CA2080098A1 - Stabilization of thermal images - Google Patents

Stabilization of thermal images

Info

Publication number
CA2080098A1
CA2080098A1 CA 2080098 CA2080098A CA2080098A1 CA 2080098 A1 CA2080098 A1 CA 2080098A1 CA 2080098 CA2080098 CA 2080098 CA 2080098 A CA2080098 A CA 2080098A CA 2080098 A1 CA2080098 A1 CA 2080098A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
color
imaging
forming
hydroquinone
medium according
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA 2080098
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Rong C. Liang
William C. Schwarzel
Rita S. S. Baker
Robert P. Short
Stephen R. Sofen
Larry C. Takiff
Michael A. Young
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Polaroid Corp
Original Assignee
Polaroid Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US07/795,102 external-priority patent/US5210064A/en
Priority claimed from US07/795,101 external-priority patent/US5206208A/en
Application filed by Polaroid Corp filed Critical Polaroid Corp
Publication of CA2080098A1 publication Critical patent/CA2080098A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M5/00Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein
    • B41M5/26Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used
    • B41M5/30Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used using chemical colour formers
    • B41M5/337Additives; Binders
    • B41M5/3375Non-macromolecular compounds
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M5/00Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein
    • B41M5/26Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used
    • B41M5/30Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used using chemical colour formers
    • B41M5/323Organic colour formers, e.g. leuco dyes

Abstract

Abstract of the Disclosure The addition, to a thermal imaging medium comprising a color-forming compound which undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time, the color-forming compound being of the cyclic sulfonamide type described in U.S. Patents Nos. 4,720,449 and 4,960,901, of a color-stabilizing additive, comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations, increases the sensitivity of the imaging medium and helps to prevent fading of images produced therefrom while the images are being projected.

Description

C-769917715 ~TABILIZATI~ F TE~EI~AL IMAGES
Back~round of the Invention Field of the Invention This invention relates to stabilization of thermal images. More particularly, this invention relates to thermal imaging media, processes for forming images and imaged media in which a color-stabilizing additive is used to reduce fading of the images during projection of the image by passage of visible radiation through the image. The sensitivity of the thermal imaging media of the inventionis improved by the incorporation of the color-stabilizing additive therein.
References to Related Applications Copending International Patent Application ~o. PCT/lJS92/02055 and Canadian Patent Application No. 2,068,0Z4, both commonly owned with the present application, describe and claim imaging media comprising a color-forming layer comprising a thermal color-forming composition adapted to undergo a change of 15 color upon increase in the temperature of the color-forming layer above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time. Preferred imaging media described in these three applications are substantially as shown in Figure I of the accompanying drawings and comprise three separate color-forming layers containing yellow, cyan and magenta thermal color-forming compositions; each of these 20 color-forming compositions comprises a color-forming compound which can produce the desired color and an infra-red absorber capable of absorbing infra-red radiation and thereby generating heat in the color-~orming layer. The three color-forming layers use infra^red absorbers absorbing at differing wavelengths so that each color-forming layer can be imaged independently; for example, specif~c imaging 25 media disclosed in these three applications use infra-red absorbers having peak absorptions at approximately 792, 822 and 869 nm.
Copending and commonly owned ~anadian Patent Application No.
2,067,959 describes and claims certain processes for the synthesis of bis(heterocyclic) q~ ~ ~

dyes, especially asymmetric dyes in which the two heterocyclic nuclei differ. These processes are useful for the synthesis of certain infra^red dyes used in the imaging medium of the present invention shown in Figure 1 of the accompanying drawings.
Copending and commonly owned International Patent Application ~o.
PCT/US91/08695 describes and claims certain bis(ben~pyrylium) infra-red dyes, including the croconate dye used in the thermal imaging medium described below with reference to Figure 1 of the accompanying drawings.
Description of the Prior Art As already indicated, imaging media are known which have at least one color-forming layer comprising a color-forming composition adapted to undergo a change of color ~from colorless to colored, from colored to colorless, or from one color to another) upon increase in the temperature of the color-forming layer above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time. The color change in such media n~ed not be supplied by applying heat directly to the medium; the color-forming composition may comprise a color-forrning compound (also referred to herein as a "leuco dye") v~hich undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-forming temperature, and an absorber capable of absorbing actinic (usually infra-red) radiation and thereby generating heat in the color-forming layer. When such a medium is exposed to appropriate actinic radiation, this radiation is absorbed by the absorber, thereby heating the color-forming compound and causing it to undergo its color change. Many such thermal imaging media have the advantage over conventional silver halide media of not requiring a post-exposure developing step. Such thermal imaging media also have the advantage that they are essentially insensitive to visible light, so that they can be handled under normal lighting conditions.
For example U.S. Patents Nos. 4,602,263 and 4,826,976 both describe thermal imaging systems for optical recording and particularly for forming colorimages. These thermal imaging systems rely upon the irreversible unimolecular ,............. "' 2~B;~$

fragmentation of one or more thermally unstable carbamate moieties of an organic compound to effect a visually discernible color shift. U.S. Patents ~os. 4,720,449 and 4,960,901 describe a similar imaging system in which the color-developing component is a substantially colorless di- or triarylmethane imaging compound 5 possessing within its di or triarylmethane structure an aryl group substituted in the ortho position to the meso carbon atom with a moiety ring-closed on the meso carbon atom to form a 5- or 6-membered ring, said moiety possessing a nitrogen atom bonded directly to the meso carbon atom and the.nitrogen atom being bound to a group with a masked acyl substituent that undergoes fragmentation upon heating 10 to liberate the acyl group for effecting intramolecular acylation of the nitrogen atom to form a new group in the ortho position that cannot bond to the meso carbon atom, whereby the di- or triarylmethane compound is rendered colored. Other thermal imaging systems using di- or triarylmethane compounds are described in U.S. Patents Nos. 4,720,450, while U.S. Patent No. 4,745,046 describes a thermal imaging system 15 using as color-forming co-reactants a substantially colorless di- or triarylmethane compound possessing on the meso carbon atom within its di- or triarylmethane structure an aryl group substituted in the ortho position with a nucleophilic moiety which is ring-closed on the meso carbon atom, and an electrophilic reagent which, upon heating and contacting the di- or triarylmethane compolmd, undergoes a 20 bimolecular nucleophilic substitution reaction with the nucleophilic moiety to form a colored, ring-opened di- or triarylmethane compound.
The aforernentioned patents describe a preferred form of imaging medium for forming multicolor images; in this preferred imaging medium, three separate color-forming layers, capable of forming yellow, cyan and magenta dyes,25 respectively, are superposed on top of one another. Each of the three color-forming layers has an inf`ra-red absorber associated therewith, these absorbers absorbing at differing wavelengths, for example 760, 820 and 880 nm. This medium is imagewise exposed to three lasers having wavelengths of 760, 820 and 880 nm. (In the present state of technology, solid state diode lasers emitting at about 760 to 1000 nm provide the highest output per unit cost. Since most of the color-forming materials described in the aforementioned patents do not have high extinction coefficients within this wavelength range, it is necessary to include the infra-red absorbers with the leuco dyes in order to ensure eff~cient absorption of the laser radiation and hence efficient heating of the leuco dye.) The resultant imagewiseheating of the color-forming layers causes the leuco dyes to under~o color challges in the exposed areas, thereby producing a multicolored image, which needs no development.
This preferred type of imaging medium is capable of very high resolution images; for example, the medium san readily be used to produce a 2K line 35 mm slide (i.e., a slide having 2000 pixels in each line parallel to the long edges of the slide). However, it has been folmd that images produced from certain leuco dyes, especially those described in the aforementioned U.S. Patents Nos. 4,720,449 lS and 4,960,901, tend to fade and/or undergo color shifts when those images are projected using powerful conventional slide projectors, for example xenon arc projectors, for extended periods of time. Obviously, fading and color shifts areundesirable and the need therefore exists for ways of preventing or at least reducing such fading and color shifts.
The thermal color-forming reactions described in the aforementioned patents do not provide any amplification such as occurs in silver halide based imaging media, and consequently the media are relatively insensitive; typically, the thermal media require energy inputs of about 1 J/cm2 per color-forming layer to achieve maximum transmission optical densities around 3.0, which are needed for 2S acceptable slides. Accordingly, it would be advantageous to improve the sensitivity of these thermal imaging media so as to improve the speed of image formation and/or reduce the power requirements for the energy source used for imaging.

" '" ' .

It has now been found that quinones, hydroquinones and certain metal ca~ions reduce the fading and color shifts which otherwise occur during projection of thermal images produced as described in the a-forementioned U.S. Patents Nos.4,720,449 and 4,960,901, and also serve to increase the sensitivity of the thermal 5 imaging media described in these patents.
Summarv of the Invention Accordingly, this invention provides a thermal imaging medium comprising at least one imaging layer, the imaging layer comprising a color-forming compound which undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-forming 10 temperature for a color-forming time, the color-forming compound being of the formula:

Z~C--B ~ so 2 1 A, (I) ~ ~ N H
I
0---(` L
and forming after its change in color a dye compound of the formula:

,. \C +

~ B 1 ~, SO2--I 1 A ~ (II) // --N ~ ' 15 in which formulae:
rings A and B are aromatic nuclei;
Z and Z', which may be linked other than via the meso carbon atom, represent the moieties suf-ficient to complete the auxochromophoric system of a 2 ~

diarylmethane or a triarylmethane dye in the dye compound, Z and Z' being such that the dye compound has absorption in the visible region;
I, is a leaving group which is removed on heating; and the broken line between the SO2 group and ring B denotes that the sulfonamide ring in the color-forming compound may be 5- or 6-membered, the imaging layer further comprising a color-stabilizing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone a~d a source of zinc, nickel, copper(lI), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
The term "meso carbon atom" is used herein in its conventional sense to refer to the carbon atom bonded to the groups Z and Z' in the compounds of ~ormula I and II.
The term "hydroquinone" is used herein generically to refer to any aromatic system in which a single phenyl ring bears two hydroxyl groups in positions ~_ to one another. Thus, the term as used herein includes not only derivatives of hydroquinone itself in which the phenyl ring is substituted, for example 2-phenyl-5-methylhydroquinone, but also compounds in which the phenyl ring bearing the hydroxyl groups is -fused to one or more other aromatic rings, for example naphthohydroquinone. The term "quinone" is used in a corresponding manner.
This invention also provides a process for forming an irnage, the process comprising: `
providing a thermal imaging medium having at least one imaging layer, the imaging layer comprising a color-forming compound of Formula I above and a color-stabili~ing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations;
imagewise heating the imaging layer above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time, thereby causing, in heated regions of the ' ~ , ` ~ ' ' , image, at least part of the color-forming compound to be converted to a dye compound of Formula II above, thereby forming an image.
Finally, this invention provides an imaged medium having imagewise S colored and substantially uncolored areas, the substantially uncolored areas of the image comprising a color-forming compound which undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-~orming temperature for a color-forming time, the color-forming compound being of Formula I above and -the colored areas of the image comprising a dye compound of Formula II above, the colored and substantially uncolored areas t'urther comprising a color-stabilizing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations Brief Description of the Drawin s Figure I of the accompanying drawings shows a schematic cross-section through a preferred imaging medium of the present invention;
Figure 2 shows the effect of chlorohydroquinone in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 1 below;
Figure 3 shows the effect of chlorohydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 1 below;
Figure 4 shows the effect of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 2 below;
Figure 5 shows the effect of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color forming compo~md, as described in Example 2 below;

