US20090126128A1 - Disazo Acid Dyes - Google Patents

Disazo Acid Dyes Download PDF

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Publication number
US20090126128A1
US20090126128A1 US12/300,709 US30070907A US2009126128A1 US 20090126128 A1 US20090126128 A1 US 20090126128A1 US 30070907 A US30070907 A US 30070907A US 2009126128 A1 US2009126128 A1 US 2009126128A1
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alkyl
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Rainer Nusser
Urs Datwyler
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Clariant Finance BVI Ltd
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Clariant Finance BVI Ltd
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Assigned to CLARIANT FINANCE (BVI) LTD. reassignment CLARIANT FINANCE (BVI) LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: DAETWYLER, URS, NUSSER, RAINER
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/021Disazo dyes characterised by two coupling components of the same type
    • C09B35/025Disazo dyes characterised by two coupling components of the same type in which the coupling component is an amine or polyamine
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/037Disazo dyes characterised by two coupling components of different types
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/039Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component
    • C09B35/205Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component being a derivative of a diaryl- or triaryl- alkane or-alkene
    • C09B35/21Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component being a derivative of a diaryl- or triaryl- alkane or-alkene of diarylmethane or triarylmethane
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/039Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component
    • C09B35/205Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component being a derivative of a diaryl- or triaryl- alkane or-alkene
    • C09B35/215Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component being a derivative of a diaryl- or triaryl- alkane or-alkene of diarylethane or diarylethene
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/039Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component
    • C09B35/28Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component containing two aryl nuclei linked by at least one of the groups —CON<, —SO2N<, —SO2—, or —SO2—O—
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/039Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component
    • C09B35/28Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component containing two aryl nuclei linked by at least one of the groups —CON<, —SO2N<, —SO2—, or —SO2—O—
    • C09B35/30Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component containing two aryl nuclei linked by at least one of the groups —CON<, —SO2N<, —SO2—, or —SO2—O— from two identical coupling components
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09BORGANIC DYES OR CLOSELY-RELATED COMPOUNDS FOR PRODUCING DYES, e.g. PIGMENTS; MORDANTS; LAKES
    • C09B35/00Disazo and polyazo dyes of the type A<-D->B prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B35/02Disazo dyes
    • C09B35/039Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component
    • C09B35/28Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component containing two aryl nuclei linked by at least one of the groups —CON<, —SO2N<, —SO2—, or —SO2—O—
    • C09B35/32Disazo dyes characterised by the tetrazo component the tetrazo component containing two aryl nuclei linked by at least one of the groups —CON<, —SO2N<, —SO2—, or —SO2—O— from two different coupling components
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09DCOATING COMPOSITIONS, e.g. PAINTS, VARNISHES OR LACQUERS; FILLING PASTES; CHEMICAL PAINT OR INK REMOVERS; INKS; CORRECTING FLUIDS; WOODSTAINS; PASTES OR SOLIDS FOR COLOURING OR PRINTING; USE OF MATERIALS THEREFOR
    • C09D11/00Inks
    • C09D11/30Inkjet printing inks
    • C09D11/32Inkjet printing inks characterised by colouring agents
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06PDYEING OR PRINTING TEXTILES; DYEING LEATHER, FURS OR SOLID MACROMOLECULAR SUBSTANCES IN ANY FORM
    • D06P3/00Special processes of dyeing or printing textiles, or dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form, classified according to the material treated
    • D06P3/02Material containing basic nitrogen
    • D06P3/04Material containing basic nitrogen containing amide groups
    • D06P3/24Polyamides; Polyurethanes
    • D06P3/241Polyamides; Polyurethanes using acid dyes
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06PDYEING OR PRINTING TEXTILES; DYEING LEATHER, FURS OR SOLID MACROMOLECULAR SUBSTANCES IN ANY FORM
    • D06P5/00Other features in dyeing or printing textiles, or dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form
    • D06P5/30Ink jet printing

Definitions

  • the invention relates to novel acid dyes, a process for their preparation and their use for dyeing organic substrates.
  • Acid dyes are known and dyes with bridging members are known as well. However, there is still a need for acid dyes with improved properties.
  • the invention provides compounds of the general formula (I)
  • the preferably 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are preferably the further substituents or the substituents on the radicals R 1 , R 2 , R 9 and R 10 .
