention we have assumed that the ortho sigma values of substituents are equal to its para sigma value. The sigma value for a thermal solvent is the simple algebraic sum of all of the substituents on an aromatic ring exclusive of any hydrogen bond donating substituent.
The application of the octanol/water partition coefficient as logP and the corresponding Hansch pi (.pi.) substituent parameter has been described by Hansch et al., in J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 1964, 86, 1616, J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 1964, 86, 5175, Accts. Chem. Res. 1969, 2, 232, and numerous other subsequent journal articles by these and other authors. Tabulations of the experimentally derived .pi. value for numerous substituents are available in the literature, for example, Hansch et al., J. Med. Chem., 1973, 16, 1207, and Hansch and Leo, "Substituent Constants for Correlation Analysis in Chemistry and Biology", Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1985. Partition coefficients can be calculated by fragment additivity relationships. These calculations are relatively simple for additional methylene unit in a hydrocarbon chain, but are more difficult in more complex structural variations. An expert computer program, MEDCHEM, Pomona Medchem Software, Pomona College, California (ver. 3.54), permits consistent calculation of partition coefficients as the log value, clogP, from molecular structure inputs and is used in the present invention to calculate these values.
The concept of the hydrogen bond is widely employed in organic chemistry. The hydrogen bond is a bond between a covalently bonded hydrogen and another atom and is usually represented as A-H . . . B where B is any sigma (.sigma.) or pi (.pi.) electron donor site (Lewis base), referred to as a hydrogen-bond acceptor (HBA), and A in organic compounds is N, P, O, S and Se and is referred to as a hydrogen bond donor (HBD). These bonds are weaker than normal covalent bonds but are well known to stabilize organic chemical structures. Monographs by Joesten and Schaad, "Hydrogen Bonding", M. Decker New York, 1974 and Pimentel and McClellan, "The Hydrogen Bond", Freeman, San Francisco, 1960 discuss various aspects of this subject. Quantitative assessment of hydrogen bonding characteristics for use in structure-activity relationships have been published. Hansch and Leo in "Substituent Constants for Correlation Analysis in Chemistry and Biology", Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1985 give a binomial scale describing hydrogen bond donating and hydrogen bond accepting character for a wide variety of substituent groups. Drago et al. (J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 1971, 93, 6014) present a double-scale equation for empirically predicting the strengths of the hydrogen bond formation for a variety of pairs of hydrogen bond donors and receivers. This work emphasizes the concept that the strength of the hydrogen bond is dependent on the characteristics of both the hydrogen bond donor and the hydrogen bond acceptor. M. J. Kamlet and R. W. Taft developed an empirical scale defining the hydrogen bond donating (HBD) parameter .alpha. (alpha), and the hydrogen bond accepting (HBA) parameter .beta. (beta). The development of these parameters are described in a series of papers beginning in 1976 (J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 1976, 98, 377 and J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 1976, 98, 2886) and are reviewed in Progress in Physical Organic Chemistry, 1981, 13, 485 and in J. Org. Chem., 1983, 48, 2877. The methods for determining these molecular characteristics and their use in correlating chemical reactions are described in these and other papers in the series. While the parameters .alpha. and .beta. refer to molecular characteristics it is clear from inspection of the tables of values provided in the above reviews that functional group contributions useful in the prediction of hydrogen bonding characteristics can be derived from the molecular values.
PROBLEMS TO BE SOLVED BY THE INVENTION
A major problem that remains in wet developed dry thermal transfer systems, wherein the dye images so formed are transferred by diffusion through substantially dry gelatin, is to facilitate the ease with which such dye images may be transferred by diffusion. Another problem that exists is to facilitate such diffusion without inducing the crystallization of said dyes in the gelatin binder. Similar problems of dry dye diffusion transfer exist in color photothermographic systems that rely on dry or heat development processes.
Much of the aforementioned prior art having to do with chromogenic image formation in diffusion transfer processes actually utilize a considerable amount of water in the diffusion process. The diffusion therefore is conventional diffusion transfer, rather than the extremely highly activated diffusion of said dyes through substantially dry gelatin. Diffusion of dyes through wet gelatin, when such dyes have sufficient solubilization, is relatively facile. Much of this same prior art, based on moderately wet diffusion transfer, utilizes imaging chemistry, (dye releasing compounds), that is much more expensive than the simple silver halide based indoaniline dye forming chemistry obtained in conventional wet development of silver halide systems.
These and other problems may be overcome by the practice of our invention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the present invention is to overcome the disadvantages of the prior processes and products. A further object of the present invention is to provide improved image dye diffusion transfer efficiency.
A further object of the present invention is to allow separation of the silver, silver halide, and unused chromogenic chemistry from the dye image. Another object of the present invention is to provide a chromogenic imaging system wherein much of the chemistry utilized in creating the image is recoverable and recyclable. Yet another object of the present invention is to provide an imaging system which minimizes toxic effluent and environmental contamination. A significant further object of the present invention is to provide an improved process of image formation comprising eliminating bleching fixing and bleach-fixing processing steps.
The invention provides an aqueous-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element comprising radiation sensitive silver halide, a dye-providing compound that forms or releases an image dye upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of a primary amine developing agent, a hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent for facilitating non-aqueous diffusion transfer wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (I) ##STR2## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with a pK.sub.a for aqueous proton loss of greater than 6;
L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
m is 1, 2, or 3;
Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
n is 1 or 2;
the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
R is an alkyl, aryl and alkylaryl group of from 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10.
ADVANTAGEOUS EFFECT OF THE INVENTION
We have discovered that selected examples of substituted phenols serve to advantageously improve the diffusion of image dyes through relatively dry photographic binders such as gelatin to a receiver element. Compositions of the present invention yield dramatically improved dye images in receiver layers of the photographic element. This improved dye transfer efficiency enables photographic elements to be constructed using less incorporated chemistry and therefore lower manufacturing costs. The compositions of the present invention eliminate the bleaching and fixing treatments in aqueous developable photographic elements, thus removing a potential source of environmental degradation. The materials in the color photographic element are readily available for recycling.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1. Photographic element layer-structure for heat image separation system: 1-transparent or reflection base; 2-polymeric receiving layer, 3-stripping layer (optional); 4-interlayers; 5-protective overcoat layer, 6-diffusion transfer dye generation layers. The number of dye generation layers (6) is greater than or equal to one. Interlayers (4) between dye generation layers (6) are optional.
FIG. 2. Test coating format layer structure: 11-transparent or reflection base; 12-polymeric receiving layer, 14-interlayer containing gelatin and optionally thermal solvent; 15-protective overcoat layer, 16-diffusion transfer dye generation layer.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
A novel method of imaging, whereby conventional wet development processes are utilized in combination with substantially dry thermally activated diffusion transfer of image dyes to a polymeric receiver has been described by Willis and Texter in commonly assigned U.S. application Ser. No. 07/804,877 filed Dec. 6, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,270,145 and hereby incorporated by reference. The methods and processes disclosed therein are incorporated herein by reference. The essential morphology of such an imaging system is illustrated in FIG. 1. It essentially consists of a conventional multilayer photographic element coated on a polymeric receiver element. The conventional element comprises one or more dye generation layers (6) and optionally one or more interlayers (4) and a protective overcoat (5) layer. This multilayer structure is coated on a receiver layer (2) with an optionally intervening stripping layer (3). The receiver layer (2) is coated on an appropriate transparent or reflection base (1). Images are created by conventional radiation sensitivities in the silver halide emulsion containing layers, and these images are amplified using conventional aqueous color development processes. After the development, the development is stopped with an appropriate wash or stop bath, and thereafter the element is dried. Preferred stop baths have an acidic pH. No fixing or bleaching chemistry need be invoked in this process, and bleaching, fixing, and bleach-fixing processing steps are omitted in preferred embodiments of the present invention process. After the elements have been dried, they are subjected to heating, in order to drive the heat-transferable image dyes to the receiver layer. After such image transfer, the donor layers are removed and recycled, to recover silver and valuable fine organic compounds, and the receiver/base combination is retained as the final print material.
Typical aqueous developable elements of the present invention are dried to remove excess water prior to heating to effect heat-transferable dye-diffusion transfer. This drying typically reduces the water content in such elements to less than 50% by weight relative to the hydrophilic binder present in said element. In preferred embodiments this drying reduces the water content to less than 20% by weight relative to the hydrophilic binder present.
We define the term "heat transferable" used herein as applied to image dyes to mean that said dyes will diffuse through hydrophilic binder when heated to temperatures in excess of 50.degree. C. and when this hydrophilic binder is substantially dry with respect to the absorbed water, where the amount of absorbed water in this binder is less than 50% by weight relative to the binder and furthermore wherein said dyes are substantially insoluble and nondiffusible in aqueous medium of pH 7 to 13.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,164,286, Texter et al., hereby incorporated by reference, discloses a preferred method of separating receiver elements from the imaging layers. The thermal solvents of this invention are particularly effective in aiding the transfer of dyes formed by reaction of couplers with oxidized developer or by other means from imaging layers to a receiver element. The receiving element, containing the transferred dye image, is then separated from the imaging layers. Said separated receiving element constitutes the final print material.
In the present invention, thermal solvents are included in a chromogenic photographic heat-transferable dye-diffusion-transfer element, substantially dry and activated by heat, and comprising contacting dye-receiver and dye-donor layers. It has been found that the thermal solvents of our invention must have both a hydrogen bond donating functional group and a hydrogen bond accepting functional group as separate and distinct functional groups in the same compound. Thermal solvents are provided according to formula (I) ##STR3## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;
L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
m is 1, 2, or 3;
Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
n is 1 or 2;
the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
R is an alkyl, aryl and alkylaryl group of from 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10.
These specific examples are meant to illustrate the invention and should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention.
Lists of typical compounds according to formula (I) wherein Q is a phenyl ring, L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are absent, AH is hydroxyl, B is an ester or amide functional group and R is alkyl are given in Tables I, II, and III.