., " ; ' , Figure 6 shows the effect of various concentrations of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 3 below;
Figure 7 shows the effect of various concentrations of 5 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 4 below;
Figure 8 shows the effect of 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a magenta color-forming compound, as described in Example 5 below;
Figure 9 shows the effects of catechol and resorcinol in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 6 below;
Figure 10 shows the effect of catechol and resorcinol in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 6 below;
Figure 11 shows the effects of 2-phenyl-5-t-butylhydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone and 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming Gompound, as described in Example 7 below;
lFigure 12 shows the effects of 2-phenyl-5-t-butylhydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone and 2~5-dichlorohydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 7 below;
Figure 13 shows the effects of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone and 2-phenyl-5-t-butylhydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 8 below;

,' ' ~ '' ' '' ' ''' ~ , , .

Figure 14 shows the effects of 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone and 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forrning compound, as described in Example 8 below;
Figures lSA, 15B and ISC show the effects upon the red, green and S blue minimum optical densities of a medium caused by addition of various hydroquinones, as described in Example 9 below;
Figures 16A and 16B show the effects upon the red and visible minimum optical densities of a thermal imaging medium of this invention caused by addition of 2-methyl-S-phenylhydroquinone, 2,6-dichloro-1,4-benzoquinone and 9,10-anthraquinone, as described in Example 10 below;
Figure 17 shows the effects of 2-methyl-S-phenylhydroquinone, 2,6-dichloro-1,4-benzoquinone and 9,10-anthraquinone in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 10 below;
lS Figure 18 shows the effect of 2-methyl-S-phenylhydroquinone~
2,6-dichloro- 1 ,4-benzoquinone and 9,1 0-anthraquinone in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example lO below;
Figure 19 shows the effect of zinc, nickel and aluminum cations in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan 20 color-forming compound, as described in Example 11 below;
Figure 20 shows the effect of zinc, nickel and aluminum cations in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 11 below;
Figure 21 shows the effect of varying amounts of zinc cation in 25 increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 12 below;

Figure 22 shows the effect of varying amounts of zinc cation in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 12 below;
Figure 23 shows the etfect of copper(II) and cobalt(II) cations in 5 preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 13 below;
Figure 24 shows the effect of various zinc rosinates in increasing the sensitivity of a thermal imaging medium containing a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 14 below; and Figure 25 shows the effect of various zinc rosinates in preventing fading of images produced from a cyan color-forming compound, as described in Example 14 below.
Detailed Description of the Invention As already mentioned, the thermal imaging medium of the present invention comprises a color-forming compound of Formula I (which, upon heating above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming tirne, forms a dye compound of Formula II) and a color-stabilizing additive. More than one color-stabilizingadditive may be employed if desired.
In general, it is preferred to use a hydroquinone rather than a quinone in the imaging medium and process of the present invention, since the hydroquinones seem to be somewhat more e~fective than the quinones. Hydroquinones having an electron withdrawing substituent on the aromatic ring bearing the t~o hydroxyl groups are preferred, since they have been found to be more effective in preventing fading of images produced using the present process; the effectiveness of the : ~ 25 hydroquinones in preventing image fading correlates well with the electron withdrawing ability of the substituent(s), but does not correlate with the redoxpotentials of the hydroquinones. The or each electron withdrawing substituent may be, for example, a halogen atom or an alkyl group. Specific preferred hydroquinones . ' , -:

2 ~

for use in the present medium and process are chlorohydroquinone, 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone,2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone,phenylhydroquinoneand 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone.
The imaging layer used in the imaging medium of the present S invention normally contains a polymeric binder and, when the color-stabilizingadditive is a quinone or hydroquinone, the quinone or hydroquinone used must of course be chosen so that it can be dispersed at the required concentration in the polymeric binder used, though in practice it is not usually difficult to disperse quinones and hydroquinones in the binders normally used in thermal imaging media:
10 In general, it is recommended that quinones and hydroquinones containing strongly acid substituents be avoided, since these acid substituents may cause undesirable color formation of the color-forming compound during storage at ambient temperature.
In general, zinc is preferred over the other metal cations for use in the 15 imaging medium and process of the present invention. With sensitive color-forming compounds, zinc will typically increase the sensitivity of the medium at least about 30 percent. However, as illustrated in Example 11 below, certain relatively insensitive color-forming compo~mds, which in the absence of zinc image so slowly that they are impractical for use in any commercially-useful imaging medium, are20 increased in sensitivity several hundred per cent by the addition of zinc. Appropriate zinc salts are readily available and inexpensive. ~n addition, zinc tends to be less likely than other cations to form unwanted colored complexes with other components of the imaging medium.
The source of metal cations used in the present imaging medium can 25 be any metal compound which can be dispersed at the required concentration in the imaging layer and which does not adversely affect any of the components of that layer. The imaging layer normally contains a polymeric binder and this polymericbinder typically restricts the sources of metal cations which can be used, since many ' inorganic metal salts cannot be dispersed at high concentrations in polymeric binders and/or adversely affect such binders. In general, it is recommended that strongly acidic salts, for exarnple, zinc salicylate, benzoate, ascorbate and phenolsulfonate, be avoided, since these acidic salts may cause undesirable color formation of the color-forming compound during storage at ambient temperature. Zinc chloride and zinc nitrate are also sufflciently acidic to cause undesirable color formation in some leuco dyes, and hence are not recommended for use in the present invention.
Preferred metal sources are metal carboxylates; zinc acetate and isobutyrate areespecially preferred because of their low cost and low molecular weight, which reduces the amount of the salt which has to be included in the imaging layer to provide a given amount of zinc cation. The use of lower carboxylates containing less than about 8 carbon atoms is preferred, since higher carboxylates, which are waxy materials, tend not to give clear layers; for example, it has been found that zinc stearate is too waxy to give a clear coating. Nickel, aluminum, copper(II~ and cobalt(II) are all conveniently supplied as their acetates.
Another preferred source of zinc and/or nickel in the imaging media of the present invention is zinc and nickel rosinates, also known commercially as zinc and nickel resinates. These materials are rosin-based zinc and nickel salts with good solubility in the polymeric binders typically used in thermal imaging rnedia.
Rosin consists mainly of abietic acid, with minor proportions of hydrogenated abietic acids and other materials. Examples of rosinates which are available commercially and are use~ul in the present imaging media are the materials sold under the registered tr~dernarks Zirex, Zinar, Zitro and PolytaclOO by Arizona Chemical Company, 1001 .East Business Highway 98, Panama City, Florida 32401, United States of ~merica. The zinc derivatives described in U.S. Patent No. 5,008,237 may also be used.
The rate of projector fading and/or color shifting experienced with the imaged medium of the present invention varies considerably with the polymeric ".'.
.: ' . ' ~.

binder used in the imaging layer, and thus the optimum amount of color-stabilizing additive to be used in the imaging layer is best determined empirically. In general~
however, when the color-stabilizing additive is a quinone or hydroquinone, it ispreferred that at least about 0.25, and desirably at least about 0.5, mole of quinone 5 or hydroquinone be provided per mole of color-forming compound, and when the color-stabilizing additive is a source of metal cations, it is preferred that the source provide at least about 0.1, and desirably at least about 0.25, mole of metal cation per mole of color-forming compound.. It should be noted that there is a color stabilizing additive/color-forming compound ratio above which further increases in the ratio do 10 not appear to produce further increases in sensitivity or protection against projector fading, although the exact ratio at which this occurs will vary with the specific color-stabilizing additive and color-forming compound used.
The color change undergone by the color-forming compound during imaging of the thermal imaging medium of the present invention may be from 15 colorless to colored, or from one color to another), but in general it is preferred that the color change be from colorless to colored. The term "colored" as used herein is not restricted to colors visible to the human eye; although the present invention may find its chief application in imaging media intended for the production of visible images, it may also be used in imaging media intended for the production of 20 "images" which can only be read at non-visible (for example, infra-red3 wavelengths.
~ ;:eferred color-forming compounds of Formula I are those in which 7. and Z' each comprise a benzene ring, Z and Z' being linked via an oxygen atombonded to the two benzene rings at positions ortho to the meso carbon atom, so that the Z-C-Z' grouping forms a xanthene nucleus. Especially preferred compounds of 25 this type are those in which the benzene rings of Z and Z' carry substituted amino groups at positions para to the meso carbon atom. It is also preferred that, in the color-forming compounds of Formula I, ring A comprise a benzene ring bearing, atits position para to the sulfonamide nitrogen atom, a carbamate moiety.

Two specific preferred color-~orming compounds of Formula I are:
Cl CH~ CH~ Cl ~N,~o~, N--~ 50 2 ~--NC--O ~>--O--CH~ (III) HNC--O ~ O--CH3 and _ NC--- ~ (IV) HNC--0~

Except for the presence of the color-stabilizing additive, the various layers of the imaging medium of the present invention, and the techniques used for exposing the medium, can be those used in the aforementioned patents and applications. Thus, in carrying out the imaging method of the present invention, heat may be applied or induced imagewise in a variety of ways. Preferably, selective 10 heating is produced in the color-~orming layer itself by the conversion o:f electromagnetic radiation into heat, and preferably the light source is a laser emitting source such as a ~as laser or semiconductor laser diode, preferably an infra-red laser The use of a laser beam is not only well suited for recording in a scanning mode but by utilizing a highly concentrated beam, radiant energy can be concentrated in a15 small area so that it is possible to record at high speed and high density. Also, it is a convenient way to record data as a heat pattern in response to transmitted signals~
such as digitized information.