  • these 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are attached to aryl moieties of the radicals R 1 , R 2 , R 9 and R 10 if aryl moieties are present in the radicals R 1 , R 2 , R 9 and R 10 .
  • More preferred these 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are located on the radicals R 2 and/or R 10 .
  • the preferred compounds of the formula (I) bear 2 sulpho groups.
  • Aryl is preferably substituted phenyl or substituted naphthyl or unsubstituted phenyl or unsubstituted naphthyl.
  • the substituted aryl groups are preferably substituted by nitro or sulpho groups. Particular preference is given to sulpho groups as substituents on the aryl groups.
  • the preferred —CH 2 -phenylen groups are substituted, preferably by nitro groups and/or sulpho groups, a sulpho group being very particularly preferred as a substituent for the preferred —CH 2 -phenyl groups.
  • the branched C 3-6 alkyl groups or unbranched C 1-6 alkyl groups and the unbranched C 1-6 alkoxy groups or branched C 3-6 alkoxy groups can be further substituted with hydroxy groups or cyano groups.
  • Preferably the alkyl groups and/or the alkoxy groups are not further substituted.
  • the preferred alkyl groups and the preferred alkoxy groups are methyl, ethyl, propyl, methoxy and ethoxy groups. Methyl, ethyl and methoxy groups are very particularly preferred.
  • the particularly preferred bridges have the structures (II-1) or (II-2) or (II-3) or (II-4) or (II-5):
  • the bridge structure (II-3) are the preferred bridge BR.
  • m is 1, n and o are each 0 and have the following structure (II-3′)
  • R 4′ , R 5′ , R 4 , R 5 , R 6 , R 7 , R 6′ and R 7′ have the meaning as described above.
  • R 4′ and R 5′ are hydrogen and R 4 and R 5 are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C 1-6 alkyl or unsubstituted branched C 3-6 alkyl, or substituted unbranched C 1-6 alkyl or substituted branched C 3-6 alkyl or unsubstituted unbranched C 1-6 alkoxy or unsubstituted branched C 3-6 alkoxy or substituted unbranched C 1-6 alkoxy or substituted branched C 3-6 alkoxy.
  • R 4′ , R 5′ , R 4 and R 5 are each hydrogen.
  • R 6 , R 7 , R 6′ , R 7′ , R 6′′ , R 7′′ , R 6′′′ and R 7′′′ are independently hydrogen or methyl or ethyl or phenyl. Most preferably R 6 , R 7 , R 6′ and R 7′ are each hydrogen (and m is 1, n and o are each 0).
  • the invention also provides a process for preparing compounds of the formula (I).
  • the present invention's compounds of the formula (I) can be prepared under conventional conditions in conventional processes.
  • the statistical mixture of the different possible compounds will result in such a reaction procedure, wherein the diamine (II) is bis-diazotized and then reacted with the mixture of the compounds of the formulae (IIIa) and (IIIb).
  • one of the components (IIIa) and/or (IIIb) comprises position isomers it should be clear to a person skilled in the art, that this would result as well to the statistical mixture of the additional different possible compounds.
  • the compound of the formula (IIIa) may consist of a mixture of the compounds (IIIa′) and (IIIa′′), e.g. 15 weight-% of the compound of the formula (IIIa′) and 85 weight-% of the compound of the formula (IIIa′′)
  • the particular diamine is cooled to 0-10° C. or preferably to 0-5° C. and diazotized by adding nitrosylsulphuric acid or sodium nitrite. Afterwards, the bis-diazotized diamine is allowed to react with the compound (IIIa) or with the compound (IIIb), preferably in aqueous solution.
  • the dyes of the formula (I) can be isolated from the reaction medium by conventional processes, for example by salting out with an alkali metal salt, filtering and drying, if appropriate under reduced pressure and at elevated temperature.
  • the dyes of the formula (I) can be obtained as free acid, as salt or as mixed salt which contains for example one or more cations selected from alkali metal ions, for example the sodium ion, or an ammonium ion or alkylammonium cation, for example mono-, di- or trimethyl- or -ethylammonium cations.
  • the dye can be converted by conventional techniques from the free acid into a salt or into a mixed salt or vice versa or from one salt form into another. If desired, the dyes can be further purified by diafiltration, in which case unwanted salts and synthesis by-products are separated from the crude anionic dye.