TABLE I______________________________________ ##STR4##Compound Position (p or m) R______________________________________I-1 p 1-hexylI-2 p cyclohexylI-3 p phenylI-4 p cyclopentylmethylI-5 p 2-hexylI-6 p 3-hexylI-7 p 2-ethyl-1-butylI-8 p 3,3-dimethyl-2-butylI-9 p 2-methyl-1-pentylI-10 p 2-methyl-2-pentylI-11 p 3-methyl-1-pentylI-12 p 4-methyl-2-pentylI-13 p 4-methyl-1-pentylI-14 m 1-hexylI-15 m cyclohexylI-16 m phenylI-17 m cyclopentylmethylI-18 m 2-hexylI-19 m 3-hexylI-20 m 2-ethyl-1-buty1I-21 m 3,3-dimethyl-2-butylI-22 m 2-methyl-1-pentylI-23 m 2-methyl-2-pentylI-24 m 3-methyl-1-pentylI-25 m 4-methyl-2-pentylI-26 m 4-methyl-1-pentylI-27 p 1-heptylI-28 p benzylI-29 p tolylI-30 p 2-methyl-1-phenylI-31 p 3-methyl-1-phenylI-32 p 2,2-methyl-3-pentylI-33 p 2,3-dimethyl-3-pentylI-34 p 3-ethyl-2-pentylI-35 p 3-ethyl-3-pentylI-36 p 2-heptylI-37 p 2-methyl-2-hexylI-38 p 3-methyl-2-hexylI-39 p 5-methyl-2-hexylI-40 p 2-methyl-5-hexylI-41 p cycloheptylI-42 p 2-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-43 p 3-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-44 p 4-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-45 p hexahydrobenzylI-46 m 1-heptylI-47 m benzylI-48 m tolylI-49 m 2-methyl-1-phenylI-50 m 3-methyl-1-phenylI-51 m 2,2-dimethyl-3-pentylI-52 m 2,3-dimethyl-3-pentylI-53 m 3-ethyl-2-pentylI-54 m 3-ethyl-3-pentylI-55 m 2-heptylI-56 m 2-methyl-2-hexylI-57 m 3-methyl-2-hexylI-58 m 5-methyl-2-hexylI-59 m 2-methyl-5-hexylI-60 m cycloheptylI-61 m 2-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-62 m 3-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-63 m 4-methyl-1-cyclohexylI-64 m hexahydrobenzylI-65 p 2-ethyl-1-hexylI-66 p 1-octylI-67 p 2,2-dimethyl-3-hexylI-68 p 2,3-dimethyl-2-hexylI-69 p 3-ethyl-3-hexylI-70 p 2,4-dimethyl-3-hexylI-71 p 3,4-dimethyl-2-hexylI-72 p 3,5-dimethyl-3-hexylI-73 p 2-methyl-2-heptylI-74 p 3-methyl-5-heptylI-75 p 4-methyl-4-heptylI-76 p 6-methyl-2-heptylI-77 p 2,4,4-trimethyl-2-pentylI-78 p cyclohexylethylI-79 p cycloheptylmethylI-80 p 3,5-dimethyl-1-cyclohexylI-81 p 2,6-dimethyl-1-cyclohexylI-82 m 2-ethyl-1-hexylI-83 m 1-octylI-84 m 2,2-dimethyl-3-hexylI-85 m 2,3-dimethyl-2-hexylI-86 m 3-ethyl-3-hexylI-87 m 2,4-dimethyl-3-hexylI-88 m 3,4-dimethyl-2-hexylI-89 m 3,5-dimethyl-3-hexylI-90 m 2-methyl-2-heptylI-91 m 3-methyl-5-heptylI-92 m 4-methyl-4-heptylI-93 m 6-methyl-2-heptylI-94 m 2,4,4-trimethyl-2-pentylI-95 m cyclohexylethylI-96 m cycloheptylmethylI-97 m 3,5-dimethyl-1-cyclohexylI-98 m 2,6-dimethyl-1-cyclohexylI-99 p 1-nonylI-100 p 2-nonylI-101 p 3-nonylI-102 p 4-nonylI-103 p 5-nonylI-104 p 2-methyl-3-octylI-105 p 2-methyl-4-octylI-106 p 3-methyl-3-octylI-107 p 4-methyl-4-octylI-108 p 4-ethyl-4-heptylI-109 p 2,4-dimethyl-3-heptylI-110 p 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptylI-111 p 1,3-diisobutyl-2-propylI-112 p 2,2,3-trimethyl-3-hexylI-113 p 3,5,5-trimethyl-1-hexylI-114 p 3-cyclohexyl-1-propylI-115 p 1-methyl-1-cyclooctylI-116 p 3,3,5-trimethylcyclohexylI-117 m 1-nonylI-118 m 2-nonylI-119 m 3-nonylI-120 m 4-nonylI-121 m 5-nonylI-122 m 2-methyl-3-octylI-123 m 2-methyl-4-octylI-124 m 3-methyl-3-octylI-125 m 4-methyl-4-octylI-126 m 4-ethyl-4-heptylI-127 m 2,4-dimethyl-3-heptylI-128 m 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptylI-129 m 1,3-diisobutyl-2-propylI-130 m 2,2,3-trimethyl-3-hexylI-131 m 3,5,5-trimethyl-1-hexylI-132 m 3-cyclohexyl-1-propylI-133 m 1-methyl-1-cyclooctylI-134 m 3,3,5-trimethylcyclohexylI-135 p 1-decylI-136 p 2-decylI-137 p 3-decylI-138 p 4-decylI-139 p 5-decylI-140 p 2,2-dimethyl-3-octylI-141 p 4,7-dimethyl-4-octylI-142 p 2,5-dimethyl-5-octylI-143 p 3,7-dimethyl-1-octylI-144 p 3,7-dimethyl-3-octylI-145 m 1-decylI-146 m 2-decylI-147 m 3-decylI-148 m 4-decylI-149 m 5-decylI-150 m 2,2-dimethyl-3-octylI-151 m 4,7-dimethyl-4-octylI-152 m 2,5-dimethyl-5-octylI-153 m 3,7-dimethyl-1-octylI-154 m 3,7-dimethyl-3-octylI-155 p 2-methyl-4-octylI-156 p 3-methyl-3-octylI-157 p 4-methyl-4-octylI-158 p 4-ethyl-4-heptylI-159 p 2,4-dimethyl-3-heptylI-160 p 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptylI-161 p 1,3-diisobutyl-2-propylI-162 p 2,2,3-trimethyl-3-hexylI-163 p 3,5,5-trimethyl-1-hexylI-164 p 2-methyl-4-octylI-165 p 3-methyl-3-octylI-166 p 4-methyl-4-octylI-167 p 4-ethyl-4-heptylI-168 p 2,4-dimethyl-3-heptylI-169 p 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptylI-170 p 1,3-diisobutyl-2-propylI-171 p 2,2,3-trimethyl-3-hexylI-172 p 3,5,5-trimethyl-1-hexylI-173 p 1-undecylI-174 p 2-undecylI-175 p 5-undecylI-176 p 6-undecylI-177 m 1-undecylI-178 m 2-undecylI-179 m 5-undecylI-180 m 6-undecylI-181 p 1-dodecylI-182 p 2-dodecylI-183 p 2-butyl-1-octylI-184 p 2,6,8-trimethyl-4-nonylI-185 p cyclododecylI-186 m 1-dodecylI-187 m 2-dodecylI-188 m 2-butyl-1-octylI-189 m 2,6,8-trimethyl-4-nonylI-190 m cyclododecylI-191 p 1-tridecylI-192 m 1-tridecylI-193 m 2-pentyl-1-nonylI-194 p 1-hexadecylI-195 p 2-hexadecylI-196 p 2-hexyl-1-decylI-197 m 1-hexadecylI-198 m 2-hexadecylI-199 m 2-hexyl-1-decyl______________________________________
TABLE II______________________________________ ##STR5##Compound Position (p or m) R______________________________________II-1 p 1-hexylII-2 p 2-hexylII-3 p 1-methyl-1-pentylII-4 p cyclohexylII-5 p 1-heptylII-6 p 2-heptylII-7 p 4-heptylII-8 p 5-methyl-2-hexylII-9 p 1,4-dimethyl-1-pentylII-10 p cyclohexylmethylII-11 p 2-methyl-1-cyclohexylII-12 p 3-methyl-1-cyclohexylII-13 m 1-heptylII-14 m 2-heptylII-15 m 4-heptylII-16 m 5-methyl-2-hexylII-17 m 1,4-dimethyl-1-pentylII-18 m cyclohexylmethylII-19 m 2-methyl-1-cyclohexylII-20 m 3-methyl-1-cyclohexylII-21 p 1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-1-butylII-22 p 1-octylII-23 p 1-methyl-1-heptylII-24 p 2-ethyl-2-hexylII-25 p 2-methyl-1-heptylII-26 p 6-methyl-2-heptylII-27 p cyclooctylII-28 p 2-cyclohexyl-1-ethylII-29 m 1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-1-butylII-30 m 1-octylII-31 m 1-methyl-1-heptylII-32 m 2-ethyl-2-hexylII-33 m 2-methyl-1-heptylII-34 m 6-methyl-2-heptylII-35 m cyclooctylII-36 m 2-cyclohexyl-1-ethylII-37 p 5-nonylII-38 p 1-nonylII-39 p cyclooctylmethylII-40 m 5-nonylII-41 m 1-nonylII-42 m cyclooctylmethylII-43 p 1-decylII-44 m 1-decylII-45 p 2-undecylII-46 p 4-undecylII-47 m 2-undecylII-48 m 4-undecylII-49 p 1-dodecylII-50 p cyclododecylII-51 m 1-dodecylII-52 m cyclododecylII-53 p 2-tridecylII-54 m 2-tridecylII-55 p 1-tetradecylamineII-56 m 1-tetradecylamine______________________________________
TABLE III______________________________________III-1 3,4,5-trihydroxy-2'-ethyl-1'-hexyl benzoateIII-2 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-octyl benzoateIII-3 3,4,5-trihydroxy-2',2'-dimethyl-3'-hexyl benzoateIII-4 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-nonyl benzoateIII-5 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-decyl benzoateIII-6 1,8-octyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzoate)III-7 1,8-octyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzoate)III-8 1,10-decyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzoate)III-9 1,10-decyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzoate)III-10 3,7-dimethyl-1,7-octyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzoate)III-11 1,11-undecyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzoate)III-12 1,12-dodecyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzoate)III-13 1,12-dodecyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzoate)III-14 4'-hydroxydecaphenoneIII-15 1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)decan-2-oneIII-16 3,4,5-trihydroxy-2'-ethyl-1'-hexyl benzamideIII-17 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-octyl benzamideIII-18 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-nonyl benzamideIII-19 3,4,5-trihydroxy-1'-decyl benzamideIII-20 1,8-octyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzamide)III-21 1,8-octyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzamide)III-22 1,4-cyclohexane-bis(methyl-4'-hydroxy benzamide)III-19 1,4-cyclohexane-bis(methyl-3'-hydroxy benzamide)III-20 1-(methyl-4'-hydroxy benzamide)-4-(methyl-3"- hydroxy benzamide)-cyclohexaneIII-21 1,9-nonyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzamide)III-22 1,10-decyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzamide)III-23 1,10-decyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzamide)III-24 1,12-dodecyl-bis(4'-hydroxy benzamide)III-25 1,12-dodecyl-bis(3'-hydroxy benzamide)______________________________________
Further examples of preferred compounds according to formula (I) are generated from the structural components given in Table IV by selection of;
one group from column Q, with selection of appropriate branching groups, R.sup.b, from column R.sup.b ;
either 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4 groups from column Z, where Z is a substituent on an aromatic ring;
one AH--Q linking group L.sup.1 from column L.sup.1, L.sup.2 ;
one proton donating group from column AH;
one Q--B linking group L.sup.2 from column L.sup.1, L.sup.2 except for the example --OCH2-- where the carbon bonding atom from B is not equal to carbon;
one hydrogen bond accepting group from column B, with selection of amine substituent groups, R.sup.b, from column R.sup.b ;
and one group from column R;
such that the clogP of the resulting compound is greater than 3 and less than 10 and such that a hydrogen bonded ring of either 5 or 6 atoms cannot be formed between an atom in B and AH, as for example in salicylates.
In Table IV the positional numbering of substituents, Z, are subordinate to that of L.sup.1 --A--H, which is defined as position 1, and to L.sup.2 --B--R which is defined in column Q.
Specific examples of highly preferred compounds according to formula (I) that are included within the scope of the examples given below are generated from the structural components given in Table IV by selection of;
one group from column Q being limited to either the 1,4-phenyl, 1,3-phenyl, or 1,2-phenyl ring;
either 0, 1, or 2 groups from column Z being limited to methyl or chlorine;
L.sup.1 as absent;
the proton donating group from column AH limited to OH;
one Q--B linking group L.sup.2 from column L.sup.1, L.sup.2 except for the example --OCH2- where the carbon bonding atom from B is not equal to carbon;
one hydrogen bond accepting group from column B, limited to esters (C(.dbd.O)O, OC(.dbd.O)) and amides (C(.dbd.O)NR.sup.b, NR.sup.b C(.dbd.O)) where R.sup.b is hydrogen, methyl or ethyl;
and one group from column R;
such that the clogP of the resulting compound is greater than 3 and less than 9 and such that a hydrogen bonded ring of either 5 or 6 atoms cannot be formed between an atom in B and AH, as for example in salicylates.
TABLE IV__________________________________________________________________________STRUCTURAL TABLE FOR EXAMPLES OF DRY DIFFUSION TRANSFER THERMAL SOLVENTSACCORDING TO FORMULA (I).AH (HBD) Q Z L1, L2 B (HBA) R.sup.b R__________________________________________________________________________ 1 OH 1,4-Phenyl 4-CH.sub.3 . O H methyl 2 SO.sub.2 NHR.sup.b 1,3-Phenyl 5-CH.sub.3 --CH.sub.2 -- S methyl ethyl 3 NHSO.sub.2 R.sup.b(1) 1,2-Phenyl 6-CH.sub.3 --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)O ethyl 1-propyl 4 NHSO.sub.2 CF.sub.3 --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- 6-CH.sub.2 --O --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- OC(.dbd.O) 1-propyl 2-propyl 5 NHSO.sub.2 CH.sub.2 CF.sub.3 --CR.sup.b.sub.2 CR.sup.b.sub.2 -- 4-CH.sub.2 CH.sub.3 --CH(Me)CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O) 1-butyl 1-butyl 6 --CH.sub.2 (CH.sub.2).sub.3 CH.sub.2 -- 5-CH.sub.2 CH.sub.3 --CH.dbd.CH-- NR.sup.b (C.dbd.O) isobutyl 2-butyl 7 --CH.sub.2 CF.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- 4-CH(CH.sub.3).sub.2 --CH.dbd.CHCH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)NR.sup.b 1-pentyl isobutyl 8 1,4-cyclohexyl 6-CH(CH.sub.3).sub.2 --CH.sub.2 CH(CH.sub.2 --)CH.sub.2 -- OC(.dbd.O)O 1-hexyl 1-pentyl 9 1,3-cyclohexyl 4-CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 CH.sub.3 --OCH.sub.2 -- OC(.dbd.O)NR.sup.b benzyl 1-hexyl10 1,2-cyclohexyl 5-CH.sub.2 (CH.sub.2).sub.2 CH.sub.3 --OCH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- NR.sup.b C(.dbd.O)O --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- 2-hexyl11 6-CH.sub.2 (CH.sub.2).sub.2 CH.sub.3 --OCH(Et)CH.sub.2 -- NR.sup.b C(.dbd.O)NR.sup.b 1-(2- methyl)- pentyl12 6-C(CH.sub.3).sub.3 OS(.dbd.O).sub.2 1-(2- ethyl)- butyl13 4-C(CH.sub.3).sub.2 CH.sub.2 C(CH.sub.3).sub.3 S(.dbd.O).sub.2 O 1-heptyl14 4-CH.sub.2 (CH.sub.2).sub.6 CH.sub.3 S(.dbd.O).sub.2 1-octyl15 4-Cl NR.sup.b S(.dbd.O).sub.2 1-(2- ethyl) hexyl16 5-Cl S(.dbd.O).sub.2 NR.sup.b 1,8-octyl- (bis)17 6-Cl OS(.dbd.O).sub.2 O tert-octyl18 OS(.dbd.O).sub.2 NR.sup.b 1-nonyl19 NR.sup.b S(.dbd.O).sub.2 1-(3,5,5- tri-Me)- hexyl20 NR.sup.b S(.dbd.O).sub.2 NR.sup.b 1-decyl21 NR.sup.b CH.sub.2 S(.dbd.O).sub.2 1 1-(3,7- dimethyl) octyl22 OP(.dbd.O)(--O--).sub.2 1,10- decyl- (bis)23 1-undecyl24 1-dodecyl25 1-(2- butyl) octyl26 1-tridecyl27 1-tetra- decyl28 1-(2- hexyl)- decyl29 benzyl30 1-ethyl- phenyl31 1-propyl- phenyl32 phenyl__________________________________________________________________________ (Notes: .sup.(1) Rb not H)
Binders that can be employed in the aqueous developable photographic element of the present invention are described in Research Disclosure, No. 17643, p. 26 (December, 1978) and Research Disclosure, No. 308199, pp. 1003-1004 (December, 1989) (hereafter referred to as RD 308199) and include: synthetic high-molecular weight compounds such as polyvinylbutyral, polyvinyl acetate, ethyl cellulose, cellulose acetate butyrate, polyvinyl alcohol and polyvinylpyrrolidone; synthetic or natural high-molecular weight compounds such as gelatin, gelatin derivatives (e.g., phthalated gelatin), cellulose derivatives, proteins, starches, and gum arabic. These high-molecular weight compounds may be used either singly or in combination. It is particularly preferred to employ gelatin.