2 ~ 9 ~

Since most of the color-forming compo~mds used in the present imaging medium do not absorb strongly in the infra-red, in the imaging medium ofthe present invention the imaging medium desirably comprises an absorber capableof absorbing infra-red radiation and thereby generating heat in the imaging layer.
The heat thus generated is transferred to the color-forming compound to initiate the color-forming reaction and effect the change in the absorption characteristics of the color-forming compound from colorless to colored. Obviously, the infra-red absorber (which may also be referred to hereinafter as an "infra-red dye") should be in heat-conductive relationship with the color-forming compound, for example, in the same layer as the colos-forming compound or in an adjacent layer. Though an inorganiccompound may be employed, the infra-red absorber preferably is an organic compound, such as a cyanine, merocyanine, squarylium, thiopyrylium or benzpyrylium dye, and preferably, is substantially non-absorbing in the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum so that it will not contribute any substantial amount of color to the D,njl~ areas, i.e., the high!ight areas of the image. The light absorbed by the respective infra-red absorbers is convertecl into heat and the heat initiates the reaction to effect the formation of colored compounds in the color-forming layers.
Since this type of imaging medium is imaged by infra-red radiation rather than by direct heating, a high resolution image is more easily achieved.
An especially preferred form of imaging medium of the present invention has at least two imaging layers, the at least two imaging layers comprising color-forming compounds arranged to produce dye compounds having di-ffering colors, and comprising absorbers absorbing at differing wavelengths. The infra-red absorbers are desirably selocted such that they absorb radiation at different predetermined wavelengths above 700 nm sufficiently ~,eparated so that each color-forming layer may be exposed separately and independently of the others byusing infra-red radiation at the particular wavelengths selectively absorbed by the respective infra-red absorbers. ~s an illustratlon, th}ee color-forming layers 2 ~

containing yellow, magenta and cyan color-forming compounds coulcl have infra-red absorbe}s associated therewith that absorb radiation at 792 nm, 84~ nm and 926 nm, respectively, and could be addressed by laser sources, for example, infia-red laser diodes, emitting laser beams at these respective wavelengths so that the three S color-forming layers can be exposed independently of one another. While each layer may be exposed in a separate scan, it is usually preferred to expose all of the color-forming layers in a single scan using multiple laser sources of the appropriate wavelengths. Instead of using superimposed imaging layers, the color-forming compounds and associated infra-red absorbers may be arranged in an array of side-10 by-side dots or stripes in a single recording layer. In such multi-color imaging media, the color-forming cornpounds may comprise the subtractive primaries yellow, magenta and cyan or other combinations of colors, which combinations may additionally include black. The leuco dyes generally are selected to give the subtractive colors cyan, magenta and yellow, as commonly employed in photographic 15 processes to provide full natural color. A full color imaging medium of this type having three imaging layers is described below with reference to Figure 1 of theaccompanying drawings.
Where imagewise heating is induced by converting light to heat, the imaging medium may be heated prior to or during exposure. This may be achieved 20 using a heating platen or heated drum or by employing an additional laser source or other appropriate means for heating the medium while it is being exposed.
The imaging medium of the present invention can be prepared in a manner similar to the imaging media described in the aforementioned patents and applications. Typically, the color-forming compound and any other cornponents of25 the imaging layer (for example, a polymeric binder and an infra-red absorber) are dispersed in an appropriate solvent, and the resultant liquid dispersion is coated onto a support, generally a polymer film, using conventional coating equipment, and the resultant liquid film dried to produce the imaging layer. Rather than a solution 2 ~ g coating, the layer may be applied as a dispersion or an emulsion. The coa~ing composition also may contain dispersing agents, plasticizers, defoaming agents, hindered amine light stabilizers and coating aids. In forming the imaging layer(s) and the interlayers or other layers, temperatures should be maintained below levels 5 that will cause the color-forming reactions to occur rapidly so that the color-forming compounds will not be prematurely colored.
To incorporate a color-stabilizing additive into the imaging layer in accordance with the present invention, the additive is simply dispersed in the liquid dispersion with the other components of the imaging layer. Thus, the present 10 invention does not require e~tensive changes in the equipment or processes used to produce the thermal imaging medium.
Apart from the presence of the color-stabilizing additive, the imaging medium of the present invention may contain additional layers and components as described in the aforementioned patents and applications. Thus, as already indicated, lS the imaging medium typically includes a support on which the imaging layer(s) are deposited. The support should be sufficiently thick as to permit easy handling of the imaging medium, and may be any material that substantially retains its dimensional stability during imaging. I~esirabiy, the support has a thickness of at least about 50 llm. The support must be sufficiently transparellt that it does not raise excessively 20 the Dmjn of the ~inal image. If it is desired to image through the support, the support must also be sufficiently transparent that it does not interfere with the imaging process, and is preferably non-birefringent, since if the medium is imaged through the support, a birefringent support may cause difficulties in focussing the laser (or other radiation source) at the proper level within the imaging medium. Suitable 25 supports include polyethylene, polypropylene, polycarbonate, cellulose acetate, and polystyrene. The preferred material for the support is a polyester, desirably poly(ethylene terephthalate).

2 ~

Examples of binders that may be used include poly(vinyl alcohol), poly(vinyl pyrrolidone), methyl cellulose, cellulose acetate butyrate, styrene-acrylonitrile copolymers, copolymers of styrene and butadiene,-poly(methyl methacrylate), copolymers of methyl and ethyl acrylate, poly~vinyl acetate), 5 poly(vinyl butyral), polyurethane, polycarbonate and poly(vinyl chloride). It will be appreciated that the binder selected should not have any adverse ef~ect on the leuco dye incorporated therein and may be selected to have a beneficial effect. Also, the binder should be substantially heat-stable at the temperatures encountered during image formation and it should be transparent so that it does not interfere with 10 viewing of the color image. Where electromagnetic radiation is employed to induce imagewise heating, the binder also should transmit the light intended to initiate image formation.
As explained in more detail in the aforementioned copending Application No. 2,068,024, in some imaging media of the type described in the 15 aforementioned patents, there is a tendency for one or more of the colored materials produced during imaging to diffuse out of their color-forming layers, but such undesirable diffusion of colored material can be reduced or eliminated by dispersing the leuco dye in a first polymer having a glass transition temperature of at least about 50C, preferably at least about 75C, and rnost preferably at least about 95C, 20 and providing a diffusion-reducing layer in contact with the color-forrning layer, this diffusion-reducing layer comprising a second polymer having a glass transition temperature of at least about 50C and being essentially free from the color-forming composition. Desirably, the diffusion-reducing layer has a thickness of at least about l,um. The first polymer is desirably an acrylic polymer, preferably poly(methyl 25 methacrylate).
As discussed in the aforementioned International Application No.
PCT/US92/02055, certain color-forming compounds show a tendency to form bubbles during imaging. Accordingly, the imaging medium of the present invention advantageously comprises a bubble-suppressant layer superposed on the imaging layer and having a thickness of at least about 10 Ilm, such that, upon imagewiseincrease in the temperature of the imaging layer above the color-forming temperature for the color-forming time, in heated regions the imaging layer undergoes its change of color but remains essentially free from bubbles.
Other layers which may be included in the imaging medium of the present invention are, for example, a subbing layer to improve adhesion to a support, interlayers for thermally insulating the imaging layers from each other, an ultra-violet screening layer having an ultra~iolet absorber therein, or other auxiliary layers. To give good protection against ultra-violet radiation, ultra-violet screening layers are desirably provided on both sides of the imaging layer(s); conveniently, one of the ultra-violet screening layers is provided by using as the support a polymer filmcontaining an ultra-violet absorber, and such absorber-containing films are available commercially.
A preferred embodirnent of the invention will now be describedJ
though by way of illustration only, with reference to Figure 1 of the accompanying drawings, which is a schematic cross-section through an imaging medium of the present invention. The thicknesses of the various layers shown in the drawing are not to scale.
The imaging medium (generally designated 10) shown in Figure 1 is intended for use in the production of transparencies and comprises a substantially transparent support 12 formed of 4 mil (101 llm) poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) film incorporating an ultra-violet absorber. Appropriate PET films are readily available commercially, for example as P4~1A film from DuPont de Nemours., Wilmington, Delaware, United States of America.
The imaging medium l0 also comprises a diffusion-reducing subcoat 14 approximately I llm thick formed from a 10:1 w/w mixture of a water-dispersible styrene acrylic polymer (Joncryl 538 sold by S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc., Racine .

.
, . . ~'' ' 2 ~

Wisconsin 53403, United States of America) and a water-soluble acrylic polymer (~arboset 526 sold by The B.F. Goodrich (~o., Akron Ohio 44313, United States ofAmerica). The presence of the minor proportion of water-soluble aclylic polymer reduces the tendency for the layer 14 to crack during the coating process. The 5 diffusion-reducing subcoat 14, which has a glass transition temperature of approximately 55C, serves the function of a conventional subcoat, narnely increasing the adhesion of the imaging layer 16 (described in detail below) to the support 12.
The subcoat 14 also serves to reduce or eliminate migration of dye compound fromthe imaging layer 16 after imaging, if a conventional subcoat were employed in place l0 of the diffusion-reducing subcoat 14, diffusion of the dye compound from the layer 16 into the subcoat after imaging might cause loss of sharpness of the image. The subcoat 14 is coated onto the support 12 from an aqueous medium containing the water-dispersible and water-soluble polymers.
A yellow imaging layer 16 is in contact with the diffusion-reducing 15 subcoat 14. This imaging layer 16 is approximately 5 ,um thick and comprises approximately 47.5 parts by weight of a leuco dye of the formula:
Cl O O H
(CH3)3C--C/C--C--N /~ Cl O N--C---O--R' ¦ (LDI) N(C2 H5)2 2 8 ~

in which R' is a tertiary butyl group (the compounds in which R' is an isobutyl or benzyl group may alternatively be used), 1.6 parts by weight of an infra-rcd dye of the formula:
~, ~ OC H 3 O~ OCH 3 CH 3 O ~, (IRI) O

C~l O ~'~i'^,<

(prepared as described in copending and commonly owned International ApplicationNo. PCT/US91/08695; essentially, this dye is produced by condensing two moles ofa 2-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-5,7-dimethoxy-4-methylbenzpyrylium salt with a croconatesalt), 3.3 parts by weight of a hindered amine stabilizer (HAI,S-63, sold by Fairmount Chemical Co.,, Inc., 117 Blanchard Street, Newark NJ 07105, United 10 States of America), and 47.5 parts by weight of a poly(methyl methacrylate) binder (Elvacite 2Q21, sold by DuPont de Nemours, Wilmington, Delaware, United States of America; this material is stated by the manufacturer to be a methyl methacrylate/etllyl acrylate copolymer, but its glass transition temperature approximates that of poly(methyl methacrylate)). This binder has a glass transition temperature of approximately 110C. The imaging layer 16 is applied by coating from a mixture of heptanes and methyl ethyl ketone.
Superposed on the yellow imaging layer 16 is a diffusion-reducing layer 18, which, like the first diffusion-reducing layer 14, serves to prevent migration of dye compound from the yellow imaging layer 16 on storage after imaging. The . ~'",''. .