  • the removal of unwanted salts and synthesis by-products and partial removal of water from the crude dye solution is carried out by means of a semipermeable membrane by applying a pressure whereby the dye is obtained without the unwanted salts and synthesis by-products as a solution and if necessary as a solid body in a conventional manner.
  • the dyes of the formula (I) and their salts are particularly suitable for dyeing or printing fibrous material consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides in yellow to violet shades.
  • the dyes of the formula (I) and their salts are suitable for producing Inkjet printing inks and for using these Inkjet printing inks to print fibrous material which consists of natural or synthetic polyamides or cellulose (paper for example).
  • the invention accordingly provides from another aspect for the use of the dyes of the formula (I), their salts and mixtures for dyeing and/or printing fibrous materials consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides.
  • a further aspect is the production of Inkjet printing inks and their use for printing fibrous materials consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides.
  • Dyeing is carried out as per known processes, see for example the dyeing processes described in Ullmamns Encyklopädie der techliischen Chemie, 4th Edition, 1982, Volume 22, pages 658-673 or in the book by M. Peter and H. K. Rouette, Kunststoffn der Textilveredlung, 13th Edition, 1989, pages 535-556 and 566-574. Preference is given to dyeing in the exhaust process at a temperature of 30 to 140° C., more preferably 80 to 120° C. and most preferably at a temperature of 80 to 100° C., and at a liquor ratio in the range from 3:1 to 40:1.
  • the substrate to be dyed can be present in the form of yarn, woven fabric, loop-formingly knitted fabric or carpet for example. Fully fashioned dyeings are even permanently possible on delicate substrates, examples being lambswool, cashmere, alpaca and mohair.
  • the dyes of the invention are particularly useful for dyeing fine-denier fibres (microfibres).
  • the dyes according to the present invention and their salts are highly compatible with known acid dyes. Accordingly, the dyes of the formula (I), their salts or mixtures can be used alone in a dyeing or printing process or else as a component in a combination shade dyeing or printing composition together with other acid dyes of the same class, i.e. with acid dyes possessing comparable dyeing properties, such as for example fastness properties and exhaustion rates from the dyebath onto the substrate.
  • the dyes of the present invention can be used in particular together with certain other dyes having suitable clromophores. The ratio in which the dyes are present in a combination shade dyeing or printing composition is dictated by the hue to be obtained.
  • novel dyes of the formula (I), as stated above, are very useful for dyeing natural and synthetic polyamides, i.e. wool, silk and all nylon types, on each of which dyeings having a high fastness level, especially good light fastness and good wet fastnesses (washing, alkaline perspiration) are obtained.
  • the dyes of the formula (I) and their salts have a high rate of exhaustion.
  • the ability of the dyes of the formula (I) and their salt to build up is likewise very good.
  • On-tone dyeings on the identified substrates are of outstanding quality. All dyeings moreover have a constant hue under artificial light. Furthermore, the fastness to decating and boiling is good.
  • novel dyes are metal free and provide very level dyeings.
  • the compounds according to the invention can be used as an individual dye or else, owing to their good compatibility, as a combination element with other dyes of the same class having comparable dyeing properties, for example with regard to general fastnesses, exhaustion value, etc.
  • the combination shade dyeings obtained have similar fastnesses to dyeings with the individual dye.
  • the invention's dyes of the formula (I) can also be used as red components in trichromatic dyeing or printing.
  • Trichromatic dyeing or printing can utilize all customary and known dyeing and printing processes, such as for example the continuous process, exhaustion process, foam dyeing process and Ink-Jet process.
  • composition of the individual dye components in the trichromatic dye mixture used in the process of the invention depends on the desired hue.
  • a brown hue for example preferably utilizes 20-40% by weight of a yellow component, 40-60% by weight of the invention's orange or red component and 10-20% by weight of a blue component.
  • the orange component as described above, can consist of a single component or of a mixture of different orange individual components conforming to the formula (I). Preference is given to double and triple combinations.
  • the tables I and II which follow contain dyes which can be prepared similarly to the method described in Example 1 by using the corresponding starting materials. These dyes provide orange dyeings having very good light and wet fastnesses on polyamide fibres and wool.
  • a dyebath at 40° C. consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.25 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of nylon-6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 98° C. at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 45-60 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 15 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange polyamide dyeing possessing good light and wet fastnesses.