The binders are generally used in amounts ranging from 0.05 to 50 g, preferably from 0.2 to 20 g, per square meter of the base support. The binders are preferably used in amounts of 0.1-10 g, more preferably 0.2-5 g, per gram of the dye-providing material.
Couplers may be either four-equivalent, losing two hydrogen atoms from the coupling site during reaction with oxidized color developer, or formally two-equivalent, having a coupling-off group that is lost from the coupler during reaction with the oxidized color developer to form a dye. The coupler fragment that bears the coupling-off group and that forms the dye with the oxidized color developer is referred to as the coupler parent. Coupling-off groups are well known in the art and include, for example, alkylthio, arylthio, aryloxy, N-linked nitrogen heterocycles and chlorine. It is generally preferred in color photographic elements that the molecular weight of the couplers be above 600 (all molecular weights herein are expressed in atomic mass units). The typical molecular weight for these couplers is between 700 and 1100.
The coupler compound contained in the aqueous developable color photographic elements of the present invention may be any coupler designed to be developable by color developer solutions, and to form a heat transferable dye upon such development. While color images may be formed with coupler compounds which form dyes of essentially any hue, couplers which form heat transferable cyan, magenta, or yellow dyes upon reaction with oxidized color developing agents are used in preferred embodiments of the invention. Suitable couplers for this invention are disclosed by Willis and Texter in U.S. Ser. No. 804,877, filed Dec. 6, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,270,145. Preferred couplers for this invention are those that have a coupling-off group. Further, it is preferred that the molecular weight of the parent portion of the coupler be in the range of 90 to 600 and more preferably in the range of 110 to 400 so that the resulting dyes have increased diffusibility. The molecular weight of the entire coupler compound can be adjusted to a selected value by variation to the coupling-off group structure. Couplers that have no readily ionizable functional groups such as sulfonic acids, carboxylic acids, very strongly acidic phenols, or very strongly acidic sulfonamides are preferred in this invention so that their interaction with dry hydrophilic binder, especially gelatin, is minimized.
Suitable heat transferable dye forming compounds of the present invention provide heat transferable dyes that are devoid of functional groups with aqueous pK.sub.a values for proton loss of less than 9. Preferred heat transferable dye forming compounds of the present invention provide heat transferable dyes that are devoid of functional groups with aqueous pK.sub.a values for proton loss of less than 6. In preferred embodiments of the elements of the present invention heat-transferable dye-diffusion transfer is not significantly facilitated at 40.degree. C. and below by wetting with aqueous alkali.
Dye-forming compounds contained in the element of our invention may be linked to a polymer structure so that on reaction with oxidized color developer the dye is chemically released from the polymer. Dye-forming compounds that are linked to polymers through the coupling site are a preferred class of compounds in our invention. Image dye-forming compounds linked to polymers so that the dye remains chemically bound to the polymer are not preferred in this invention because the dye will not readily transfer to the dye receiver layer.
The dye transfer facilitating thermal solvents of this invention may be contained in the same layer as that containing the heat-transferable dye-forming compound or in layers not containing these dye-forming compounds. In elements of two or more layers the thermal solvents of our invention may be contained in any, some or all layers of the element. The dye transfer facilitating thermal solvents of our invention are preferably employed at a loading of between 10 and 300% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in each layer in the photographic element, or more preferably between 40 and 150% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in each layer. Further, the amount of dye transfer facilitating thermal solvent in the element is preferred to be between 10 and 200% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in the element, or more preferably between 10 and 120% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in the element. The thermal solvents of our invention are preferably employed at a level of between 100 to 3000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only a single color record, between 200 and 4500 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only two color records and between 400 and 6000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements comprising three color records.
The photographic elements of our invention may contain high boiling solvents, known in the art as coupler solvents. These high boiling solvents can be employed in dispersions of the heat-transferable dye-forming compounds, interlayer scavengers, thermal solvents, or other compounds contained in the photographic element. The dye-forming compounds in the photographic elements of our invention may be employed without the use of high boiling solvents. These high boiling solvents may increase the reactivity of the heat-transferable dye-forming compound, improve the stability of the dispersion of the dye-forming compound, or may improve the transfer of heat-transferable dye from the dye generation layer to the dye receiver layer. Such high boiling solvents may be selected from any of these compounds known in the art. Coupler solvents may be contained in the dispersions of the dye-forming compounds at amounts between 0 and 400% of the dye-forming compound. High boiling solvents may be contained in dispersions of the dye transfer facilitating thermal solvents of our invention at amounts between 0 and 100% of the thermal solvent. These high boiling solvents may be dispersed with other addenda contained in the photographic element.
The primary amine developing agents useful in the practice of this invention are selected from the p-amino-N,N-dialkylanilines known in the art of color photography. Examples of these compounds are described, for example, by R. L. Bent et al. (Photo. Sci. Eng., 1963, 8, 125). Primary amine developing agents that have no readily ionizable functional groups such as sulfonic acids or carboxylic acids are preferred in this invention so that the interaction between dry hydrophilic binder, especially gelatin, and the heat-transferable dye formed by the reaction with the dye-forming compound is minimized.
The aqueous developer solution may contain compounds to stabilize the developing agents against oxidation, compounds to minimized precipitation of development products, brightening agents and other compounds to maintain the stability of the developer prior to and during use. The aqueous developer solution can be employed at a wide range of temperatures but is preferred to be in the range of 15.degree. to 55.degree. C. The pH of the aqueous developer solution can be in the range of 8 to 12 with a preferred range of 9 to 11.
A typical multilayer, multicolor photographic element to be used with the thermal solvents of this invention comprises a support having thereon a red-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer having associated therewith a heat-transferable cyan dye image forming coupler compound, a green-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer having associated therewith a heat-transferable magenta dye image forming coupler compound and a blue-sensitive silver halide emulsion layer having associated therewith a heat-transferable yellow dye image forming coupler compound. Each silver halide emulsion layer can be composed of one or more layers and the layers can be arranged in different locations with respect to one another. Typical arrangements are described in RD 308199, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
The light sensitive silver halide emulsions can include coarse, regular or fine grain silver halide crystals of any shape or mixtures thereof and can be comprised of such silver halides as silver chloride, silver bromide, silver bromoiodide, silver chlorobromide, silver chloroiodide, silver chlorobromoiodide and mixtures thereof. The emulsions can be negative working or direct positive emulsions. They can form latent images predominantly on the surface of the silver halide grains or pre-dominantly on the interior of the silver halide grains. They can be chemically or spectrally sensitized. The emulsions typically will be gelatin emulsions although other hydrophilic colloids as disclosed in RD 308199 can be used in accordance with usual practice.
Especially useful in this invention are tabular grain silver halide emulsions. Suitable tabular grain emulsions can be selected from among a variety of conventional teachings, such as those of the following: Research Disclosure, No. 22534, (January, 1983); U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,439,520; 4,414,310; 4,433,048; 4,643,966; 4,647,528; 4,665,012; 4,672,027; 4,678,745; 4,693,964; 4,713,320; 4,722,886; 4,755,456; 4,775,617; 4,797,354; 4,801,522; 4,806,461; 4,835,095; 4,853,322; 4,914,014; 4,962,015; 4,985,350; 5,061,069 and 5,061,616. More preferred in this invention are tabular silver chloride grains such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,176,991; 5,176,992; 5,178,998; 5,183,732; 5,185,239 and EP 0534395.
The support can be of any suitable material used with photographic elements. Typically, a flexible support is employed, such as a polymeric film or paper support. Such supports include cellulose nitrate, cellulose acetate, polyvinyl acetal, poly(ethylene terephthalate), polycarbonate, white polyester (polyester with white pigment incorporated therein) and other resinous materials as well as glass, paper or metal. Paper supports can be acetylated or coated with polymer of an alpha-olefin containing 2 to 10 carbon atoms such as polyethylene, polypropylene or ethylene butene copolymers. The support may be any desired thickness, depending upon the desired end use of the element. In general, polymeric supports are usually from about 3 .mu.m to about 200 .mu.m in thickness and paper supports are generally from about 50 .mu.m to about 1000 .mu.m in thickness.
The dye-receiving layer to which the formed heat-transferable dye image is transferred according to the invention may be coated on the photographic element between the emulsion layer and support, or may be in a separate dye-receiving element which is brought into contact with the photographic element during the dye transfer step. If present in a separate receiving element, the dye receiving layer may be coated or laminated to a support such as those described for the photographic element support above, or may be self-supporting. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the dye-receiving layer is present between the support and any silver halide emulsion layer of an integral photographic element.
The dye receiving layer may comprise any material effective at receiving the heat transferable dye image. Examples of suitable receiver materials include polycarbonates, polyurethanes, polyesters, polyvinyl chlorides, poly(styrene-coacrylonitrile)s, poly(caprolactone)s and mixtures thereof. The dye receiving layer may be present in any amount which is effective for the intended purpose. In general, good results have been obtained at a concentration of from about 1 to about 10 g/m.sup.2 when coated on a support. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the dye receiving layer comprises a polycarbonate. The term "polycarbonate" as used herein means a polyester of carbonic acid and a glycol or a dihydric phenol. Examples of such glycols or dihydric phenols are p-xylylene glycol, 2,2-bis(4-oxyphenyl)propane, bis(4-oxyphenyl)methane, 1,1-bis(4-oxyphenyl)ethane, 1,1-bis(oxyphenyl)butane, 1,1-bisphenol-A polycarbonate having a number average molecular weight of at least about 25,000 is used. Examples of preferred polycarbonates include General Electric LEXAN.RTM. Polycarbonate Resin and Bayer AG MACROLON.RTM. 5700. Further, a thermal dye transfer overcoat polymer as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,775,657 may also be used.
Heating times of from about 10 seconds to 30 minutes at temperatures of from about 50.degree. to 200.degree. C. (more preferably 75.degree. to 160.degree. C., and most preferably 80.degree. to 120.degree. C.) are preferably used to activate the thermal transfer process. This aspect makes it possible to use receiver polymers that have a relatively high glass transition temperature (Tg) (e.g., greater than 100.degree. C.) and still effect good transfer, while minimizing back transfer of dye (diffusion of dye out of the receiver onto or into a contact material).
While essentially any heat source which provides sufficient heat to effect transfer of the developed heat-transferable dye image from the emulsion layer to the dye receiving layer may be used, in a preferred embodiment dye transfer is effected by running the developed photographic element with the dye receiving layer (as an integral layer in the photographic element or as part of a separate dye receiving element) through a heated roller nip. Thermal activation transport speeds of 0.1 to 50 cm/sec are preferred to effect transfer at nip pressures of from about 500 Pa to 1,000 kPa and nip temperatures of from about 75.degree. to 190.degree. C.
In preferred embodiments of the aqueous developable elements of the present invention containing an integral receiver the amount of heat-transferable dye density transferred through drying is less than 15% fo the total dye density transferable through drying and heating.