2 ~

diffusion-reducing layer 18, which is approximately 2 llm thick, is formed of a water-dispersible styrene acrylic polymer ~Joncryl 138 sold by S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc., Racine Wisconsin 53403, United States of America), and is coated from an aqueous dispersion. This layer has a glass transition temperature of approximately 5 60C.
The next layer of the imaging medium 10 is a solvent-resistant interlayer 20 approximately 4.6 llm thick and composed of a major proportion of partially cross-linked polyurethane (NeoRez XR-9637 polyurethane sold by ICI
Resins US, Wilmington, Massachusetts, United States of America) and a minor 10 proportion of poly(vinyl alcohol) (Airvol 540, sold by Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., Allentown Pennsylvania 18195, United States of America). This solvent-resistant interlayer 20 is coated from an aqueous dispersion. The interlayer 20 not only helps to thermally insulate the imaging layers 14 and 22 (described below) from one another during imaging, but also prevents disruption and/or damage 15 to the yellow imaging layer 16 and the diffusion-reducing layer 18 d~lring coating of the magenta imaging layer 22. Since the yellow imaging layer 16 and the magenta imaging layer 22 are both coated from organic solution, if a solvent-resistant interlayer were not provided on the layer 16 before the layer 22 was coated, the organic solvent used to coat the layer 22 might disrupt, damage or extract 20 leuco dye or infra-red absorber from the layer 16. Provision of the solvent-resistant interlayer 20, which is not dissolved by and does not swell in the organic solvent used to coat the layer 22, serves to prevent disruption of or damage to the layer 16 as the layer 22 is coated. ~urthermore, the solvent-resistant interlayer 20 serves to prevent the magenta leuco dye, infra-red dye and hindered amine light stabilizer from 25 the layer 22 sinking into the diffusion-reducing layer 18 and the yellow imaging layer 16 as the layer 22 is being coated.
Superposed on the solvent-resistant interlayer 20 is the magenta imaging layer 22, which is approximately 3 ,um thick and comprises approximately ' ~

2~$~

47.25 parts by weight of a leuco dye of Formula III above (this leuco dye may beprepared by the methods described in the aforementioned IJ.S. Patents Nos.
4,720,449 and 4,960,901), approximately 5.02 parts by weight of chlorohydroquinone (thus giving a leuco dye: chlorohydroquinone molar ratio of about 1:0.75;
5 alternatively, approximately 3.4 parts by weight of zinc acetate may be used, thus giving a leuco dye: zinc cation molar ratio of about 1:0.4), 1.62 parts by weight of an infra-red dye of the -l~ormula:

N Et 2 ~/ (IR2) ~ N Et 2 Et2N -~

(which may be prepared by reactlng a compound of the formula:
o ~ 0 ,~
11 ~ (V) .:

E t N/~O~

in which R is a halogen atom or an alkyl group, with diethylamine to introduce the -NEt2 group on the squarylium ring, and then reacting the product with the 4-methylbenzpyrylium salt to give the final infra-red dye of Formula IR2), 3.6 parts ,3 ~

by weight of a hindered amine stabilizer (HALS-63), 0.27 parts by weight of a wetting agent, and 47.25 parts by weight of a polyurethane binder (Estane 5715, supplied by The B.F. Goodrich Co., Akron Ohio 44313, United States of America).
The imaging layer 22 is applied by coating from a cyclohexanone/methyl ethyl 5 ketone mixture.
(Alternatively, the infra-red dye of Formula IR2 above may be replaced by the dye of formula:
><~Se~nx (IR3) N H

~Se~
(used in the form of its tetrafluoroborate salt) ~this infra-red dye may be prepared by .10 the process analogous to that used to prepare the infra-red dye of Formula IR'~ above using the corresponding selenopyrylium squaric acid derivative and ammonia to introduce the amino group, followed by condensation of the product with a selenopyrylium salt; to prepare the selenopyrylium squaric acid derivative, the corresponding selenopyrylium salt is substituted for the benzpyrylium salt IV).): On the imaging layer 22 is coated a second solvent-resistant interlayer 24 which is formed from the same material, and coated in the same manner as, thesolvent-resistant interlayer 20.
Superposed on the second solvent-resistant interlayer 24 is a cyan imaging layer 26, which is approximately 3 llm thick and comprises approximately 49.5 parts by weight of.a leuco dye of Formula IV above (this leuco dye may be prepared by the methods described in the aforementioned U. S . Patents Nos.
4,720,449 and 4,960,901), approximately 5.86 grams of chlorohydroquinone (thus giving a.leuco dye: chlorohydroquinone molar ratio of about 1:0.75; alternatively 5 approximately 3.97 grams of zinc acetate may be used to give a leuco dye: zinccation molar ratio of about 1:0.4), 1.62 parts by weight of an infra-red dye of the formula:

~
~\~/ (IR4) (which is preferably prepared by the process described in the copending and commonly owned Application No. 2,067,959; essentially this process comprises reacting a diester, diacid chloride or monoester monoacid chloride of squaric acid with a 2-(1,1-dimethylethyl)7-diethylamino-4-methylbenzpyrylium salt and hydrolysing to produce a benzpyryliummethylidene compound, and then reacting this compound with a 7-alkoxy 2-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-4-methylbenzpyrylium salt to givethe final infra-red dye), 0.2 parts of a wetting agent, and 49.5 parts by weight of a polyurethane binder (Estane 5715). The imaging layer 26 is applied by coating from methyl ethyl ketone.
(Alternatively, the infra-red dye of Formula IR4 above may be replaced by the dye of formula:

2 ~ $

NEt2 f~ (IR5 Et2N NHCOC(CH3)3 (which may be prepared by a process analogous to that used to prepare the infra-red dye of Formula IR2 above, by reacting the intermediate of Formula V above with ammonia to introduce an amino group on the squarylium ring, then reacting the 5 product with a 4-methylbenzpyrylium salt to produce the amino squarylium dye, and finally reacting this amino squarylium dye with pivaloyl chloride to produce the final pivaloylamino group on the squarylium ring).
As already indicated, the layers 14-26 of the imaging medium 10 are produced by coating on to the transparent support 12. However, the remaining layers 10 of the imaging medium 10, namely the transpare~nt bubble-suppressant layer 32, the ultraviolet filter layer 30 and the adhesive layer 28 are not coated on to the layer 26 but rather are prepared as a separate unit and then laminated to the remaining layers of the medium.
The transparent bubble-suppressant layer 32 is a 1.75 mil (4411m) PET
15 ~llm, a preferred film being that sold as ICI 505 film by ICI Americas, Inc.,Wilmington, Delaware, United States of America. The bubble-suppressant layer 32 prevents the formation of bubbles in the imaging layers 16, 22 and 26 of the imaging medium 10 during imaging.
The ultraviolet filter~ layer 30 serves to protect the imaging layers 16, 20 22 and 26 from the effects of ambient ultraviolet radiation. It has been found that 2 ~

the leuco dyes are susceptible to undergoing color changes when exposed to ultraviolet radiation during storage before or after imaging; such color changes are obviously undesirable since they increase the Dmj~ of the image and may distort the colors therein. The ultraviolet filter layer 30 is approximately 5 ,um thick andS comprises approximately 83 percent by weight of a poly(methyl methacrylate) (Elvacite 2043, sold by DuPont de Nemours, Wilmington, Massachusetts, United States of America), 16.6 percent by weight of an ultraviolet filter (Tinuvin 328 sold by Ciba-~eigy, Ardsdale New York, United States of ~merica) and 0.4 percent by weight of a wetting agent. The ultraviolet filter layer 30 is prepared by coating on lO to the bubble-suppressant layer 32 from a solution in methyl ethyl ketone.
The adhesive layer, which is approximately 211m thicl~, is formed of a water-dispersible styrene acrylic polymer (Joncryl 138 sold by S.C. ;rohnson & Son, Inc., 3~acille Wisconsin 53403, United States of America) and is coated on to the ultraviolet filter layer 30 from an aqueous dispersion.
lSAfter the layers 30 and 28 have been coated on to the bubble-suppressant layer 32, the entire structure containing these three layers is laminated under heat (approximately 225F, 107C) and pressure to the structure containing the layers 12-26 to form the complete imaging medium 10.
If desired, the bubble-suppressant 1ayer 32 may be formed by coating, 20 rather than by lamination of a pre-formed film on to the layers 12-26. If the bubble-" suppressant layer 32 is to be formed by coating, it is convenient to incorporate an ultra-violet absorber into the bubble-suppressant layer, thereby avoiding the need for a separate ultra-violet absorber layer. Thus, in this case, the layer 28 is coated on to the layer 26 using the solvent already described, and then the bubble-suppressant 25 layer 32 containing the ultra-violet absorber may be coated on to the layer 28 from an aqueous medium.
The medium 10 is imaged by exposing it to the beams from three infra-red lasers having wavelengths of approximately 792,8~8 and 926 nm. The 926 .. . .... :, : : . ~
' ' , '~
.

nm beam images the yellow imaging layer 16, the 848 nm beam images the magenta imaging layer 22 and the 792 nm beam images the cyan imaging layer 26. Thus, a multicolor image is formed in the imaging medium 10, and this multicolor image requires no further development steps. Furthermore, the medium l O may be handled 5 in normal room lighting prior to exposure, and the apparatus in which the imaging is performed need not be light-tight.
The following Examples are given, though by way of illustration only, to show the effects of the color-stabilizing additives in increasing the sensitivity of the imaging medium of the present invention, and in reducing projector fading in10 images produced therefrom. The.infra-red dyes used in combination with the leuco dyes of these Examples were different from those used in the preferred imaging medium described above with reference to Figure 1, and were as follows:
With magenta leuco dyes:
o q~ (Vl) (see U.S. Patent No. 4,508,811); and With cvan leuco dves:
O-'~e~ (Vll) O

(which may be prepared as described in the aforementioned copending Application No. 2,067,959).