  • a dyebath at 40° C. consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.3 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5.5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of nylon-6,6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 120° C. at a rate of 1.5° C. per minute and then left at this temperature for 15-25 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 25 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the dyebath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange polyamide dyeing with good levelness and having good light and wet fastnesses.
  • a dyebath at 40° C. consisting of 4000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly amphoteric levelling agent which is based on a sulphated, ethoxylated fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.4 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of wool fabric.
  • the dyebath is heated to boiling at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 40-60 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 20 minutes.
  • the dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange wool dyeing possessing good light and wet fastnesses.
  • the material thus impregnated is rolled up and left to dwell in a steaming chamber under saturated steam conditions at 85-98° C. for 3-6 hours for fixation.
  • the dyeing is then rinsed with hot and cold water and dried.
  • the result obtained is an orange nylon dyeing having good levelness in the piece and good light and wet fastnesses.
  • a textile cut pile sheet material composed of nylon-6 and having a synthetic base fabric is padded with a liquor containing per 1000 parts
  • the print is fixed for 6 minutes in saturated steam at 100° C., rinsed and dried.
  • the result obtained is a level-coloured cover material having an orange and white pattern.
  • a dyebath at 40° C. consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and has affinity for dye, 0.2 part of the dye of Example 1, 1.5 parts of a commercially available preparation of C.I. Acid Yellow 236 (Nylosan Yellow F-L) and 0.5 part of the blue dye of Preparation Example 46 of the patent application WO99/51681 and EP 1066340 B1:
  • Preparation Example 46 of the patent application WO99/51681 and EP1066340 B1, which is adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of woven nylon-6,6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 98° C. at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 45 to 60 minutes. This is followed by cooling down to 70° C. over 15 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is a level grey polyamide dyeing having good light and wet fastnesses.
  • 100 parts of a chrome-tanned and synthetically retanned shave-moist grain leather are dyed for 30 minutes in a bath of 300 parts of water and 2 parts of the dye of Preparation Example 1 at 55° C.
  • the leather is fatliquored for 45 minutes. It is then acidified with 8.5% fommic acid and milled for 10 minutes (final pH in the bath 3.5-4.0).
  • the leather is then rinsed, allowed to drip dry and finished as usual.
  • the result obtained is a leather dyed in a level clear orange hue with good fastnesses.
  • Use Example H can also be carried out with dyes 1 or 2 and 4 to 140 with similar results.
  • a dyebath consisting of 1000 parts of water, 80 parts of calcined Glauber salt, 1 part of sodium nitrobenzene-3-sulphonate and 1 part of dye from Example 79 is heated to 8° C. in the course of 10 minutes. Then, 100 parts of mercerized cotton are added. This is followed by dyeing at 80° C. for 5 minutes and then heating to 95° C. in the course of 15 minutes. After 10 minutes at 95° C., 3 parts of sodium carbonate are added, followed by a further 7 parts of sodium carbonate after 20 minutes and another 10 parts of sodium carbonate after 30 minutes at 95° C. Dyeing is subsequently continued at 95° C. for 60 minutes.
  • the dyed material is then removed from the dyebath and rinsed in running demineralized water for 3 minutes. This is followed by two washes for 10 minutes in 5000 parts of boiling demineralized water at a time and subsequent rinsing in running demineralized water at 60° C. for 3 minutes and with cold tap water for one minute. Drying leaves a brilliant orange cotton dyeing having good fastnesses.

Abstract

Compounds of the general formula (I)
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00001
a process for their preparation and their use for dyeing and/or printing organic substrates.

Description

  • The invention relates to novel acid dyes, a process for their preparation and their use for dyeing organic substrates.
  • Acid dyes are known and dyes with bridging members are known as well. However, there is still a need for acid dyes with improved properties.