Another preferred method of imaging combines thermal or heat development of radiation sensitive silver halide, usually in the presence of an organic silver salt and an incorporated reducing agent, with thermally activated diffusion transfer of image dyes to a polymeric receiver. Such systems are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,584,267, 4,590,154, 4,595,652, 4,770,981, 4,871,647, 4,948,698, 4,952,479, and 4,983,502, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. Such materials generally comprise a plurality of radiation sensitive layers. A typical radiation sensitive layer comprises radiation sensitive silver halide, an organic silver salt, a reducing agent, a dye forming or donating compound, a binder, and in preferred embodiments, one or more thermal solvents to facilitate the heat development of the silver halide and organic silver salt and the transfer of the resulting image dye to a suitable receiving element. In preferred multilayer materials, radiation sensitive layers sensitive to blue, green, and red light are included that produce yellow, magenta, and cyan heat-transferable image dyes for diffusion transfer, respectively. Thermal solvents and heat solvents of the type disclosed in the aforesaid U.S. Patent documents and disclosed herein by reference are included to facilitate heat development and thermal dye transfer. The preferred thermal solvents of the present invention serve to facilitate the thermal dye transfer of dyes through the binder to the receiver element.
The coupler compound to be used in this process of the invention may be any dye forming, dye providing, or dye donating material that will produce a heat transferable dye upon heat development. Preferred dye forming compounds are those that provide heat transferable cyan, magenta, or yellow dyes upon heat development
The dye-providing materials of the present invention may be used either on their own or as admixtures. If desired, they may be used in combination with dye-providing materials of the type described in such patents as U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,631,251, 4,656,124, and 4,650,748.
The amount of the dye-providing materials used is not limited and may be determined according to their type, the manner in which they are used (i.e., either singly or in combination) or the number of photographic constituent layers of which the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention is composed (i.e., a single layer or two or more layers in superposition). As a guide, the dye-providing materials may be used in an amount of 0.005-50 g, preferably 0.1-10 g, per square meter. The dye-providing materials for use in the present invention may be incorporated in photographic constituent layers of the heat-processible photographic material by any suitable method.
The light-sensitive silver halide to be used in the present invention may include, for example, silver chloride, silver bromide, silver iodide, silver chlorobromide, silver chloroiodide and silver iodobromide. Such light-sensitive silver halides can be prepared by any of the methods commonly employed in the photographic art.
If desired, a silver halide emulsion having silver halide grains with a duplex structure (i.e., the halide composition of the grain surface differing from that of the interior) may be used and an example of such duplex grains is core/shell type silver halide grains. The shell of these grains may change in halide composition stepwise or gradually. The silver halide grains used may have a well-defined crystal habit as in cubes, spheres, octahedra, dodecahedra or tetradecahedra Alternatively, they may not have any well-defined crystal shape. The silver halide grains in these light-sensitive emulsions may be coarse or fine; preferred grain sizes are on the order of 0.005 .mu.m to 1.5 .mu.m in diameter, with the range of from about 0.01 to about 0.5 .mu.m being more preferred.
According to another method for preparing light-sensitive silver halides, a light-sensitive silver salt forming component may be used in the presence of organic silver salts (to be described below) so as to form light-sensitive silver halides in part of the organic silver salts.
These light-sensitive silver halides and light-sensitive silver salt forming component may be used in combination in a variety of methods, and the amount used in one photographic layer preferably ranges from 0.001 to 50 g, preferably 0.1-10 g, per square meter of base support.
The light-sensitive silver halide emulsions illustrated above may be chemically sensitized by any of the methods commonly employed in the photographic art. The light-sensitive silver halide emulsions to be used in the present invention may be spectrally sensitized with known spectral sensitizers in order to provide sensitivity to the blue, green, red, or near-infrared region.
Typical examples of the spectral sensitizers that can be used in the present invention include cyanine dyes, merocyanine dyes, complex (tri- or tetra-nuclear) cyanine dyes, holopolar cyanine dyes, styryl dyes, hemicyanine dyes and oxonol dyes. These sensitizers are incorporated in amounts ranging from 1.times.10.sup.-4 to 1 mole, preferably from 1.times.10.sup.-4 to 1.times.10.sup.-1 mole, per mole of the light-sensitive silver halide or silver halide forming component. The sensitizers may be added at any stage of the preparation of silver halide emulsions; they may be added during the formation of silver halide grains, during the removal of soluble salts, before the start of chemical sensitization, during chemical sensitization or after completion of the chemical sensitization.
A variety of organic silver salts may optionally be employed in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention in order to increase its sensitivity or improve its developability.
Illustrating organic silver salts that may be employed in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention include: silver salts of long-chain aliphatic carboxylic acids and silver salts of carboxylic acids having a hetero ring, such as silver behenate and silver .alpha.-(1-phenyltetrazolethio) acetate (see U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,330,633, 3,794,496 and 4,105,451); and silver salts of an imino group as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,123,274.
Among the organic silver salts listed above, silver salts of an imino group are preferred. Particularly preferred are silver salts of benzotriazole derivatives such as 5-methylbenzotriazole or derivatives thereof, sulfobenzotriazole or derivatives thereof and N-alkylsulfamoylbenzotriazole or derivatives thereof.
These organic silver salts may be used either singly or as admixtures in the present invention. Silver salts prepared in suitable binders may be immediately used without being isolated. Alternatively, isolated silver salts may be dispersed in binders by suitable means before they are used. The organic silver salts are preferably used in amounts ranging from 0.01 to 500 moles, more preferably from 0.1 to 100 moles, most preferably from 0.3 to 30 moles, per mole of the light-sensitive silver halide.
The reducing agent for use in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention (the term "reducing agent" as used herein shall include precursors of the reducing agent) may be selected from among those which are commonly employed in the field of heat-processible photographic materials.
Reducing agents that can be used in the present invention include: p-phenylenediamine developing agents and their precursors or p-aminophenolic developing agents, phosphoroamidophenolic developing agents, sulfonamidoaniline-based developing agents, hydrazone-based color developing agents, and precursors of these developing agents, such as those described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,531,286, 3,761,270, and 3,764,328. Also useful are phenols, sulfonamidophenols, polyhydroxybenzenes, naphthols, hydroxybinaphthyls, methylenebisnaphthols, methylenebisphenols, ascorbic acids, 3-pyrazolidones, pyrazolones, etc. The reducing agents may be used either on their own or as admixtures. The amount in which the reducing agents are used in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention depend upon many factors such as the type of light-sensitive silver halide used, the type of organic acid silver salt, and the type of other additives used. Usually, the reducing agents are used in amounts ranging from 0.01 to 1,500 moles per mole of light-sensitive silver halide, with the range of 0.1-200 moles being preferred.
Illustrative binders that can be employed in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention include: synthetic high-molecular weight compounds such as polyvinylbutyral, polyvinyl acetate, ethyl cellulose, polymethyl methacrylate, cellulose acetate butyrate, polyvinyl alcohol and polyvinylpyrrolidone; synthetic or natural high-molecular weight compounds such as gelatin, gelatin derivatives (e.g., phthalated gelatin), cellulose derivatives, proteins, starches, and gum arabic. These high-molecular weight compounds may be used either singly or in combination. It is particularly preferred to employ gelatin or its derivatives in combination with synthetic hydrophilic polymers such as polyvinylpyrrolidone and polyvinyl alcohol. A more preferred binder is a mixture of gelatin and polyvinylpyrrolidone.
The binders are generally used in amounts ranging from 0.05 to 50 g, preferably from 0.2 to 20 g, per square meter of the base support. The binders are preferably used in amounts of 0.1-10 g, more preferably 0.2-5 g, per gram of the dye-providing material.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention is produced by forming photographic constituent layers on a base support. A variety of base supports can be used and they include: synthetic plastic films such as a polyethylene film, a cellulose acetate film, a polyethylene terephthalate film, and a polyvinyl chloride film; paper bases such as photographic raw paper, printing paper, baryta paper and resin-coated paper, and base prepared by coating these materials with electron-beam curable resin compositions, followed by curing of the same.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention is suitable for processing by transfer photography using an image-receiving member. In the practice of the present invention, a variety of thermal solvents are preferably incorporated in the heat-processible photographic material and/or the image-receiving member.
Particularly useful thermal solvents are urea derivatives (e.g., dimethylurea, diethylurea and phenylurea), amide derivatives (e.g., acetamide, benzamide and p-toluamide), sulfonamide derivatives (e.g., benzenesulfonamide and (.alpha.-toluenesulfonamide), and polyhydric alcohols (e.g., 1,6-hexanediol, 1,2-cyclohexanediol and pentaerythritol, and polyethylene glycol. Water-insoluble solid thermal solvents may be used with particular advantage.
Thermal solvents may be incorporated in various layers such as light-sensitive silver halide emulsion layers, intermediate layers, protective layers, and image-receiving layers in an image-receiving member so that the results desired in respective cases can be obtained. It is preferred that for employment in heat developable photographic elements that the dye-transfer facilitating thermal solvents of the present invention have melting points below 100.degree. C.
The dye transfer facilitating thermal solvents of this invention may be contained in the same layer as that containing the heat-transferable dye-forming compound or in layers not containing these dye-forming compounds. In elements of two or more layers the thermal solvents of our invention may be contained in any, some or all layers of the element. The dye transfer facilitating thermal solvents of our invention are preferably employed at a loading of between 10 and 300% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in each layer in the photographic element, or more preferably between 40 and 150% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in each layer. Further, the amount of dye transfer facilitating thermal solvent in the element is preferred to be between 10 and 200% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in the element, or more preferably between 10 and 120% by weight of the hydrophilic binder in the element. The thermal solvents of our invention are preferably employed at a level of between 100 to 3000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only a single color record, between 200 and 4500 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only two color records and between 300 and 6000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements comprising three color records.
The organic silver salts and thermal solvents may be dispersed in the same liquid dispersion system. The binder, dispersion medium and dispersing apparatus used in this case may be the same as those employed in preparing the respective liquid dispersions.
Besides the components described above, the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention may incorporate various other additives such as development accelerators, antifoggants, base precursors, etc.
Illustrative base precursors include compounds that undergo decarboxylation upon heating to release a basic substance (e.g., guanidium trichloroacetate) and compounds that are decomposed by reactions such as intramolecular nucleophilic substitution reaction to release amines. Other additives that are used as required in heat-processible photographic materials may also be incorporated in the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention. Illustrative additives include antihalation dyes, brighteners, hardeners, antistats, plasticizers, extenders, matting agents, surface-active agents and antifading agents. These additives may be incorporated not only into light-sensitive layers but also into non-light-sensitive layers such as intermediate layers, protective layers and backing layers.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention contains (a) a light-sensitive silver halide, (b) a reducing agent, (c) a binder and (d) the dye-providing material of the present invention. Preferably, it further contains (e) an organic silver salt as required. In a basic mode, these components may be incorporated in one heat-processible light-sensitive layer but it should be noted that they are not necessarily incorporated in a single photographic constituent layer but may be incorporated in two or more constituent layers in such a way that they are held mutually reactive. In one instance, a heat-processible light-sensitive layer is divided into two sub-layers and components (a), (b), (c) and (e) are incorporated in one sub-layer with the dye-providing material (d) being incorporated in the other sub-layer which is adjacent to the first sub-layer. The heat-processible light-sensitive layer may be divided into two or more layers including a highly sensitive layer and a less sensitive layer, or a high-density layer and a low-density layer.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention has one or more heat-processible light-sensitive layers on a base support. If it is to be used as a full-color light-sensitive material, the heat-processible photographic material of the invention generally has three heat-processible light-sensitive layers having different color sensitivities, each light-sensitive layer forming or releasing a dye of different color as a result of thermal development A blue-sensitive layer is usually combined with a yellow dye, a green-sensitive layer with a magenta dye, and a red-sensitive layer with a cyan dye, but different combination may be used.
The choice of layer arrangements depends on the objective of a specific use. For instance, a base support is coated with a red-sensitive, a green-sensitive and a blue-sensitive layer, or in the reverse order (i.e., a blue-sensitive, a green-sensitive and a red-sensitive layer), or the support may be coated with a green-sensitive, a red-sensitive and a blue-sensitive layer.
Besides the heat-processible light-sensitive layers described above, the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention may incorporate non-light-sensitive layers such as a subbing layer, an intermediate layer, a protective layer, a filter layer, a backing layer and a release layer. The heat-processible light-sensitive layers and these non-light-sensitive layers may be applied to a base support by coating techniques that are similar to those commonly employed to coat and prepare ordinary silver halide photographic materials.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention is developed after imagewise exposure and this can usually be done by merely heating the material at a temperature in the range of 80.degree.-200.degree. C., preferably 100.degree.-170.degree. C., for a period of from 1-180 seconds, preferably 1.5-120 seconds. A diffusible dye may be transferred onto an image-receiving layer simultaneously with thermal development by bringing the image-receiving layer in the image-receiving member into intimate contact with the light-sensitive surface of the photographic material. Alternatively, the photographic material brought into intimate contact with the image-receiving member after thermal development may be subsequently heated. The photographic material may be preliminarily heated in the temperature range of 70.degree.-180.degree. C. prior to exposure. In order to enhance the adhesion between the photographic material and the image-receiving member, they may be separately heated at a temperature of 80.degree.-250.degree. C. just prior to thermal development and transfer.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention permits the use of a variety of known heating techniques. All methods of heating that can be used with ordinary heat-processible photographic materials may be applied to the heat-processible photographic material of the present invention. In one instance, the photographic material may be brought into contact with a heated block or plate, or with heated rollers or a hot drum. Alternatively, the material may be passed through a hot atmosphere. High-frequency heating is also applicable. The heating pattern is in no way limited; preheating may be followed by another cycle of heating; heating may be performed for a short period at high temperatures or for a long period at low temperatures; the temperature may be elevated and lowered continuously; repeated cycles of heating may be employed; the heating may be discontinuous rather than continuous. A simple heating pattern is preferred. If desired, exposure and heating may proceed simultaneously.