Example 1 This Example illustrates the effect of chlorohydroquinone in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
5 Part A _Sensitivity Experiments The following experiments used a simpli~led, monochrome model of the imaging medium described above with reference to Figure 1. This simplified model comprised the support 12 incorporating an ultra-violet absorber, the cyan imaging layer 26 (with varying amounts of chlorohydroquinone, as described below, 10 with the aforementioned Elvacite 2021 poly(methyl methacrylate) replacing theEstane 5715 used in the medium shown in Figure 1, and with the infra-red absorber being that of Formula ~II above), an adhesive layer 2~ and a bubble-suppressant layer 32, which was formed from the same polymeric film as the support 12 and thus incorporated an ultra violet absorber.
15Three imaging media were prepared, a control in which the imaging Iayer contained no chlorohydroquinone, and two others in which the molar ratio of leuco dye to chlorohydroquinone was 1:0.5 and 1:1 (hereinafter referred to as "OEIQ/LC = 0.5" and "CHQ/LC = 1" respectively). All three media were then imaged with a 792 nm laser at varying writing speeds (the speed at which the 20 focussed spot from the laser is moved across the medium), a separate area of the `` medium being imaged at each writing speed, to produce images having regions of : varying red optical densities. The red optical densities of the various areas of the resultant images were measured using an X-Rite 310 photographic densitometer (supplied by X-Rite, Inc., Grandville, Michigan) with the appropriate filter. The 25 results are shown in Table 1 below and plotted in Figure 2 of the accompanying drawings, in which the red optical density achieved is plotted against writing speed.

' .~

,. : .
. . . ,-. . ~ , :
.
- . . - ~ :

2 ~

Part B: Projector _ading Experiments The images produced in Part A above were placed in a Kodak Ektagraphic Model ~F-2 slide projector (equipped with a Sylvania tungsten-halogen ELH 300W 120V bulb) for 10 minutes with the projector on the high setting, and 5 the red optical densities of the various areas of the images remeasured following projector exposure in the same manner as bei~ore. The results are shown in Table 1 below and plotted in Figure 3 of the accompanying drawings, in which the percentage change in red optical density of the images is plotted against the initial red ~ptical density. This percentage change in optical density is calculated by: % Change in O.D. = 100(Da - Db)/Db where D~ is the optical density after projector exposure and Db is the optical density before exposure. Obviously, negative percentage changes in optical density represent fading of the image.
Table I
~ . _ . _ __ 1S Control CHQ/L~ = 0.~ CHQ/LC = 1.0 Wri~ing Ini~ial Change Initial Cllange Initial Chnn~e Speed, Red in O.D., Red in O.D., Red in O.D., m/s Density % Density o/o Dens;ty . _/
0.18 3.49 0.0 3.84-1.3 3.44 0.3 0.26 2.80 -2.0 3.76-0.5 3.42 0.1 0.32 1.73 -16.8 2.37I .3 1.93 -1.3 0.42 0.~9 -24.0 0.72-0.9 0.76 0.8 0 51 0.l9 -172 0 280.0 0 28 1.0 Frorn Table 1 and Figure 2 it will be seen that both 25 hydroquinone-containing media produced optical densities at a given writing speed higher than that produced by the hydroquinone-free control medium, with the medium having a leuco dye:hydroquinone ratio of 1:1.0 usually giving a lower optical density at a given writing speed than the medium having a leuco dye:hydroquinone ratio of 1:0.5. Thus, the addition of hydroquinone to the cyan S imaging layer rendered the medium more sensitive.
Quantifying the increase in sensitivi-ty produced by a given hydroquinone or quinone additive is complicated by a "burn-out" phenomenon whichis just visible in Figure 2 but which is more easily discerned in other experiments described below; see, for example, Figure 9. Although this "burn-out" phenomenon10 is not described in the aforementioned patents, it is known that if a thermal imaging medium having a color-forming layer such as those used in the present invention is imaged at progressively greater exposures (i.e., greater energy inputs per unit area of medium), the optical density of the image increases steadily with exposure until a point of maxirrrum optical density is reached, after which further increase in15 exposure results in the optical density decreasing with exposure, so that very heavily exposed samples of mediurn have optical densities significantly less than the maximum achievable for that medium. It is this decrease in optical density with increasing exposure which is referred to as "burn-out". In experiments such as those whose results are shown in Figure 2, in which a laser of constant energy output is 20 used and the writing speed is varied, burn-out is manifested as a positive slope of the optical density against writing speed curve at low writing speeds, since exposure is inversely proportional to writing speed.
As might be expected, the experiments described herein show that media sensitized with hydroquinones or quinones in accordance with the present 25 invention begin to manifest burn-out at lower exposures (and thus higher writing speeds) than similar unsensitized media. Accordingly, at low writing speeds a sensitized medium might produce a lower optical density than the corresponding unsensitized medium because at that low writing speed the sensitized medium is 2 ~

already suffering from severe burn-out, while the unsensitized medium has not begun to suffer from burn-out. Thus, the sensitivities of various media can only properly be compared at exposures and writing speeds where none of the media being compared are suffering from burn-out; in other words, when making sensitivity 5 comparisons, the comparisons must be made in regions of optical density/writing speed curves where all the relevant curves have a significant negative slope.
Hereinafter, quoted percentage increases in sensitivity are expressed as:
[ {Average of (Optical Density of Sensitized Medium/Optical Density of Unsensitized Medium)~ - 1] x 100%
10 with the relevant range of writing speeds indicated in parentheses following the percentage.
Using this formula, the CHQ/LC = 0.5 medium showed a 42%
(writing speeds 0.26 - 0.51 m/s) increase in sensitivity, and the CHQ/LC = 1.0 medium showed a 34% (writing speeds 0.26 - 0.51 m/s) increase in sensitivity.
15Also, from Table I and Figure 3 it will be seen that, in both hydroquinone-containing media, the -fading expe:rienced in the control medium a*er 10 minutes of projector exposure was substantially eliminated.
Examele 2 This Example illustrates the effect of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone 20 ("MPHQ") in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Example 1 was repeated, except that the chlorohydroquinone used in that Example was replaced with equimolar amounts of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone. The media were imaged and exposed in a projector in the 25 same way as in Example 1. The results are given in Table 2 below; the results of the imaging experiments are plotted in Figure 4, while the result of the projector experiments are plotted in Figure 5 below.

Table 2 -Cont~ o~ IV~PHQ/LC = 0.5 MPHQ/LC = 1.0 WritingInitial (~hange Initial Change InitialChange Speed, l~ed in O.D., Red in O.D., t~ed irl ~.D., S mls Density % Densi~y % Density %
.. _ . . __ . _ .. _ 0.18 3.49 0.0 3.64 2.2 4.05 -2.5 0.26 2.80 -2.0 3.42 1.~ 3.24 0.0 0.32 1.73 -16.~ 1.81 0.0 1.70 -5.9 0.42 0.49 -24.0 0.53 -2.0 0.45 -1.8 100.5~ 0.19 -17.2 0 ~1 -2.9 0 17 7.2 From Table 2 and Figure 4 it will be seen that both hydroquinone-containing media produced some increase in optical densities at low writing speeds, although the improvernent was smaller than for the chlorohydroquinone-containingmedia in Example I above; the medium having a leuco dye:hydroquinone ratio of 1:0.5 showed an average increase in sensitivity of about 12% (writing speeds 0.26 - 0.51 m/s), whereas the medium having a leuco dye:hydroqui.none ratio of 1:1.0 showed a smaller increase in sensitivity.
Also, from Table 2 and Figure 5 it will be seen that, in both hydroquinone-containing media, the fading experienced in the control medium after 10 minutes of projector exposure was substantially reduced, and in the case of the medium having a leuco dye:hydroquinone ratio of 1 :0.5, substantially eliminated.
Example 3 This Example illustrates the effect of varying amounts of 2-methyl- ~ :
S-phenylhydroquinone in reducing projector fading of images formed from imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.

:' . -. . :

2 ~

Example 2 was repeated, except that the media used were a control medium free from hydroquinone and media in which the imaging layer contained MPHQ at leuco cyan dye: MPHQ molar ratios of 1:0.14, 1:0.28, 1:0.37 and 1:0.49.
The media were imaged at writing speeds of 0.18, 0.22, 0.26, 0.32, 0.42 and 0.515 m/s, and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Examples I and 2. The results are given in Table 3 below and plotted in Figure 6.

2 ~
~ ^ ~

~. ~ o o o .
~ - ~
. ~.- ~ o ~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ o o ---- ---~ ~ ~ o a~ ~ o ~ ~ ~
o ~ ~ ~ o '`3 o ~ - ~
~ ~ - ~ o o c~^
. v .c ~ oo :~
c~l ~ . ~
-- D ~ ~ o o c~ ^ . _ ~ ~ ~ O~ ~ O ~ ~.
V O o\ ~ ~ ':
P.';l _ ...
'~ ~ ~ ~
O O

-- = R
o U .~ o ~ ~ o o o V _ ~ __ .~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~ o o' _ . .. _ , . ,, ,__ From Table 3 and Figure 6, it will be seen that all the MPHS2-containing media showed less fading than the control medium, with the LC
: MPHQ = 1:0.49 medium exhibiting the smallest average fading.
Example 4 This Example illustrates the effect of varying amounts of 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone ("DtBHQ") in reducing projector fading of images formed from imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Example 3 was repeated, except that the media used were a control medium free from hydroquinone and media in which the imaging layer contained DtBHQ at leuco cyan dye: DtBHQ rnolar ratios of 1:0.24, 1:0.48, 1:0.71 and 1:0.84.
The media w~re imaged at writing speeds of 0.18, 0.22, 0.26, 0.32, 0.42 and 0.51m/s, and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Examples 1 to 3. The results are given in Table 4 below and plotted in Figure 7.

~ ---~
~ v.~ ~
ey~l _ ~ ,~ .___ ._ ~ 3 ~ ~ ~ ~o ~ o o~
_ =~

O e O ~ , ~ o oo ~
.~ ~

~o ~ O :-.. C~. . I
~, ~. oO~ ~ ~
~1 ~ , E~l ~ .~ o .~ ~ ~ ~ O r~
o o o _ ~ ~ . _ .