  • The invention provides compounds of the general formula (I)
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00002
  • where
      • R1, R2, R9 and R10 are independently unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl, or aryl, or —(CH2)p-aryl where p=1, 2, 3 or 4,
      • R3 and R8 is hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl or unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy or substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or substituted branched C3-6alkoxy, or halogen, or —NHCO—(C1-6alkyl) with an unbranched C1-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, or —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with a branched C3-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, or —NHCONH2,
      • BR is a bridge of the formula -A-B-A- wherein
        • A is substituted phenyl or substituted naphthyl or unsubstituted phenyl or unsubstituted naphthyl, and
        • B is a bridging —[(CR6R7)— (CR6′R7′)m—(CR6″R7″)n—(CR6′″R7′″)o]— where m, n and o have the meaning of 1 or 0 and R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″, R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl or un substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted or substituted phenyl or R6 and R7 together or R6′ and R7′ together or R6″ and R7″ together or R6′″ and R7′″ together form a five or six membered aliphatic ring, or
        • B is a bridging sulphon, or B is a bridging sulphonamide or
        • B is a bridging carboxamide or
        • B is a bridging
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00003
  • and the compounds of the formula (I) bear 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups.
  • In preferred compounds of the general formula (I)
      • R1 and R9 are unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl,
      • R2 and R10 are aryl, or —(CH2)p-aryl where p=1, 2, 3, or 4,
      • R3 and R8 are hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl or unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy or substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or substituted branched C3-6alkoxy,
      • BR is a bridge of the formula -A-B-A- wherein
        • A is substituted phenyl or substituted naphthyl or unsubstituted phenyl or unsubstituted naphthyl, and
        • B is a bridging —[(CR6R7)— (CR6′R7′)m—(CR6″R7″)n—(CR6′″R7′″)o]— where m, n and o have the meaning of 1 or 0, and R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″, R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl or un substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted or substituted phenyl or R6 and R7 together or R6′ and R7′ together or R6″ and R7″ together or R6′″ and R7′″ together form a five or six membered aliphatic ring, or
        • B is a bridging sulphon, or B is a bridging sulphonamide or
        • B is a bridging carboxamide or
        • B is a bridging
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00004
  • The preferably 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are preferably the further substituents or the substituents on the radicals R1, R2, R9 and R10. By preference these 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are attached to aryl moieties of the radicals R1, R2, R9 and R10 if aryl moieties are present in the radicals R1, R2, R9 and R10. More preferred these 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups are located on the radicals R2 and/or R10. In the preferred compounds of the formula (I) there are no anionic substituents in the bridge member BR.
  • The preferred compounds of the formula (I) bear 2 sulpho groups.
  • Aryl is preferably substituted phenyl or substituted naphthyl or unsubstituted phenyl or unsubstituted naphthyl. The substituted aryl groups are preferably substituted by nitro or sulpho groups. Particular preference is given to sulpho groups as substituents on the aryl groups.
  • Very particular preference is further given to compounds of the formula (I) wherein R2 and/or R10 are substituted or unsubstituted —(CH2)p-phenyl or substituted or unsubstituted —(CH2)p-naphthyl where p=1, 2, 3 or 4, preferrably p is 1 or 2 and of which a —CH2-phenyl group is very particularly preferred.
  • The preferred —CH2-phenylen groups are substituted, preferably by nitro groups and/or sulpho groups, a sulpho group being very particularly preferred as a substituent for the preferred —CH2-phenyl groups.
  • Particularly preferred —CH2-phenyl groups have the following formula
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00005
  • The branched C3-6alkyl groups or unbranched C1-6alkyl groups and the unbranched C1-6alkoxy groups or branched C3-6alkoxy groups can be further substituted with hydroxy groups or cyano groups. Preferably the alkyl groups and/or the alkoxy groups are not further substituted.
  • In the preferred compounds of the formula (I) the preferred alkyl groups and the preferred alkoxy groups are methyl, ethyl, propyl, methoxy and ethoxy groups. Methyl, ethyl and methoxy groups are very particularly preferred.
  • In the preferred compounds of the formula (I), the particularly preferred bridges have the structures (II-1) or (II-2) or (II-3) or (II-4) or (II-5):
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00006
  • wherein
    • R4, R4′, R5 and R5′ are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl or unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy or substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or substituted branched C3-6alkoxy, or halogen or —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with an unbranched C1-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, or —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with a branched C3-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, or —NHCONH2
    • R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″,
    • R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted or substituted phenyl, or R6 and R7 together or R6′ and R7′ together or R6″ and R7″ together or R6′″ and R7′″ together form a five or six membered aliphatic ring, or
    • m, n and o have the meaning of 1 or 0.