Any image-receiving member may effectively be used in the present invention if the image-receiving layer employed has a capability for accepting the dye released or formed in the heat-processible light-sensitive layer as a result of thermal development. A preferred example is a polymer containing a tertiary amine or quaternary ammonium salt, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,709,690. Typical image-receiving layers suitable for use in diffusion transfer can be prepared by coating a base support, with a mixture in which a polymer containing an ammonium salt or tertiary amine is combined with gelatin or polyvinyl alcohol. Another useful dye-receiving layer may be formed of a heat-resistant organic high-molecular substance having a glass transition point of 40.degree.-250.degree. C. These polymers may be carried as image-receiving layers on a base support; alternatively, they may be used as bases on their own.
Synthetic polymers having glass transition points of 40.degree. C. and above as described in "Polymer Handbook," 2nd ed., edited by J. Brandrup and E. H. Immergut, John Wiley & Sons are also useful. Useful molecular weights of these high-molecular substances are generally in the range of 2,000-200,000. These high-molecular substances may be used either independently or as blends. Two or more monomers may be employed to make copolymers. Particularly preferred image-receiving layers comprise polyvinyl chloride and polycarbonate, and a plasticizer.
The polymers described above may be used as base supports that also serve as image-receiving layers to form image-receiving members. In this case, the base support may be formed of a single layer or two or more layers.
Base supports for image-receiving members may be transparent or non-transparent. Illustrative supports include: films of polymers such as polyethylene terephthalate, polycarbonate, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene and polypropylene; base supports having pigments such as titanium oxide, barium sulfate, calcium carbonate and talc incorporated in these plastic films; baryta paper; resin-coated (RC) paper having paper laminated with pigment-loaded thermoplastic resins; fabrics; glass; metals such as aluminum; base supports prepared by coating these materials with pigment-loaded electron beam curable resin compositions, followed by curing of the latter, and base supports having pigment-loaded coating layers on these materials.
Particularly useful are the base support prepared by coating paper with a pigment-loaded electron-beam curable resin composition, followed by curing of the resin, and the base support prepared by applying a pigment coating layer to paper, which is then coated with an electron-beam curable resin composition, followed by curing of the resin. These base supports can immediately be used as image-receiving members since the resin layer itself serves as an image-receiving layer.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention may be of the integral type in which the light-sensitive layer and the image-receiving layer are formed on the same base support.
The heat-processible photographic material of the present invention is preferably provided with a protective layer. The protective layer may contain a variety of additives that are commonly employed in the photographic industry. Suitable additives include matting agents, colloidal silica, slip agents, organofluoro compounds (in particular, fluorine-based surface active agents), antistats, uv absorbers, high-boiling organic solvents, anti-oxidants, hydroquinone derivatives, polymer lattices, surface-active agents (including high-molecular surface-active agents), hardeners (including high-molecular hardeners), particulate organic silver salts, non-light-sensitive silver halide grains, antistats, development accelerators, etc.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises a multilayer heat-developable color-photographic material comprising a dye-diffusion-transfer element, activated by heat, said transfer element comprising contacting dye-receiver and dye-donor layers, where said receiver layers comprise a support, a polymeric layer comprising materials which have a high binding affinity for the yellow, magenta, and cyan dyes, and where said donor layers comprise a yellow dye producing layer, said layer comprising light-sensitive silver halide grains, an organic silver salt, a reducing agent, a yellow dye providing compound, and a hydrophilic binder, a magenta dye producing layer, said layer comprising light-sensitive silver halide grains, an organic silver salt, a reducing agent, a magenta dye providing compound, and a hydrophilic binder, a cyan dye producing layer, said layer comprising light-sensitive silver halide grains, an organic silver salt, a reducing agent, a cyan dye providing compound, and a hydrophilic binder, wherein said binder of said layers amount to from 3 to 10 g/m.sup.2 of said coated material. These dyes are heat-transferable dyes. The dye-receiver and dye-donor layers may be coated together in a single, integral element. Alternatively, the dye-receiver and dye-donor layers may be coated in separate elements, said elements being laminated together prior to the thermal dye-diffusion transfer process. The preferred amount of thermal solvent according to formula I incorporated in a given layer is 0 to 300% by weight of the total amount of binder present in said layer. The amount of such thermal solvent incorporated in a given layer is 20 to 150% by weight of the total amount of binder present in said element.
The advantages of the present invention will become more apparent by reading the following examples. The scope of the present invention is by no means limited by these examples, however.
EXAMPLES
The following examples are meant to be illustrative of the invention and not limiting in the materials described nor exhaustive in describing all the forms of practice.
The thermal solvents according to formula (I) that are employed in the following examples are listed in Table V. In all these examples Q of formula (I) is a phenyl ring and L.sup.1 is absent. In Table V column Z refers to substituents on the phenyl ring, Pos is the position of the hydrogen bond accepting unit L.sup.2 --B--R. Calculated logP values for these thermal solvents are also listed in Table V.
TABLE V__________________________________________________________________________HBA UnitTS No AH Z Pos Link B R clogP__________________________________________________________________________ 1 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-butyl 3.572 2 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-pentyl 4.101 3 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-hexyl 4.630 4 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-heptyl 5.159 5 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 5.688 6 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-nonyl 6.217 7 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-decyl 6.746 8 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-dodecyl 7.804 9 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-hexadecyl 9.92010 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O benzyl 3.75311 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-(2-ethyl)hexyl 5.55812 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-(2,2,4-Me.sub.3)pentyl 5.29313 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-(3-cyclohexyl)propyl 5.69314 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-(3,7-dimethyl)octyl 6.48615 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-(2-hexyl)decyl 9.79016 1-OH .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 2-n-octyl 5.46817 1-OH 2-Cl 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 6.30718 1-OH 3-Cl 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 6.30719 1-OH .cndot. 4 --OCH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 4.86820 1-OH .cndot. 4 --CH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 4.85621 1-OH .cndot. 4 --CH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-decyl 5.91422 1-OH .cndot. 4 --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 5.12523 1-OH .cndot. 4 --CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 CH.sub.2 -- OC(.dbd.O) 1-n-nonyl 6.18324 1-OH .cndot. 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 5.68825 1-OH .cndot. 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-decyl 6.74626 1-OH .cndot. 3 vinyl C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-hexyl 4.44327 1-OH .cndot. 3 vinyl C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-hepyl 4.97228 1-OH 6-CH.sub.3 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-octyl 6.12729 1-OH 6-CH.sub.3 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-nonyl 6.65630 1,3-(OH).sup.2 .cndot. 4 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)O 1-n-dodecyl 7.40731 1-OH .cndot. 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)NH 1-n-dodecyl 6.35232 1,4-(OH).sup.2 .cndot. 3 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)NH 1-n-octadecyl 9.65933 1,3-(OH).sup.2 .cndot. 5 .cndot. C(.dbd.O)NH 1-n-octadecyl 9.029__________________________________________________________________________
Comparative compounds that are outside the scope of our invention are shown below: ##STR6##
Photographic couplers employed in the examples are given below: ##STR7##
The following 75 examples illustrate the ability of materials to effect the thermal transfer of image dye through intervening layers of gelatin binder into a polymeric dye receiver layer and are described by the coating format shown in FIG. 2. The first layer (FIG. 2, layer 14) contains gelatin binder and the material to be tested as a thermal solvent while the upper layer (FIG. 2, layer 16) contains the image generating chemistry comprising a silver chloride emulsion and a dispersion of a heat transferable dye generating coupler in a gelatin binder. A third, protective overcoat, layer (FIG. 2, layer 15) containing gelatin and hardener is applied over the first two gelatin test layers.
Examples 1 through 4 describe in detail the methods of preparation of the solutions and dispersions used in all the following examples. Examples 5 through 8 describe the same film samples processed in a second developer. Example 1 is a comparison coating that contains no added material in the first gelatin layer. In examples 2 and 3 comparative compounds each having only one of the two hydrogen bonding type groups necessary for thermal solvent activity are contained in the gelatin interlayer. Example 4 is an example of a compound of our invention according to formula I.
Example 1
Comparison
Gelatin Interlayer Melt Preparation.
This is an interlayer consisting of only gelatin that serves as a control for comparison of the effect of added materials on transfer of heat-transferable dyes through gelatin layers. To 2.4 g of ethyl acetate is added, with stirring, a warm solution consisting of 28.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin and 4.3 g of a 10% solution of surfactant surfactant-A (Alkanol XC.TM., DuPont) in 54.5 g of distilled water. This mixture is dispersed by three passes thru a colloid mill set at a gap of 0.005". To 60 g of this dispersion is added 1.5 g of 10% solution of surfactant-B (active Olin 10G.TM.), 63.7 g of distilled water and 4.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin to prepare a coating melt. ##STR8## Dispersion Melt Preparation
To a warmed mixture of 8.064 g of coupler M-1 and 24.5 g of ethyl acetate is added, with stirring, a warmed solution of 134.4 g of 12.5% gelatin in 236.2 g of distilled water and 16.8 g of an 10% solution of surfactant surfactant-A. This mixture is dispersed by three passes through a colloid mill with a gap of 0.125 mm. To 337.5 g of this dispersion is added 8.10 g of 10% solution of surfactant-B, 489.6 g of distilled water and 64.8 g of 12.5% gelatin.
Emulsion Melt Preparation
To 84.2 g of a green sensitized AgCl cubic emulsion is added 53.3 g of 12.5% gelatin and 474 g of distilled water. The resulting melt has a silver content of 16.0 g of silver per kg of melt.
Protective Overcoat Melt Preparation
To 1840 g of distilled water is added 384 g of melted 12.5% gelatin and 36 g of a 10% solution of surfactant surfactant-A. Within one minute of coating the protective overcoat 140 g of a 1.8% solution of the hardening agent bis-(vinylsulfonyl)methane (HAR-1) is added.
Film Formation
The gelatin interlayer described above is coated on a corona discharge treated polymeric receiver layer paper base at an aim laydown of 1.60 g/m.sup.2 for the gelatin. The reflection base material, resin coated with high density polyethylene, was coated with a mixture of polycarbonate, polycaprolactone and 1,4-didecyloxy-2,5-dimethoxy benzene at a 0.77:0.115:0.115 weight ratio respectively, at a total coverage of 3.28 g/m.sup.2. Over the first gelatin layer is coated the silver halide emulsion and chromogenic image generating layer as follows. Thirty grams of the emulsion melt described above is added to 100 g of the coupler dispersion melt. This image dye generating layer has an aim laydown of 1.60 g of gelatin per m.sup.2, 0.26 g of silver per m.sup.2 and 0.39 g of coupler per m.sup.2. After overcoating with the protective overcoat/hardener layer with an aim laydown of 1.08 g gelatin per m.sup.2 and at a level of 1.35% hardener relative to total gelatin, the coating is stored for 4 days prior to processing.
Photographic Processing
Several examples the coatings of example 1 are individually exposed on a Kodak 1-B sensitometer with a 0.01 sec white light exposure through an infrared filter and a 21 step 0 to 3.0 density step tablet. The coatings are developed for 45 sec at 35.degree. C. in the developer formulation given below containing either Color Developer 3 (CD-3) or Color Developer 2 (CD-2), followed by a bleach-fix (45 sec, to remove the silver and silver halide for investigation purposes only) followed by a 90 sec wash in distilled water. The films are dried at low temperatures (less than 40.degree. C.). Status A reflection densitometry of the integral images prior to heat activated dye transfer are obtained.
______________________________________Developer Solutions______________________________________Triethanolamine 12.41 gPhorwhite REU (Mobay) 2.30 g30% aqueous Lithium polystyrene sulfonate 0.30 g85% aqueous N,N-diethylhydroxylamine 5.40 gLithium sulfate 2.70 gKodak Color Developing Agent CD-3 0.01145 molesor CD-260% aqueous 1-Hydroxyethyl-1,1-diphos- 1.16 gphonic acidPotassium Carbonate, anhydrous 21.16 gPotassium bicarbonate 2.79 gPotassium chloride 1.60 gPotassium bromide 7.00 mgWater to make one liter pH 10.04 .+-. 0.05 at 27.degree. C.______________________________________ ##STR9##Bleach-Fix Solution______________________________________Ammonium thiosulfate 127.40 gSodium metabisulfite 10.00 gGlacial Acetic Acid 10.20 gAmmonium ferric EDTA 110.40 gWater to make one liter pH 5.50 .+-. 0.10 at 80.degree. F.______________________________________
Heat Activated Image Transfer
Dried integral films are laminated with gelatin subbed ESTAR.TM. film base and passed through a set of heated rollers at 0.635 cm/sec with roller surface temperatures of 110.degree. C. and a pressure of 140 kPa. The two film bases are separated. The gelatin layers adhere to the gelatin subbed ESTAR.TM. base and are thus separated from the polymeric dye receiver layer and its support. Status A reflection densitometry is obtained on the polymeric dye-receiver layer coated on a reflective support. These density values determined with the appropriate Status A filter are given in Example 1 in Table VI.