~ ~ ~o V~ ~ '` ~ ~ o o o o~ ~ ~ ~ o t ~

~ 3 ~ 1 ~ o ~ s ~ ~ ~ o o o ~-o I ~3 0 0~ ,, o o ~ ,"

v - ~ -~ --t~o~ ~ ~ ~ o o 2 ~

From Table 4 and Figure 7, it will be seen that all the DtBlHQ-containing media showed less fading than the control medium, with the LC: DtBHQ
= 1:0.84 medium exhibiting the smallest average fading. By comparing Table 4 with Table 3 and Figure 7 with Figure 6, it will be seen, however, that DtBHQ appearsto be less effective than MPHQ in reducing fading of this leuco cyan dye; the medium with DtBHQ/LC = 0.84 showed about the same fading as the medium with MPHQ/LC = 0.49.
Example 5 This Example illustrates the effect of 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone in reducing projector fading of images formed from imaging media containing the magenta leuco dye of Formula III above.
Example ~ was repeated, except that the cyan imaging layer was replaced with a magenta imaging layer similar to the magenta imaging layer 22 described above with reference to Figure I but containing the infra-red dye of Formula VI above. Only two media were used, namely a control medium free from hydroquinone and a medium in which the imaging layer contained DtBHQ at a leuco magenta dye: DtBHQ molar ratio of 1:0.76. The media were imaged at writing speeds of 0.18, 0.22, 0.26, 0.32, 0.42, 0.51 and 0.63 m/s, and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Examples I to 4, but for a period of 20 minutes. The results are given in Table S below and plotted in Figure 8; for obvious reasons, green rather than red optical densities were measured for the magenta dye images.

.

, . .

Table 5 ..... _ _ Contl ol DtBHQ/L~ = 0.76 _ . _ ~. ._ Ini~ial Green ~hange in Initial Greell Change in Density D., %l~ensity 0.3~., %
3.22 -3.7 3.18 S.0 3.1g -2.5 3.15 3.2 2.98 -7.0 3.04 2.0 1.96 -9.2 2.09 1.0 :
0.67 -12.0 0.67 -3.0 -18 0.24 -8.4 From Table 5 and Figure 8, it will be seen that the addition of the DtBHQ to the magenta imaging layer greatly reduced the projector fading of the images produced from that irmaging layer.
Example 6 S This Example illustrates the effect of catechol and resorcinol in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Example I was repe,ated, except that the media used were the colitrol medium, a medium containing catechol at a leuco dye: catechol molar ratio of ].0 1:1.08, and a medium containing resorcinol at a leuco dye: resorcinol molar ratio oF 1:1.05. The infra-red optical densities of the three media at 792 nm were found to be 0.89, 1.09 and 1.05 respectively. The media were imaged and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Example l. The results are given in Table 6 below;
the results of the imaging experiments are plotted in Figure 9, while the result of the IS projector experiments are plotted in Figure 10 below.
.

2 ~
-- ~ -o ~ o ~ o o ~
~- -=- ~
~ ~-~ ~ o- o ~ ~ v~
~ ~ o o - -.~
oo ~ ~ ~o l` ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
o ~o ~ o ~
v - -~ol ~ IY .~ o a~ ~ ~ o i~ ~

E~ ~ ~ o o .~.

o ~ ,~æ
.~ ~ ~ V~ ~ O
~t ~~) r_ ~1 ~ ~ i O O

U~ U~ ~ O O
~ ~ O O O O O O O
S..

, 2 ~ 8 From Table 6 and Figure 9 it will be seen that both hydroquinone-containing media produced significant improvements in sensitivity, especially when allowance is made for the burn-out phenomenon discussed above, which these mediadisplay at the 0.125 and 0.14 m/s writing speeds. The average increase in optical density for the catechol-containing medium was 57% (writing speeds 0.16 - 0.32 m/s), while the average increase in optical density for the resorcinol-containing medium was 41% (writing speeds 0.16 - 0.32 m/s). Figure 9 shows catechol to be more effective as a sensitizer than resorcinol in these experiments.
Also, from Table 6 and Figure 10 it will be seen that, in both hydroquinone-containing media, the fading experienced in the control medium after 10 minutes of projector exposure was very substantially reduced.
Example 7 This Example illustrates the effect of 2-phenyl-5-t-butylhydroquinone ("PtBHQ"), phenylhydroquinone ("PHQ") and 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone ~"DClHQ") in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Example 1 was repeated, except that the media used were the control medium and three media in which the cyan imaging layer contained respectively PtBHQ, PEIQ and DCIHQ, each at a leuco dye: hydroquinone molar ratio of 1:0.5.
The media were imaged and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Example l. The results are given in Table 7 below; the results of the imaging experiments are plotted in Figure 11, while the results of the projector experiments are plotted in Figure 12 below. ~ :

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:. ~ ' 2 ~

~n :,~ ~ o, o r~ Vo V ~ .~ ~ oo oo o ~ ~
~ ~ ~ o o _ ,~"~

V VO o, ~
~ .~ ~ ~ ~ o ~1 _ ,=~
~¦ L r O ~ ~ ~ O, O

_ . __ __ P ~ _ ~ O O

_ ,~ ~ ~ O O

~a : ~ 00 ~
~ O O O O O

2 ~o ~

From Table 7 and Figure I I it will be seen that all three hydroquinone-containing media produced significant improvements in sensitivity, especially when allowance is made for the burn-out phenomenon discussed above, which these media display at low writing speeds. Figure I I indicates that the order of effectiveness as sensitizers is:
l~CIHQ > PHQ > PtBHQ.
Also, from Table 7 and Figure 12 it will be seen tha$, in all the three hydroquinone-containing media, the fading experienced in the control medium after I0 minutes of projector exposure was very substantially reduced.
_xample 8 This Exarnple illustrates the effect of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone ("MPH(2"), phenylhydroquinone ("PHQ"), 2-phenyl-5-t-butyl-hydroquinone ("PtBHQ"), 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone ("DtBHQ"~ and 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone ("DCIHQ") in reducing projector fading of images formed from imaging media I5 containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Example I was repeated, except that the media used were a control medium free from hydroquinone and six media containing in which the cyan imaginglayer contained respectively MPHQ, PHQ, PtBHQ, DtBHQ and DCIHQ, each at a leuco cyan dye: hydroquinone molar ratio of :1:0.25. The media were imaged at writing speeds of 0.18, 0.22, 0.26, 0.32, 0.42 and O.5I m/s, and exposed in a projector in the same way as in Examples I to 3. The results are given in Table 8 below and plotted in Figures 13 and 14 (the control results are shown in bo~h Figures for ease of comparison).

2 ~ g Table 8 _ Con trol MPHQ/I ,C = 0.25PHQ/L3 = 0.25 Illitial RedChang~ inIllitial Red Change in~nitial :RedChallge in Density O.D., % Density O.l)., % D~nsity D., %
3.42 -9.4 3.77 -2.9 3.94 -3.3 3.15 -12.7 3.62 -2.2 3.69 -6.5 3.01 -28.4 3.18 -2.8 3.43 -2.0 1.67 -35.4 1.74 -11.5 1.90 -6.3 0.44 -37.6 0.4~ -17.5 0.58 -17.2 10 0.18 -13.5 0.19 -9.1 0.25 -16.3 PtBHQ/LC= 0.25 DtBHQ/LC = 0.2~ DClHQ/LC = 0.2 _ Initial Red Change in Initial Red Change in Initial Red Change in D~nsity OD., % Den.sity O.D., % Density O.D.~ %
3.88 -1.6 3.37 1.S 3.67 -2.7 lS 3.80 -1.6 3.34 -2.1 3.26 -1.5 3.04 -7.7 2.61 -3.4 2.66 -2.3 1.S9 -19.5 1.37 -15.3 1.77 -9.0 0.46 -30.4 0.42 -26.2 0.61 -7.5 0.19 -21.1 0.20 -25.0 0.24 -8.3 From Table 8 and Figures 13 and 14, it will be seen that all of the .:
hydroquinone-containing media showed significantly less fading than the control medium, with the MPHQ, PHQ and DClHQ-containing media showing greatly reduced fading. Based upon these results, the order of effectiveness of the 25 hydroquinones in preventing fading appears to be:
DCIHQ > PHQ ~ MPHQ > DtBHQ ~ PtBHQ.

Example 9 This Example demonstrates that the addition of hydroquinones to imaging n1edia in accordance with the present invention does not produce unacceptable increases in the minimum optical densities of the media.
S It is known that, when used in varying types of imaging media, hydroquinones sometimes cause staining problems because air oxidation of the hydroquinones leads to the formation of yellowish materials. To determine whether such staining problems were likely to be significant in imaging media of the present invention, 25 microliters of 2 x 10 5M solutions (0.5 nanomoles) of various hydroquinones were deposited on silica gel plates, and three separate samples of the treated plates were stored for 18.5 hours at room temperature in the dark, at room temperature under intense fluorescent lighting (S10 ft. candles, approximately ten times normal room lighting intensity), and in a 70C oven respectively. The red,green and blue optical densities of each sample of the silica gel plates were read over lS a whi-te target using an ~-Rite 310 photographic densitometer. The results are shown in Figures 15A, 15B and lSC of the accompanying drawings.
Frorn these Figures it will be seen that, as would be expected, the major effect of adding the hydroquinones was an increase in the blue optical density of the medium, especially in the samples stored under intense light or at elevated temperature. B~sed upon these results, PtBHQ and DtBHQ are preferred for their lack of staining.
It should be noted that the conditions used in these experiments were deliberately made likely to produce staining, in that the hydroquinones were placed on a material with a large surface area freely exposed to atmospheric oxygen.
Increases in minimum optical densities produced by the use of hydroquinones in thermal imaging media such as that described above with reference to Figure 1, in which the hydroquinone-containing layers are sandwiched between two plastic films, are likely to be much less than those obtained in these experiments.

2 ~

Exam~ 1 0 This Example illustrates the use of quinones in the present invention.
The media used in these experiments were substantially similar to those used in Example 1 above. The infra-red dye (VII - 0.36 g of a 1% w/v solution in 2-butanone), the cyan leuco dye (IV - 0.22 g) and 1.46 g of a 15% w/v solution of a poly(methyl rnethacrylate) in acetone were mixed together to form a clear solution, which was split into four equal portions of about 500 ,1l1 each. One of these portions, the control, was used as such; to the other three portions were added 3 mg of 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone (MPHQ), 2,6-dichloro--1,4-benzoquinone IDCBQ) and 9,10-anthraquinone (AQ) respectively. Each of the portions was then coated on to a 4 mil poly(ethylene terephthalate) base with a coating rod, the coatings allowed to dry overnight, and a cover sheet was laminated over the coatings at about 220F (104C). The resultant films were imaged at writing speeds of 0.22, 0.25, 0.32 and 0.42 m/s and projected for 10 minutes in the same way as in Example 1, with the red optical densities being measured before and after projection. The results are shown in Table 9 below. Figure 17 shows the variation of red optical density with writing speed, while Figure 18 shows the change in optical density with initial red optical density.
Also, the red and visible optical densities of unimaged portions of the four films were measured after imaging. The films were stored at 70C in an ovenand these densities remeasured after 17, 41 and 65 hours storage. Figures 16A and 16B respectively show the variation of red and visible optical densities respectively with storage time.