  • From the bridge structures (II-1) or (II-2) or (II-3) or (II-4), the bridge structure (II-3) are the preferred bridge BR. In the preferred structure (II-3) m is 1, n and o are each 0 and have the following structure (II-3′)
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00007
  • wherein R4′, R5′, R4, R5, R6, R7, R6′ and R7′ have the meaning as described above.
  • Preferably R4′ and R5′ are hydrogen and R4 and R5 are independently hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, or substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl or substituted branched C3-6alkyl or unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy or substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy or substituted branched C3-6alkoxy. Most preferably R4′, R5′, R4 and R5 are each hydrogen.
  • Preferably R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″, R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently hydrogen or methyl or ethyl or phenyl. Most preferably R6, R7, R6′ and R7′ are each hydrogen (and m is 1, n and o are each 0).
  • The invention also provides a process for preparing compounds of the formula (I). The present invention's compounds of the formula (I) can be prepared under conventional conditions in conventional processes.
  • In these processes, both the amine functions of compounds of the formula (II)

  • H2N—BR—NH2  (II)
  • which are known from the literature are conventionally diazotized and coupled onto totally two equivalents of a compound of the formula (IIIa) and of a compound of the formula (IIIb)
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00008
  • where the substituents are each as defined above an the sum of the compound of the formula (IIIa) and of the compound of the formula (IIIb) is two equivalents.
  • It should be clear to a person skilled in the art, that the statistical mixture of the different possible compounds will result in such a reaction procedure, wherein the diamine (II) is bis-diazotized and then reacted with the mixture of the compounds of the formulae (IIIa) and (IIIb). Furthermore, in case that one of the components (IIIa) and/or (IIIb) comprises position isomers it should be clear to a person skilled in the art, that this would result as well to the statistical mixture of the additional different possible compounds. As an example, the compound of the formula (IIIa) may consist of a mixture of the compounds (IIIa′) and (IIIa″), e.g. 15 weight-% of the compound of the formula (IIIa′) and 85 weight-% of the compound of the formula (IIIa″)
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00009
  • In these processes, the particular diamine is cooled to 0-10° C. or preferably to 0-5° C. and diazotized by adding nitrosylsulphuric acid or sodium nitrite. Afterwards, the bis-diazotized diamine is allowed to react with the compound (IIIa) or with the compound (IIIb), preferably in aqueous solution.
  • The dyes of the formula (I) can be isolated from the reaction medium by conventional processes, for example by salting out with an alkali metal salt, filtering and drying, if appropriate under reduced pressure and at elevated temperature.
  • Depending on the reaction and/or isolation conditions, the dyes of the formula (I) can be obtained as free acid, as salt or as mixed salt which contains for example one or more cations selected from alkali metal ions, for example the sodium ion, or an ammonium ion or alkylammonium cation, for example mono-, di- or trimethyl- or -ethylammonium cations. The dye can be converted by conventional techniques from the free acid into a salt or into a mixed salt or vice versa or from one salt form into another. If desired, the dyes can be further purified by diafiltration, in which case unwanted salts and synthesis by-products are separated from the crude anionic dye.
  • The removal of unwanted salts and synthesis by-products and partial removal of water from the crude dye solution is carried out by means of a semipermeable membrane by applying a pressure whereby the dye is obtained without the unwanted salts and synthesis by-products as a solution and if necessary as a solid body in a conventional manner.
  • The dyes of the formula (I) and their salts are particularly suitable for dyeing or printing fibrous material consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides in yellow to violet shades. The dyes of the formula (I) and their salts are suitable for producing Inkjet printing inks and for using these Inkjet printing inks to print fibrous material which consists of natural or synthetic polyamides or cellulose (paper for example).
  • The invention accordingly provides from another aspect for the use of the dyes of the formula (I), their salts and mixtures for dyeing and/or printing fibrous materials consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides. A further aspect is the production of Inkjet printing inks and their use for printing fibrous materials consisting of natural or synthetic polyamides.
  • Dyeing is carried out as per known processes, see for example the dyeing processes described in Ullmamns Encyklopädie der techliischen Chemie, 4th Edition, 1982, Volume 22, pages 658-673 or in the book by M. Peter and H. K. Rouette, Grundlagen der Textilveredlung, 13th Edition, 1989, pages 535-556 and 566-574. Preference is given to dyeing in the exhaust process at a temperature of 30 to 140° C., more preferably 80 to 120° C. and most preferably at a temperature of 80 to 100° C., and at a liquor ratio in the range from 3:1 to 40:1.