Example 2 and 3
Comparison
Thermal Solvent Melt Preparation. To a mixture of 4.50 g of comparison solvent CS-1 (n-octyl p-methoxybenzoate) or CS-2 (p-n-nonylphenol) in 2.4 g of ethyl acetate is added, with stirring to a warm solution consisting of 28.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin and 4.3 g of a 10% solution of surfactant-A in 50 g of distilled water. This mixture is dispersed by three passes thru a colloid mill set at a gap of 0.125 mm. To 60 g of this dispersion is added 1.5 g of 10% solution of surfactant-B, 63.7 g of distilled water and 4.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin to prepare a coating melt.
The coupler dispersions, coating melts and films are prepared in a manner identical to those of example 1. These coatings are exposed, developed, blixed, air dried and thermally treated as described in example 1. The densitometry for these examples are determined and summarized in Table VI.
Example 4
Invention
This film is identical to that described for examples 2 and 3 in that the gelatin layer (FIG. 2 layer 14) between the dye receiver and the dye generating layer contains a material tested as a thermal solvent. This coating is prepared in the following manner.
Thermal Solvent Melt Preparation
To a mixture of 4.50 g of thermal solvent TS-5 (n-octyl p-hydroxybenzoate) in 2.4 g of ethyl acetate is added, with stirring, a warm solution consisting of 28.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin and 4.3 g of a 10% solution of surfactant-A in 50 g of distilled water. This mixture is dispersed by three passes through a Gaulin Dispersion Mill set at a gap of 0.125 mm. To 60 g of this dispersion is added 1.5 g of 10% solution of surfactant-B, 63.7 g of distilled water and 4.8 g of melted and filtered 12.5% gelatin to prepare a coating melt.
The coupler dispersion, coating melts and films are prepared in a manner identical to those of example 1. This invention coating is exposed, developed, blixed, air dried and thermally treated as described in example 1. The densitometry was determined and is summarized in Table VI.
Table VI shows the various densities obtained for these four film examples developed in the CD3 containing developer. The original (integral) DlogE scales of all example films are comparable. For all example films the dye density transferred to the dye-receiver layer in the absence of a thermal processing step (0-pass) is quite small. For example 1 with a 1.60 g/m.sup.2 interlayer of gelatin there is a net transfer of magenta dye with a green density of only 0.017 (observed less 0.05 base density) with one pass and only 0.067 with three passes through the heated rollers for the image step that has a density in the integral (0-pass) film of 2.05. For example 4 in which the interlayer contains both gelatin and the thermal test material TS-5 there is a substantial transfer of image dye as measured by the green density. For 1-pass and 3-pass treatments through the heated rollers there is obtained an image density of 1.32 and 2.01 respectively in the polymeric dye-receiver layer for the step with a density in the original integral film of 2.07. Comparison example 2 containing comparison material CS-1, a methyl capped analog of invention thermal solvent TS-5 that has no hydrogen bond donating hydroxy group, results in no effective transfer of dye density to the polymeric receiver layer. Similarly manner the comparison example 3 that contains CS-2, a phenol without a hydrogen bond accepting group, results in essentially no transfer of dye density to the polymeric receiver layer.
TABLE VI______________________________________Example Thermal Green DensityNo. Type Solvent Integr. Dens 1-pass 3-pass______________________________________1 Comp. none 2.12 0.070 0.1172 Comp. CS-1 2.47 0.058 nd3 Comp. CS-2 2.06 0.139 nd4 Invent. TS-5 2.07 1.315 2.013______________________________________ Notes: Comp = comparison example; Invent., Inv = invention example; nd = not determined
Example 5-8
The film coatings of examples 1 through 4 are similarly exposed as described above in example 1 and then processed in a developer solution containing Color Developer 2 (CD-2) as an equimolar replacement for CD3, blixed, air dried at 40.degree. C., and thermally processed as described for examples 1 through 4 to generate film examples 5 through 8. The densitometry of integral and transferred dye densities is given in Table VII. For the bilayer example containing only gelatin in the lower layer (example 5) the dye density transferred after 3 passes was only 0.07 above the apparent Dmin base density of 0.05 whereas the dye density transfer was substantial in example 8 containing the example thermal solvent TS-5 for both 1 and 3 passes. Comparison film example 6 containing comparative material CS-1 that does not have a hydrogen bond donating (hydroxy) group, results in essentially no transfer of dye density to the polymeric receiver layer. In a similar manner the comparative film, example 7, that contains CS-2, a phenol without a hydrogen bond accepting group, results in no effective transfer of dye density to the polymeric receiver layer.
TABLE VII______________________________________Exp. Thermal Green DensityNo. Type Solvent Integr. Dens 1-pass 3-pass______________________________________5 Comp. none 2.18 0.116 0.1246 Comp. CS-1 2.16 0.070 nd7 Comp. CS-2 2.16 0.066 nd8 Invent. TS-5 2.28 1.803 2.543______________________________________
Examples 9-14
A set of coatings are prepared to evaluate as thermal solvents compounds well known in the art as coupler solvents or high boiling liquids. In addition m-15 toluamide, a "heat solvent" described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,698, was obtained from Kodak Laboratory Chemicals. These coatings are prepared in a manner similar to that described above for examples 1 and 2 except as follows: the laydown of the lower thermal solvent test layer is 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of gelatin and 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of the thermal solvent test material. These films are exposed, developed in the CD-3 containing developer, stopped in a 1% aqueous acetic acid solution, air dried and thermally processed as described for example 2. The resulting transferred dye scale was read by Status A reflection densitometry, and the corresponding D.sub.max values are listed in Table VIII. The results show that TS-11 of our invention has a dramatic effect on facilitating the thermal diffusion of dye through the gelatin interlayer to the receiver. These results also show that the most common materials known in the art as coupler solvents are completely ineffective in promoting such dye diffusion transfer. Examples 10 and 12 further show that the presence on a compound of only of a hydrogen bond accepting or a hydrogen bond donating group is insufficient to effect dry thermal dye diffusion.
TABLE VIII______________________________________ Test ThermalExample Type Solvent Dmax______________________________________ 9 Comp. none 0.1010 Comp. CS-6 0.0711 Comp. CS-7 0.0712 Comp. CS-5 0.0713 Comp. m-toluamide 0.0814 Invent. TS-11 0.47______________________________________
Examples 15-17
The compound A was presented in U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,698 as a thermal solvent. In these examples we compare the efficacy of this comparison compound as a dye transfer thermal solvent, useful in the context of the dry thermally activated diffusion transfer described herein, to Compound TS-11 of our invention. ##STR10## Preparation of Compound A
Methanol (365 mL) and 4-hydroxybenzamide (100 g, 0.73 mol; Aldrich) are placed in a 2-L three-necked flask set in an ice bath. To this mixture is added 29.2 g (0.73 mol) of NaOH pellets. The mixture is warmed to dissolve all of the NaOH, and then cooled to 10.degree. C. in an ice/acetone bath. To this chilled mixture is added 91.2 g (0.73 mol) of 2-bromoethanol (Aldrich) in 140 mL methanol from a dropping funnel while maintaining the temperature below 15.degree. C. The reaction mixture is warmed to room temperature, and is then refluxed for 3 h on a stream bath. Thin layer chromatography eluted with ethyl acetate indicates the presence of some starting material in this reaction mixture. An additional 4 g of NaOH (pellets) is added and the reaction mixture is refluxed overnight. The reaction mixture is cooled to 5.degree.-10.degree. C. in an ice bath for 1 h and the white solid is collected. The liquors are concentrated and chilled to obtain a second crop. The combined solids are slurried for 1 h in cold water, collected by filtration, washed with water, washed with hexane, and air dried to yield 90 g. The proton NMR is consistent with the structure of the desired intermediate, i1, and the combustion analysis is satisfactory (found: C, 59.19%; H, 5.89%; N, 7.57%; calculated: C, 59.66%; H, 6.12%; N, 7.73%). The final compound A is prepared by placing triethylamine (76 g, 0.75 mol), dry ethyl acetate (450 mL), and intermediate i1 (42 g, 0.23 mol) in a 1-L four-neck flask, ##STR11## cooled in an ice bath. The mixture is cooled to 5.degree. C. and 21.3 g (0.23 mol) of propionyl chloride in 60 mL of dry ethyl acetate is added over a 15-20 min interval from a dropping funnel slowly, keeping the temperature below 10.degree. C. The reaction mixture is stirred at 10.degree.-15.degree. C. for 2 h. The reaction mixture is drowned in 2 L of ice water/HCl. More ethyl acetate is added. The insoluble white solid formed, about 15 g, is unreacted i1. The layers are separated and the aqueous layer is extracted with ethyl acetate. The combined ethyl acetate layers are washed three times with salt water, dried over MgSO.sub.4, and concentrated to an oily solid (15 g). This crude product is slurried in 100 mL hexane for 20 min, collected, and dried to leave 7 g of product. This material is recrystallized from 50 mL of toluene to yield 3 g of Compound A. Combustion analysis is satisfactory (found: C, 60.39%; H, 6.27%; N, 5.88%; calculated: C, 60.75%; H, 6.37%; N, 5.90%).
Thermal solvent dispersions
A dispersion of Compound TS-11 of this invention is prepared identically as described above for Example 4. A similar dispersion of Compound A was prepared, with the exception that it is prepared as an oil-in-water emulsion of an ethyl acetate solution of Compound A in aqueous gelatin/surfactant-A. After coating, the ethyl acetate is removed by evaporation.
Coating and evaluation
Coatings and evaluations are done identically as above for Examples 9 to 14. The results are illustrated in Table IX. It is apparent that the Compound TS-11 of our invention works quite well, whereas the comparison Compound A has no activity whatsoever in facilitating the dry thermal diffusion of image dyes through gelatin.
TABLE IX______________________________________Example Test Compound D.sub.max______________________________________15 none (no gelatin interlayer 0.4316 Compound A (this invention) 0.0117 Compound TS-11 (this invention) 0.78______________________________________
Examples 18-25
These examples illustrate the effect of both the octanol/water partition coefficient (logP) and the significance of intermolecular hydrogen bonding on thermal solvent performance. Additionally, the necessity of thermal treatment to effect dye transfer is illustrated. A set of coatings is prepared in a manner similar to that described above for examples 1 and 2 except as follows: the laydown of the lower thermal solvent test layer was 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of gelatin and 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of the thermal solvent test material. These coatings are exposed, developed in the CD-3 containing developer, blixed, air dried and thermally processed as described for examples 1 and 2. In these examples the gelatin layers of the integral developed films are removed from the dye receiver layer prior to thermal processing by stripping with adhesive. These samples, free of the dye generating gelatin layers, are referred to as 0-pass receivers and illustrate the dye density transfer that occurs in the treatment steps prior to thermal treatment The densitometry for the integral element and the 0-, 1-, and 3-pass receiver layers for these examples is given in Table X. Examples 18 (CS-9) and 19 (CS-10) are the benzyl and 2-ethylhexyl salicylic esters, respectively, and correspond isomerically to the 4-hydroxybenzoates TS-11 and TS-10. These examples show that salicylates, capable of forming a six-membered hydrogen bonded ring between the ortho-hydroxyl group and the ester carbonyl group, are inactive as dry-diff solvents. Examples 21, 22, 23 and 25 (containing TS-11, TS-5, TS-6 and TS-8, respectively) transfer significant dye density to the polymeric receiver layer. Examples 20 and 24 with chemically homologous structures but with lower clogP values produce significantly less transfer of dye density upon thermal processing. HPLC analysis of extracted integral samples of these films before and after development show an 85% loss of both the TS-10 (Example 20) and TS-1 (Example 24) during the pH 10 aqueous development process whereas the other examples gave 5% or less reduction in the amount of thermal solvent remaining after aqueous development. Comparison of the 0-pass densities with the 1- and 3-pass densities for any given film shows that significantly more dye is transferred in the thermal treatment step than in the prior development and drying steps. The thermally transferred net dye densities (observed Status A green density less the base density of ca. 0.05) for these preferred examples are 8 to 14 times higher for the 3-pass thermal transfer than that observed in the 0-pass cases.