:

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e R

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_l ,~ ~ o ., O ~0 ' ' '_ R

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h 1~ ~ _ ~ ~ ~ o, ~0 - ~
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L o o o o .

From Figures 16A and 16B, it will be seen that MPHQ and DCBQ
had only a minor effect on the red and visible optical densities of the film, and did not greatly affect its optical densities upon storage at elevated temperatures, whereas AQ markedly increased the optical densities both initially and upon storage at S elevated temperatures.
Also, from Figures 17 and 18, it will be seen that MPH~, DCBQ and AQ all increased the sensitivity of the medium, with AQ giving the grea~est increase in sensitivity, and that MPHQ and DCBQ greatly reduced the projector fading of the images, whereas AQ conferred no such protection against projector fading.
10 Example 11 This Example illustrates the effect of zinc, aluminum and nickel cations in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Part A . Sensi:tivity Experiments The media used in this experiment were the same as in Example l above, and had a leuco dye: polymer weight ratio of 0.5: 1. Four media were prepared, a control in which the cyan color-forming layer contained no metal cations, a second medium in which the color-forming layer contained zinc acetate at a leuco dye: zinc molar ratio of 1:0.36, a third medium in which the color-forming layer20 eontained aluminum acetate at a leuco dye: aluminum molar ratio of 1:0.23, and a , fourth medium in which the color-forming layer contained nickel acetate at a leuco dye: nickel molar ratio of 1:0.32. These four media were imaged and their optical densities recorded in the same way as in Example 1. The results are shown in Table 10 below and plotted in Figure 19 of the accompanying drawings.
25 Part B: Projector Fadin Experiments The images produced in Part A above were placed in a Kodak Ektagraphic Model AF-2 slide projector (equipped with a Sylvania tungsten halogen ELH 300W 120V bulb) for 10 minutes with the projector on the high setting, and . . .

~Q~`~3 the red optical densities of the various areas of the images remeasured followingprojector exposure in the same manner as before. The results are shown in Table 10 below and plotted in Figure 20 of the accompanying drawings, in which the percentage change in optical density of the images is plotted against the initial red S optical density.

o/ r o q v o v ~.~
z ~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~ O
,~ ~ ....

~ ~ c;~ o ~ ~oo ~
~ ~ a ~ i ~ O ,~ .
~ O ~ _ ~

S~ ~ O
O . _ ,~ :~
~1 ~ ~ o oo ~ ~ ~o ~o ~¦ ~ I i ~ N ~ ~"

E~ C=' o ~ ~ æ
r ~-~ ~ ~O ~
~ ~ O

~ O ~ o ~ o O
O O o ~ ~ O . ' U O ~ ~ .~ ~
=~1 ~ o . ~' ,~ ~^ . :

O O O 0 ~0 ~' g~ 3 .. ~. . .. -From Table 10 and Figure 19 it will be seen that the metal-containing media produced higher optical densities at certain wTiting speeds than that produced by the metal-free control medium; in fact, the ~n/LC = 0.36 medium showed a 24%
(writing speeds 0.16 - 0.32 m/s) increase in sensitivity, the Al/LC = 0.23 medium showed a 98% (writing speeds 0.16 - 0.32 m/s) increase in sensitivity, and the Ni/LC
= 0.32 medium showed a 13% (writing speeds 0.16 - 0.32 m/s) increase in sensitivity. Thus, the addition of these metals to the cyan imaging layer rendered the medium more sensitive.
Also, from Table 10 and Figure 20 it will be seen that the addition of the metais substantially reduced the fading experienced in the control medium after 10 minutes of projector exposure.
Example_ This Example illustrates the effect of zinc isobutyrate in increasing sensitivity of, and redl1cing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
Part A_Sensitivity_periments The media used in this experime:nt were the same as in Example 1 above. Four media were prepared, a control in which the cyan color-forming layercontained no zinc, and three others in which the color-forming layer contained zinc isobutyrate at leuco dye: zinc molar ratio of 1:0.2, 1:0.4 and 1:0.8. These fourmedia were imaged and their optical densities recorded in the same way as in Example 1, except that a 785 nm laser was used -~or imaging. The results are shown in Table 11 below and plotted in Figure 21 of the accornpanying drawings.
Part B: Projector ~ad~g Experiments The images produced in Part A above were placed in a Kodak Ektagraphic Model AF-2 slide projector (equipped with a Sylvania tungsten-halogen ELH 300~ 120V bulb) for 10 minutes with the projector on the high setting, and the red optical densities of the various areas of the images remeasured following 2 ~

projector exposure in the same manner as before. The results are shown in Table 11 below and plotted in Figure 22 of the accompanying drawings, in which the percentage change in optical density of the images is plotted against the initial red optical density.

' ~

. ' ' ~ ' ' ..

2 ~

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o ~ ~ c-~,o C~ ~ ~ ~ .~ ~ ~ ~O` C~

~ t~ O
_ =a~
~D ~ co o, ~, V~ ~. VO ~ o, ~ ~
~J ~ V _ ~ __ .~ \D, 00, ~
~ ~ ~ O

~1 =a~ .. ___ _I ~ ~ ~ ~ o ~t t~ ~ o -I .- ~. v o ~
V
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ oo ,,, __ _. ~
a ~ ~ ~
O ~ = p~ ., ~'~ ~
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~ v~ CQ ~ ~D 00 ~ V
_ ~0 ~ ~ ~ ~ r-C~ .~ O O O O O O O
o ~ .

~Q~2~

From Table 11 and ~igure 21 it will be seen that the ~inc-containing media produced higher optical densities at a giverl writing speed than that produced by the control medium; in fact, the ~n/LC = 0.2 medium showed a 21% (writing speeds 0.22 - 0.42 m/s) increase in sensitivity, the Zn/LC = 0.4 medium showed a23% (writing speeds 0.22 - 0.42 m/s) increase in sensitivity, and the Zn/LC = 0.8 medium showed a 49% (writing speeds 0.22 - 0.42 m/s) increase in sensitivity.
Thus, the addition of zinc to the cyan imaging layer rendered the medium more sensitive.
Also, from Table 11 and Figure 22 it will be seen that the addition of zinc substantially reduced the fading experienced in the control medium after 10minutes of projector exposure; however, zinc at a leuco dye: zinc molar ratio of1:0.8 was no more effective in preventing fading that at a molar ratio of 1:0.4.Example 13 This Example illustrates the effect of copper(II) and cobalt(II) cations in reducing projector fading of images formed from imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.
The media used in this experiment were the same as in Example 1 above. Three media were prepared, a control in which the cyan cGlor-forming layer contained no metal cations, and two others in which the color-forming layer contained, respectively, copper(II) acetate and cobalt(II) acetate at a leuco dye:
metal molar ratio of 1:0.2. These three media were imaged and their optical densities recorded in the same way as in Example 1, except that a 785 nm laser was used for imaghlg. These images were placed in a Kodak Ektagraphic Model A~-2 slide projector (equipped with a Sylvania tungsten-halogen ELH 300W 120V bulb) for 10 minutes with the projector on the high setting, and the red optical densities of the various areas of the images remeasured following projector exposure in the same manner as before. The results are shown in Table 12 below and plotted in 5~

. ~ . .

2 ~ c~ ~

Figure 23 of the accompanying drawings, in which the percentage change in optical density of the images is plotted against the initial red optical density.
Table 12 . __ _ ..
Control Cu/LC= 0.2 Cs~/LC = 0.2 _ _ ~ .__ 5 Optical 1.04 1.48 1.12 Density atn7m85 .
Control Cu/LC = 0.2 Co/LC = 0.2 . _ _ ._ 10WritingInitial Change Initial Change Initial Change Speed, Red in O.D., Red ill O.D., Red in O.D., m/s Density % Density % Dellsity %
. ~ _ .__ 0.14 2.67 -4.9 2.34 -2.6 2.79 -1.8 0.16 2.39 -8.0 2.71 3.0 3.21 -4.7 150.18 2.30 -10.9 2.95 -2.0 3.28 -4.0 0.22 1.95 -13.9 3.52 -1.7 2.95 -4.1 .
0.26 1.23 -17.1 3.08 -2.6 1.94 -6.2 0.32 0.52 -13.5 1.30 -3.1 0.91 -4.4 " 20 042 0.12 0.0 0.34 -5.9 0.32 0 0 From Table 8 and Figure 15 it will be seen that the addition OI
copper(II) or cobalt(II) substantially reduced the fading experienced in the control medium after 10 minutes of projector exposure.
Example 1 4 This Fxample illustrates the effect of zinc rosinates in increasing sensitivity of, and reducing projector fading of images formed from, imaging media containing the cyan leuco dye of Formula IV above.

. .

2~3~

Part ~ . Sensitivitv Experiments The media used in this experiment were the sarne as in Example 1 above. Five media were prepared, a control in which the cyan color-forming layercontained no zinc, and four others in which the color-forming layer contained one 5 of the zinc rosinates Zirex, Zinar, ~itro and PolytaclOO (Zirex, Zinar, Zitro and PolytaclOO are all Registered Trademarks) at a leuco dye: zinc molar ratio of 1:0.2.
These five media were imaged and their optical densities recorded in the same way as in Example 1, except that an 784 nm laser was used. The results are shown in Table 13 below and plotted in ~Figure 24 of the accompanying drawings.
~10 Part B: Projector Fadin~ Experiments The images produced in Part A above were placed in a Kodak Ektagraphic Model AF-2 slide projector (equipped with a Sylvania tungsten-halogen ELH 300W 120V bulb) for 10 minutes with the projector on the high setting, and the red optical densities of the various areas of the images remeasured following 15 projector exposure in the same manner as before. The results are shown in Table 13 below and plotted in Figure 25 of the accompanying drawings, in which the percentage change in optical density of the images is plotted against the initial red optical density.