TABLE X______________________________________ Observed Green DensityExp. Thermal Integral Receiver DensityNo. Type Solvent clogP Density 0-pass 1-pass 3-pass______________________________________18 Comp CS-9 4.383 2.07 0.070 0.064 0.06519 Comp CS-10 6.188 1.96 0.055 0.060 0.05920 Inv TS-10 3.753 1.95 0.089 0.173 0.18421 Inv TS-11 5.558 2.08 0.137 0.336 0.80222 Inv TS-5 5.688 2.05 0.136 0.500 1.23123 Inv TS-6 6.217 2.08 0.120 0.362 1.28824 Inv TS-1 3.572 1.96 0.080 0.071 0.08425 Inv TS-8 7.804 1.98 0.066 0.162 0.494______________________________________
Examples 26-34
A set of coatings is prepared in a manner similar to that described above for examples 18 through 25 above. These film examples are exposed, developed in the both the CD3 and CD2 containing developers, stopped, washed, air dried and thermally transferred in one pass as described above. The densitometry for these examples is given in Table XI. The analogous thermal solvents TS-3 and TS-4 do not transfer dye as well as the higher homologous examples. HPLC analysis of extracted integral samples of these films before and after development showed more than an 54% loss for TS-3 and a 17% loss for TS-4 during the pH 10 aqueous development process. TS-5 shows less than a 2% loss due to washout in the aqueous development step. As in examples 20 and 24 above loss of the thermal solvent in the pH 10 aqueous development process accounts of the low dye density transfer in the thermal transfer process. The loss of thermal solvent from these films during aqueous development is dependent on the pH of the aqueous solution. For example, for a 270 sec immersion in a pH 10 buffered solution at 95.degree. C. there is a loss of 45% of TS-5, whereas for a 270 sec immersion of a identical film in a pH 6 buffered aqueous solution there is less than a 1% loss of TS-5. The washout of this phenol is pH dependent and the extent of washout will decrease as the pH of the development process decreases. Washout at constant process time, temperature and pH will decrease as the pK.sub.a of the phenol decreases.
TABLE XI______________________________________ Observed Green DensityExmpl Test CD3 CD2No. Compound clogP Integral 1-pass Integral 1-pass______________________________________26 TS-8 7.804 2.16 0.233 2.21 1.14027 TS-3 4.630 2.02 0.141 2.16 0.05028 TS-5 5.688 2.02 1.158 2.40 1.76029 TS-23 6.183 1.97 0.880 2.42 1.82030 TS-7 6.746 2.19 1.184 2.13 1.57031 TS-24 5.688 2.15 0.940 2.29 1.70032 TS-11 5.558 2.20 0.705 2.23 0.88033 TS-6 6.217 1.98 1.218 2.09 1.86034 TS-4 5.159 2.02 0.592 2.34 1.000______________________________________
Examples 35-59
A set of coatings with a variety of thermal solvents is prepared in a manner similar to that described above for examples 1 and 2 above. These films are exposed, developed in the both the CD3 and CD2 containing developers, bixed, washed, air dried and thermally transferred as described above. The densitometry for these examples for the transfer of density at a step that had a density of approximately 2.0 is given in Table XII. As is seen from the examples a variety of hydroxybenzene compounds containing either one or two hydroxyl groups and, in addition, either an ester or amide functional group are useful in the practice of this invention. In examples 39, 40, 51, 52, and 55, thermal solvents with the hydrogen bond accepting unit isolated by methylene units from the phenyl ring are shown to be effective at facilitating dry dye diffusion transfer.
TABLE XII__________________________________________________________________________ CD3: Obs Green Density CD2: Obs Green DensityExpl Test Intgrl Rec. Density Intgrl Rec. DensityNo. Cmpd. clogP Density 1-pass 3-pass Density 1-pass 3-pass__________________________________________________________________________35 TS-8 7.804 2.14 0.642 . 2.12 0.393 .36 TS-5 5.688 2.02 1.302 . 2.22 1.992 .37 TS-18 6.307 2.10 0.293 . 2.33 0.916 .38 TS-17 6.307 2.00 0.705 . 2.21 1.416 .39 TS-20 5.125 2.09 1.350 1.768 2.36 2.280 .40 TS-21 5.914 1.88 1.230 1.500 2.01 1.990 .41 TS-12 5.293 2.02 0.320 . 1.98 0.560 .42 TS-5 5.688 1.97 1.489 2.021 2.16 2.200 .43 TS-16 5.468 2.14 0.940 1.220 1.98 1.000 .44 TS-13 5.693 1.52 0.210 0.220 1.64 0.410 .45 TS-5,6 >5.6 1.85 0.610 1.020 1.90 1.240 1.70046 TS-15 9.790 1.72 0.080 0.080 2.14 0.310 0.51047 TS-14 6.486 1.94 0.580 0.830 2.02 1.190 1.72048 TS-5 5.688 1.94 0.750 1.090 2.14 1.420 1.66049 TS-26,29 >4.4 2.22 0.190 0.200 2.11 0.880 1.56050 TS-5,26 >4.4 2.11 0.740 1.140 2.20 1.350 1.85051 TS-22 5.125 1.92 1.180 1.000 2.17 1.420 .52 TS-19 4.868 1.86 1.150 1.320 2.05 1.690 .53 TS-5 5.688 1.94 1.130 1.130 2.03 1.230 .54 TS-5 5.688 2.19 1.370 1.847 2.35 2.166 2.44355 TS-23 6.183 2.10 1.406 2.208 2.12 1.632 2.30356 TS-30 7.407 1.50 0.214 . 2.04 0.800 .57 TS-31 6.352 2.28 0.430 . 2.26 0.830 .58 TS-32 9.659 1.84 0.090 . 2.00 0.600 0.82059 TS-33 9.029 1.81 0.080 . 1.84 0.420 0.580__________________________________________________________________________ Notes: Mixtures of thermal solvents are coated at equal weights to each other.
Examples 60-68
Thermal Solvent Test Employing a Yellow Dye Forming Coupler
A set of films is prepared in a manner analogous to example 2, using a yellow dye forming coupler (Y-1) and a blue sensitized cubic emulsion in place of M-1 and a green sensitized emulsion, respectively. The thermal solvent test layer is coated at gelatin laydown of 1.40 g m.sup.-2 and a thermal solvent test compound at 1.40 g m.sup.-2. The dye generating layer is coated at 1.30 g m.sup.-2 of gelatin, 0.54 g m.sup.-2 of coupler Y-1 and 0.38 g m.sup.-2 of Ag. The photographic development and thermal processing is as described in example 1. The data for the dye transfer is summarized in Table XIII.
TABLE XII__________________________________________________________________________ CD3: Obs Blue Density CD2: Obs Blue DensityExpl Test Intgrl. Rec. Density Intgrl. Rec. DensityNo. Cmpd. clogP Density 1-pass 3-pass Density 1-pass 3-pass__________________________________________________________________________60 CS-3 7.793 1.91 0.143 0.156 2.07 0.079 0.08961 TS-11 5.558 2.01 0.863 1.100 2.00 0.756 0.92762 TS-5 5.688 2.11 1.012 1.302 2.00 0.922 1.16463 TS-22 5.125 2.01 0.456 0.534 2.08 0.379 0.45464 TS-7 6.746 2.08 0.942 1.150 2.04 0.722 0.85265 TS-17 6.307 2.02 0.676 0.905 2.00 0.769 0.95366 TS-23 6.183 2.00 0.848 0.958 2.10 0.760 0.80267 TS-15 9.790 1.83 0.149 0.270 2.03 0.085 0.20468 TS-19 4.868 1.92 0.182 0.280 2.01 0.463 0.727__________________________________________________________________________
Example 69-73
These example illustrates variations in the structure of the primary amine developing agent that may be employed in the practice of our invention. Shown in the following are four primary amine developing agents: ##STR12## The primary amines developing agents CD-4 and CD-6 and also CD3 and CD5 are related to each other by replacement of a weakly ionizable functional group by its methylated analog. None of the dyes derived from these compounds are expected to be substantially ionized during the thermal transfer process. CD-7 has a strongly acidic sulfonic acid functional group that is expected to be ionized during the thermal transfer process. These coatings are prepared in a manner similar to that described above for example 4 except that the laydown of the lower thermal solvent test layer is 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of gelatin and 1.08 g/m.sup.2 of the thermal solvent test material. The developer solutions are prepared as described above with the substitution of equal molar amounts of each of the primary amines for CD-3. The exposure, development, drying and thermal transfer is done as described in example 1. The characteristics DlogE curves for the integral film samples are similar for all these examples. The results or these experiments are given in Table XIV. The developing agents CD-3, CD-4, CD-5 and CD-6 result in significant dye transfer. CD-7 with an ionic functional group transfers a negligible amount of dye to the reciever layer during processing and thermal treatment.
TABLE XIV______________________________________Example Green DensityNo. Type Developer Integral 1-pass Rec.______________________________________69 Invent. CD-3 2.13 0.8870 Invent. CD-4 2.06 0.9371 Invent. CD-5 2.05 0.8472 Invent. CD-6 2.05 0.8673 Comp. CD-7 2.06 0.08______________________________________
Example 74
Three Color Film
In a manner analogous to the examples provided above a six layer three color film is coated. The film has the following structure:
______________________________________ g/m.sup.2______________________________________ 6th Layer Gelatin 1.08 HAR-01 0.08 5th Layer Gelatin 1.60 C-1 0.38 HBS-1 0.22 TS-5 1.08 Em-R 0.26 4th Layer Gelatin 1.08 TS-5 1.08 ILS-1 0.32 3rd Layer Gelatin 1.60 M-1 0.32 HBS-1 0.22 TS-5 1.08 Em-G 0.22 2nd Layer Gelatin 1.08 TS-5 1.08 ILS-1 0.32 1st Layer Gelatin 1.60 Y-1 0.32 HBS-1 0.22 TS-5 1.08 Em-B 0.22______________________________________
where Em-B, Em-G and Em-R are blue, green and red sensitized cubic AgCl emulsions, ILS-1 is 2,5-di-t-octylhydroquinone, HBS-1 is a high boiling liquid, 1,1-bis-(3,4-dimethylphenyl)ethane, and C-1 is a cyan dye forming coupler. The remaining components have been described above.
This film is given appropriate red, green and blue light exposures, developed, blixed, washed, and dried as described in example 4. The dyes are thermally transferred in 3 passes as described above and the densities of the thermally untreated integral film and the thermally processed receiver layers are determined. The densities are given in Table XV for the color density appropriate for each exposure.
TABLE XV______________________________________Film D.sub.red D.sub.green D.sub.blue______________________________________Integral 1.56 1.66 1.36Receiver 3-pass 0.80 0.83 0.68______________________________________
Example 75
Four films are prepared as described in example 4 above except that the couplers coated in the dye forming layers are M-1, M-2, M-3 and M-4 at equimolar levels. Several samples of each of these four films are exposed, developed, blixed, washed and dried as above. These developed samples were laminated with gelatin subbed ESTAR.TM. and are passed through the heated rollers at 110.degree. C., 0.25 inches per sec., and at a pressure of 140 kPa for individual totals of 0, 1, 3, 7, 10, or 30 passes to effect dye transfer to the dye-receiver layer. The dye present in the receiver layer of thermally treated films was analyzed by HPLC analysis of extracted samples and compared to the dye in the integral element. The fraction of the original dye that is transferred to the receiver layer as a function of the number of passes through the heated rollers for each film and the molecular weight of the dye is summarized in Table XVI.
TABLE XVI______________________________________ Fraction of Dye In ReceiverPasses M-2 M-1 M-3 M-4______________________________________0 0.104 0.084 0.076 0.0281 0.638 0.457 0.391 0.1543 0.771 0.653 0.611 0.3087 0.741 0.714 0.709 0.48510 0.725 0.697 0.744 0.58230 * 0.667 0.763 0.625 M.W. 379.5 553.1 656.4 760.6 kf 1.400 0.640 0.400 0.160 kr 0.656 0.122 0.049 0.019______________________________________
The fraction of transferred dye as a function of the number of passes is fitted to a model for the approach to equilibrium and the kinetic terms for forward (k.sub.f) and reverse (k.sub.r) rates (in units inverse passes) obtained. There is an inverse fit of k.sub.f to dye molecular weight with a correlation coefficient of 0.97. The molecular weight of the developer component of the dye is 269.4.
Claims
  • 1. An aqueous-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element comprising radiation sensitive silver halide, a dye-providing compound that forms or releases a heat-transferable image dye devoid of functional groups with aqueous pK.sub.a values for proton loss of less than 6 upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of an aqueous solution of a primary amine developing agent, a hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent for facilitating non-aqueous diffusion transfer wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (I) ##STR13## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;
  • L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
  • m is 1, 2, or 3;
  • Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
  • B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
  • n is 1 or 2;
  • at least one of the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
  • R is an alkyl, aryl or alkylaryl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10.
  • 2. The element of claim 1, wherein said element further comprises a dye-receiving layer.
  • 3. The element of claim 1, wherein the total amount of said binder is from 0.2 to 20 g/m.sup.2.
  • 4. The element of claim 1, wherein said hydrophilic binder is gelatin.
  • 5. The element of claim 1, wherein the amount of thermal solvent incorporated in a given layer is 40 to 120% by weight of the total amount of hydrophilic binder in said layer.
  • 6. The element of claim 1, wherein the amount of thermal solvent incorporated in a given layer is 10 to 120% by weight of the total amount of hydrophilic binder in said element.
  • 7. The element of claim 1, wherein the amount of thermal solvent incorporated is 100 to 3000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only a single color record, is 200 to 4500 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements having only two color records, or is 400 to 6000 mg/m.sup.2 for photographic elements comprising three or more color records.
  • 8. The element of claim 1, wherein said dye forming compound has a dye forming fragment having a formula weight of at least 90 and less than 600.
  • 9. The element of claim 1, wherein said dye forming compound has a dye forming fragment having a formula weight of at least 110 and less than 400.
  • 10. The element of claim 1, wherein said element further comprises a high boiling liquid comprising 1,1-bis-(3,4-dimethylphenyl)ethane.
  • 11. The element of claim 1, wherein said calculated logP for said thermal solvent according to formula (I) is greater than 4 and less than 10.
  • 12. The element of claim 1, wherein said thermal solvent is not dispersed with a dye-forming compound.
  • 13. The element of claim 1, wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (II) ##STR14## wherein n is 1, 2 or 3;
  • p is 0 to 5-n substituents, Z, where each Z consists independently of groups selected from alkyl groups of 1 to 8 carbon atoms or halogens;
  • L is an alkyl or alkoxy group of from 1 to 6 carbon atoms or is absent;
  • XGY is a hydrogen bond accepting group where X and Y are each independently absent, O, or NR.sup.b, where R.sup.b is hydrogen or a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons, and where G is a carbonyl group;
  • R is an alkyl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • at least one OH group and any hydrogen bond accepting atom in XGY cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms.
  • 14. The element of claim 13, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is an oxygen atom and Y is absent, or where X is absent and Y is an oxygen atom;
  • 15. The element of claim 13, where said thermal solvent according to formula (II) comprises either a 3-hydroxybenzoate, a 4-hydroxybenzoate a 3,4-dihydroxybenzonate, a 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, a 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate, a 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate, a 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate, a 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate, a 2,3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, a 2,3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, or a 2,4,5-dihydroxybenzoate, where R is an alkyl group or an alkylaryl group of from 6 to 18 carbons atoms.
  • 16. The element of claim 13, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is NR.sup.b and Y is absent or X is absent and Y is NR.sup.b where R.sup.b is hydrogen or is a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons.
  • 17. The element in claim 13, wherein the thermal solvent according to formula (II) comprises a 3-hydroxybenzamide, a 4-hydroxybenzamide, a 3,4-dihydroxybenzamide, a 3,5-dihydroxybenzamide, a 2,3-dihydroxybenzamide, a 2,4-dihydroxybenzamide, a 2,5-dihydroxybenzamide, a 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzamide, a 2,3,4-dihydroxybenzamide, a 2,3,5-dihydroxybenzamide, or a 2,4,5-dihydroxybenzamide, where R is an alkyl group or an alkylaryl group of from 6 to 18 carbons atoms.
  • 18. The element of claim 1, wherein a link between two or more thermal solvents of formula (I) is formed at R, L.sup.1, L.sup.2, or Q.
  • 19. The element of claim 1, that contains a plurality of thermal solvents according to formula (I).
  • 20. The element of claim 1, wherein said element is not heat developable.
  • 21. The element of claim 1, wherein said dye providing compound comprises a dye forming coupler compound having no readily ionizable sulfonic acid, carboxylic acid, or very strongly acidic sulfonamide functional groups.
  • 22. The element of claim 1, wherein said aqueous-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element is a multilayer aqueous-developable color-photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element further comprising
  • a support;
  • a heat-transferable yellow dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable yellow dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder,
  • a heat-transferable magenta dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable magenta dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder;
  • a heat-transferable cyan dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable cyan dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder.
  • 23. A process for forming an improved dye image comprising the steps of:
  • providing in an aqueous-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element comprising radiation sensitive silver halide, a dye-providing compound that forms or releases a heat-transferable image dye upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of a primary amine developing agent, a hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent for facilitating non-aqueous diffusion transfer wherein said thermal solvent has the formula according to formula (I) ##STR15## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;
  • L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
  • m is 1, 2, or 3;
  • Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
  • B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
  • n is 1 or 2;
  • at least one of the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
  • R is an alkyl, aryl or alkylaryl group of from 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10;
  • exposing said non-aqueous dye-diffusion transfer element to actinic radiation;
  • contacting said element with an aqueous-developing solution, wherein said solution comprises a primary amine developing agent;
  • contacting said element with an aqueous bath of acidic pH;
  • drying said element;
  • providing a dye-receiving layer and a contiguous, dimensionally stable, support where said dye receiving layer is in physical contact with said dye-diffusion transfer element;
  • heating said dye-diffusion transfer element and dye-receiving layer to effect dye-diffusion transfer; and
  • separating said dye-receiving layer and contiguous support from said dye transfer element.
  • 24. The process of claim 23, wherein said element further comprises a dye-receiving layer.
  • 25. The process of claim 23, wherein said dye forming compound has a dye forming fragment having a formula weight of at least 90 and less than 600.
  • 26. The process of claim 23, wherein said dye forming compound has a dye forming fragment having a formula weight of at least 110 and less than 400.
  • 27. The process of claim 24, wherein said primary amine developing agent, has a formula weight of at least 110 and less than 400.
  • 28. The process of claim 23, wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (II) ##STR16## wherein n is 1, 2 or 3;
  • p is 0 to 5-n substituents, Z, where each Z consists independently of groups selected from alkyl groups of 1 to 8 carbon atoms or halogens;
  • L is an alkyl or alkoxy group of from 1 to 6 carbon atoms or is absent;
  • XGY is a hydrogen bond accepting group where X and Y are each independently absent, O, or NR.sup.b, where R.sup.b is hydrogen or a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons, and where G is a carbonyl group;
  • R is an alkyl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • at least one OH group and any hydrogen bond accepting atom in XGY cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms.
  • 29. The process of claim 28, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is an oxygen atom and Y is absent, or where X is absent and Y is an oxygen atom.
  • 30. The process of claim 28, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is NR.sup.b and Y is absent or X is absent and Y is NR.sup.b where R.sup.b is hydrogen or is a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons.
  • 31. The process of claim 23 for forming an improved multicolor dye image comprising the steps of:
  • providing aqueous-developable color-photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element comprising
  • a support;
  • a beat-transferable yellow dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable yellow dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder,
  • a heat-transferable magenta dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable magenta dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder;
  • a heat-transferable cyan dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable cyan dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder.
  • 32. A heat developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable dye-diffusion transfer element comprising radiation sensitive silver halide, a reducing agent, a dye-forming compound wherein said compound forms a heat transferable image dye devoid of functional groups with aqueous pK.sub.a values for proton loss of less than 6 upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of said reducing agent, hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (I) ##STR17## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;
  • L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of from 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
  • m is 1, 2, or 3;
  • Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
  • B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
  • n is 1 or 2;
  • at least one of the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
  • R is an alkyl, aryl or alkylaryl group of from 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10.
  • 33. The element of claim 32, wherein said reducing agent is a 4-(N,N-dialkylamino)phenyl sulfamic acid.
  • 34. The element of claim 32, wherein said element further comprises a dye-receiving layer.
  • 35. The element of claim 32, wherein the dye forming fragment of said dye forming compound has a formula weight of at least 110 and less than 400.
  • 36. The element of claim 32, wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (II) ##STR18## wherein n is 1, 2 or 3;
  • p is 0 to 5-n substituents, Z, where each Z consists independently of groups selected from alkyl groups of 1 to 8 carbon atoms or halogens;
  • L is an alkyl or alkoxy group of from 1 to 6 carbon atoms or is absent;
  • XGY is a hydrogen bond accepting group where X and Y are each independently absent, O, or NR.sup.b, where R.sup.b is hydrogen or a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons, and where G is a carbonyl group;
  • R is an alkyl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • at least one OH group and any hydrogen bond accepting atom in XGY cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms.
  • 37. The element of claim 36, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is an oxygen atom and Y is absent, or where X is absent and Y is an oxygen atom.
  • 38. The element of claim 36, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is NR.sup.b and Y is absent or X is absent and Y is NR.sup.b where R.sup.b is hydrogen or is a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons.
  • 39. The element of claim 32, wherein said heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion transfer is not significantly facilitated at 40.degree. C. and below by wetting with aqueous alkali.
  • 40. The element of claim 32, wherein said heat-developable chromogenic photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element is a multilayer aqueous-developable color-photographic heat-transferable non-aqueous dye-diffusion-transfer photographic element comprising
  • a support;
  • a heat-transferable yellow dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable yellow dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder,
  • a heat-transferable magenta dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable magenta dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder,
  • a heat-transferable cyan dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable cyan dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder.
  • 41. A process for forming an improved dye image in a photographic thermal dye-diffusion transfer element comprising the steps of:
  • providing a heat-developable chromogenic photographic non-aqueous dye-diffusion transfer element comprising;
  • radiation sensitive silver halide,
  • a reducing agent,
  • a dye-forming compound wherein said compound forms or releases a heat-transferable dye devoid of functional groups with aqueous pK.sub.a values for proton loss of less than 6 upon reaction of said compound with the oxidation product of a reducing agent,
  • a hydrophilic binder, and a thermal solvent for facilitating non-aqueous dye diffusion transfer wherein said thermal solvent has the formula according to formula (I) ##STR19## wherein AH is a hydrogen bond donating group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton loss of greater than 6;
  • L.sup.1 and L.sup.2 are each independently divalent linking groups consisting of groups of 1 to 12 atoms or are independently absent;
  • m is 1, 2, or 3;
  • Q comprises a group of 2 to 15 carbon atoms selected from the group consisting of aromatic rings, alkyl chains, alkyl rings, or ring-chain combinations, optionally substituted with substituents, Z, consisting of alkyl groups or halogens;
  • B is a hydrogen bond accepting group with an aqueous pK.sub.a value for proton gain of less than 6;
  • n is 1 or 2;
  • at least one of the groups AH and B cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms;
  • R is an alkyl, aryl or alkylaryl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • the calculated log of the octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) is greater than 3 and less than 10;
  • exposing said heat-developable element to actinic radiation
  • providing a dye-receiving layer and a contiguous, dimensionally stable, support where said dye receiving layer is in physical contact with said dye-diffusion transfer element;
  • heating said dye-diffusion transfer element and dye-receiving layer to effect thermal development and dye-diffusion transfer, and
  • separating said dye-receiving layer and contiguous support from said dye-diffusion transfer element by automated mechanical means.
  • 42. The process of claim 41, wherein said element further comprises a dye-receiving layer.
  • 43. The process of claim 41, wherein the dye forming fragment of said dye forming compound has a formula weight of at least 110 and less than 400.
  • 44. The process of claim 41, wherein said thermal solvent has the formula (II) ##STR20## wherein n is 1, 2 or 3;
  • p is 0 to 5-n substituents, Z, where each Z consists independently of groups selected from alkyl groups of 1 to 8 carbon atoms or halogens;
  • L is an alkyl or alkoxy group of from 1 to 6 carbon atoms or is absent;
  • XGY is a hydrogen bond accepting group where X and Y are each independently absent, O, or NR.sup.b, where R.sup.b is hydrogen or a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons, and where G is a carbonyl group;
  • R is an alkyl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms;
  • at least one OH group and any hydrogen bond accepting atom in XGY cannot hydrogen bond to form a ring of either 5 or 6 atoms.
  • 45. The process of claim 44, where said thermal solvent has
  • n equal to 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is an oxygen atom and Y is absent, or where X is absent and Y is an oxygen atom.
  • 46. The process of claim 44, where in formula (II)
  • n is 1;
  • p is up to 2 substituents, Z, each independently methyl or chlorine;
  • X is NR.sup.b and Y is absent or X is absent and Y is NR.sup.b where R.sup.b is hydrogen or is a primary alkyl, primary alkylaryl, or aryl group of from 1 to 8 carbons.
  • 47. The process of claim 41
  • wherein said thermal dye-diffusion transfer element comprises
  • a heat-transferable yellow dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable yellow dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder;
  • a heat-transferable magenta dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable magenta dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder;
  • a heat-transferable cyan dye producing layer containing a heat-transferable cyan dye providing compound, a radiation sensitive silver halide, and a hydrophilic binder.
  • 48. The element of claim 1, wherein said dye providing compound is a coupler that forms a heat-transferable dye upon reaction with oxidized color developer.
  • 49. The process of claim 23, wherein said dye providing compound is a coupler that forms a heat-transferable dye upon reaction with oxidized color developer.
  • 50. The element of claim 32, wherein said dye providing compound is a coupler that forms a heat-transferable dye upon reaction with oxidized color developer.
  • 51. The process of claim 41, wherein said dye providing compound is a coupler that forms a heat-transferable dye upon reaction with oxidized color developer.
  • 52. The process of claim 23, wherein said dye providing compound comprises a dye forming coupler compound having no readily ionizable sulfonic acid, carboxylic acid, or very strongly acidic sulfonamide functional groups.
  • 53. The element of claim 32, wherein said dye-forming compound comprises a dye forming coupler compound having no readily ionizable sulfonic acid, carboxylic acid, or very strongly acidic sulfonamide functional groups.
  • 54. The process of claim 41, wherein said dye providing compound comprises a dye forming coupler compound having no readily ionizable sulfonic acid, carboxylic acid, or very strongly acidic sulfonamide functional groups.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 07/804,868 filed Dec. 6, 1991, now pending.

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Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 804868 Dec 1991