. 2 oo, ~ o ~ ~ o t o ~ ~1 , ~

: r ._ O ~. 0~ ~ O o o 1-V o' ~ _ ,~ .__ .___ .~ ~ .~ O~ 0 ~ ~ .: p~ o~ o~
_ --~ .__ _ o o ~ c ~i ~ o~ ~ o o ~J _ ~ .. __ ~1 .~ .~ ~ ~ ~ O
E~ _ ~ . . _ o ~ o ~.0 c~ ~ - ~e; .
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o O 0~ O~
V O r~ _ ~ ...... ___ ... _ ~ ~ o :~ ~ ~.9 ~^~ oo ~
o ,~ ~ æ v, 9 0 3 0 0 0 From Table 13 and Figure 24 it will be seen that the zinc rosinate-containing media produced higher optical densities at a given writing speeds than that prodwced by the control medium; in fact, the Zirex/LC = 0.2 medium showed a 190% increase in sensitivity, the Zinar/LC = 0.2 medium showed a 106% increase5 in sensitivity, the Zitro/LC = 0.2 medium showed a 117% increase in sensitivity, and the Polytacl 00/LC = 0.2 medium showed a 188% increase in sensitivity, all calculated over the full range of writing speeds of 0.18 - 0.42 m/s. Thus, the addition of zinc rosinates to the cyan imaging layer rendered the medium more sensitive.
Also, from Table 13 and Figure 25 it will be seen that the addition of zinc rosinate substantially reduced the fading experienced in the control medium after 10 minutes of projector exposure.
*************
From the foregoing it will be seen that the addition of a color-15 stabilizing additive to the imaging layer of a thermal imaging medium in accordance with the present invention is efféctive in increasing the sensitivity of the imaging medium and in reducing projector fading of images produced therefrom.

Claims (51)

1. A thermal imaging medium comprising at least one imaging layer, the imaging layer comprising a color-forming compound which undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time, the color-forming compound being of the formula:

and forming after its change in color a dye compound of the formula:

in which formulae:
rings A and B are aromatic nuclei;
Z and Z', which may be linked other than via the meso carbon atom, represent the moieties sufficient to complete the auxochromophoric system of a diarylmethane or a triarylmethane dye in the dye compound, Z and Z' being such that the dye compound has absorption in the visible region;
L is a leaving group which is removed on heating; and the broken line between the SO2 group and ring B denotes that the sulfonamide ring in the color-forming compound may be 5- or 6-membered, the imaging layer further comprising a color-stabilizing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
2. An imaging medium according to claim 1 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a quinone or a hydroquinone.
3. An imaging medium according to claim 2 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a hydroquinone.
4. An imaging medium according to claim 3 wherein the hydroquinone has an electron withdrawing substituent on the aromatic ring bearing the two hydroxyl groups.
5. An imaging medium according to claim 4 wherein the or each electron withdrawing substituent comprises a halogen atom or an alkyl group.
6. An imaging medium according to claim 4 wherein the hydroquinone is chlorohydroquinone, 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone, 2-methyl-5-phenyl-hydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone or 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone.
7. An imaging medium according to claim 2 wherein the imaging layer comprises a total of at least about 0.25 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
8. An imaging medium according to claim 7 wherein the imaging layer comprises a total of at least about 0.5 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
9. An imaging medium according to claim 1 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
10. An imaging medium according to claim 9 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises comprises a source of zinc cations.
11. An imaging medium according to claim 9 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.1 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
12. An imaging medium according to claim 11 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.25 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
13. An imaging medium according to claim 1 wherein, in the color-forming and dye compounds, Z and Z' each comprise a benzene ring, Z and Z' being linked via an oxygen atom bonded to the two benzene rings at positions ortho to the meso carbon atom, so that the Z-C-Z' grouping forms a xanthene nucleus.
14. An imaging medium according to claim 13 wherein the benzene rings of Z and Z' carry substituted amino groups at positions para to the meso carbon atom.
15. An imaging medium according to claim I wherein, in the color-forming compound, ring A comprises a benzene ring bearing, at its positionpara to the sulfonamide nitrogen atom, a carbamate moiety.
16. An imaging medium according to claim 1 wherein the color-forming compound comprises:

or
17. An imaging medium according to claim 1 wherein the color change of the color-forming compound is from colorless to colored.
18. An imaging medium according to claim 1 further comprising an absorber capable of absorbing infra-red radiation and thereby generating heat in the imaging layer and promoting the color change of the color-forming compound.
19. An imaging medium according to claim 18 having at least two imaging layers, the at least two imaging layers comprising color-forming compounds arranged to produce dye compounds having differing colors, and comprising at least two absorbers absorbing at differing wavelengths.
20. A process for forming an image, the process comprising:
providing a thermal imaging medium having at least one imaging layer, the imaging layer comprising a color-forming compound of the formula:

and a color-stabilizing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations;
imagewise heating the imaging layer above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time, thereby causing, in heated regions of the image, at least part of the color-forming compound to be converted to a dye compound of the formula:

in which formulae:
rings A and B are aromatic nuclei;
Z and Z', which may be linked other than via the intervening carbon atom, represent the moieties sufficient to complete the auxochromophoric system of a diarylmethane or a triarylmethane dye in the dye compound, Z and Z' being suchthat the dye compound has absorption in the visible region;
L is a leaving group which is removed on heating; and the broken line between the SO2 group and ring B denotes that the sulfonamide ring in the color-forming compound may be 5- or 6-membered, thereby forming an image.
21. A process according to claim 20 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a quinone or a hydroquinone.
22. A process according to claim 21 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a hydroquinone.
23. A process according to claim 22 wherein the hydroquinone has an electron withdrawing substituent on the aromatic ring bearing the two hydroxyl groups.
24. A process according to claim 23 wherein the or each electron withdrawing substituent comprises a halogen atom or an alkyl group.
25. A process according to claim 23 wherein the hydroquinone is chlorohydroquinone, 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone, 2-methyl-5-phenylhydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone or 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone.
26. A process according to claim 21 wherein the imaging layer . comprises a total of at least about 0.25 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
27. A process according to claim 26 wherein the imaging layer comprises a total of at least about 0.5 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
28. A process according to claim 20 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
29. A process according to claim 28 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises comprises a source of zinc cations.
30. A process according to claim 28 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.1 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
31. A process according to claim 30 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.25 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
32. A process according to claim 20 wherein, in the color-forming and dye compounds, Z and Z' each comprise a benzene ring, Z and Z' being linked via an oxygen atom bonded to the two benzene rings at positions ortho to the meso carbon atom, so that the Z-C-Z' grouping forms a xanthene nucleus.
33. A process according to claim 32 wherein the color-forming compound comprises:

or
34. A process according to claim 20 wherein the imaging medium further comprises an absorber capable of absorbing infra-red radiation and thereby generating heat in the imaging layer, and wherein the imagewise heating of the imaging layer is effected by imagewise exposure of the imaging medium to infra-red radiation.
35. A process according to claim 34 wherein the imaging medium has at least two imaging layers, the at least two imaging layers comprising color-forming compounds arranged to produce dye compounds having differing colors, the imaging medium further comprising at least two absorbers absorbing at differing wavelengths, and wherein the at least two imaging layers are independently imaged by imagewise exposure of the imaging medium to infra-red radiation of at least two differing wavelengths capable of being absorbed by the absorbers.
36. A process according to claim 20 wherein the image produced is projected by passing visible radiation through the image and wherein the color-stabilizing additive present in the imaging medium reduces fading of the image during projection.
37. An imaged medium having imagewise colored and substantially uncolored areas, the substantially uncolored areas of the image comprising a color-forming compound which undergoes a change of color upon heating above a color-forming temperature for a color-forming time, the color-forming compound being of the formula:

and the colored areas of the image comprising a dye compound of the formula:

in which formulae:
rings A and B are aromatic nuclei;

Z and Z', which may be linked other than via the intervening carbon atom, represent the moieties sufficient to complete the auxochromophoric system of a diarylmethane or a triarylmethane dye, Z and Z' being such that the dye compound has absorption in the visible region;
L is a leaving group which is removed on heating; and the broken line between the SO2 group and ring B denotes that the sulfonamide ring in the color-forming compound may be 5- or 6-membered, the colored and substantially uncolored areas further comprising a color-stabilizing additive comprising any one or more of a quinone, a hydroquinone and a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
38. An imaged medium according to claim 37 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a quinone or a hydroquinone.
39. An imaged medium according to claim 38 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a hydroquinone.
40. An imaged medium according to claim 39 wherein the hydroquinone has an electron withdrawing substituent on the aromatic ring bearing the two hydroxyl groups.
41. An imaged medium according to claim 40 wherein the or each electron withdrawing substituent comprises a halogen atom or an alkyl group.
42. An imaged medium according to claim 40 wherein the hydroquinone is chlorohydroquinone, 2,5-dichlorohydroquinone, 2-methyl-5-phenyl-hydroquinone, phenylhydroquinone or 2,5-di-t-butylhydroquinone.
43. An imaged medium according to claim 3 8 wherein the imaging layer comprises a total of at least about 0.25 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
44. An imaged medium according to claim 43 wherein the imaging layer comprises a total of at least about 0.5 mole of quinone and hydroquinone per mole of color-forming compound.
45. An imaged medium according to claim 37 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises a source of zinc, nickel, copper(II), cobalt(II) or aluminum(III) cations.
46. An imaged medium according to claim 45 wherein the color-stabilizing additive comprises comprises a source of zinc cations.
47. An imaged medium according to claim 45 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.1 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
48. An imaged medium according to claim 47 wherein the source can provide at least about 0.25 mole of the metal cations per mole of color-forming compound.
49. An imaged medium according to claim 37 wherein, in the color-forming and dye compounds, Z and Z' each comprise a benzene ring, Z and Z' being linked via an oxygen atom bonded to the two benzene rings at positions ortho to the meso carbon atom, so that the Z-C-Z' grouping forms a xanthene nucleus.
50. An imaged medium according to claim 37 wherein the color-forming compound comprises:

or
51. An imaged medium according to claim 37 wherein the substantially uncolored areas further comprise an absorber capable of absorbing infra-red radiation and thereby generating heat.
CA 2080098 1991-11-20 1992-10-07 Stabilization of thermal images Abandoned CA2080098A1 (en)

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US07/795,102 US5210064A (en) 1991-11-20 1991-11-20 Stabilization of thermal images
US07/795,101 US5206208A (en) 1991-11-20 1991-11-20 Stabilization of thermal images
US07/795,102 1991-11-20
US07/795,101 1991-11-20

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JPS56144193A (en) * 1980-04-10 1981-11-10 Jujo Paper Co Ltd Heat-sensitive recording sheet
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