  • The substrate to be dyed can be present in the form of yarn, woven fabric, loop-formingly knitted fabric or carpet for example. Fully fashioned dyeings are even permanently possible on delicate substrates, examples being lambswool, cashmere, alpaca and mohair. The dyes of the invention are particularly useful for dyeing fine-denier fibres (microfibres).
  • The dyes according to the present invention and their salts are highly compatible with known acid dyes. Accordingly, the dyes of the formula (I), their salts or mixtures can be used alone in a dyeing or printing process or else as a component in a combination shade dyeing or printing composition together with other acid dyes of the same class, i.e. with acid dyes possessing comparable dyeing properties, such as for example fastness properties and exhaustion rates from the dyebath onto the substrate. The dyes of the present invention can be used in particular together with certain other dyes having suitable clromophores. The ratio in which the dyes are present in a combination shade dyeing or printing composition is dictated by the hue to be obtained.
  • The novel dyes of the formula (I), as stated above, are very useful for dyeing natural and synthetic polyamides, i.e. wool, silk and all nylon types, on each of which dyeings having a high fastness level, especially good light fastness and good wet fastnesses (washing, alkaline perspiration) are obtained. The dyes of the formula (I) and their salts have a high rate of exhaustion. The ability of the dyes of the formula (I) and their salt to build up is likewise very good. On-tone dyeings on the identified substrates are of outstanding quality. All dyeings moreover have a constant hue under artificial light. Furthermore, the fastness to decating and boiling is good.
  • One decisive advantage of the novel dyes is that they are metal free and provide very level dyeings.
  • The compounds according to the invention can be used as an individual dye or else, owing to their good compatibility, as a combination element with other dyes of the same class having comparable dyeing properties, for example with regard to general fastnesses, exhaustion value, etc. The combination shade dyeings obtained have similar fastnesses to dyeings with the individual dye.
  • The invention's dyes of the formula (I) can also be used as red components in trichromatic dyeing or printing. Trichromatic dyeing or printing can utilize all customary and known dyeing and printing processes, such as for example the continuous process, exhaustion process, foam dyeing process and Ink-Jet process.
  • The composition of the individual dye components in the trichromatic dye mixture used in the process of the invention depends on the desired hue. A brown hue for example preferably utilizes 20-40% by weight of a yellow component, 40-60% by weight of the invention's orange or red component and 10-20% by weight of a blue component.
  • The orange component, as described above, can consist of a single component or of a mixture of different orange individual components conforming to the formula (I). Preference is given to double and triple combinations.
  • Particularly preferred blue and/or yellow components are described in WO2002/46318.
  • In the examples which follow, parts and percentages are by weight and temperatures are reported in degrees Celsius.
  • PREPARATION EXAMPLE 1
  • 29.1 parts of 3-[(ethylphenylamino)methyl]benzenesulphonic acid were suspended in 200 parts of water and dissolved by adding a small amount of sodium hydroxide solution (approx. 30% strength) at a pH 7-7.5. This solution was then admixed with a bis-diazonium salt solution prepared in a conventional manner from 43.0 parts of 1,2-(4,4′-diamino diphenyl)ethane and 50 parts by volume of 4N sodium nitrite solution at 0-5° C. The pH is held at 7.0-7.5 by metered addition of 15% sodium carbonate solution. After coupling had ended, the resulting dye of the formula
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00010
  • is salted out with sodium chloride, filtered off and dried at 50° C. under reduced pressure. On wool and in particular on polyamide fibres it produces orange dyeings having very good light and wet fastness properties (lamda(max) (λmax)=482 nm).
  • EXAMPLES 2-28
  • The tables I and II which follow contain dyes which can be prepared similarly to the method described in Example 1 by using the corresponding starting materials. These dyes provide orange dyeings having very good light and wet fastnesses on polyamide fibres and wool.
  • TABLE I
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00011
    Example R1 and R9 R2 and R10 R3 and R8 BR λmax [nm]
    2 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00012
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00013
    469
    3 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00014
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00015
    467
    4 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00016
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00017
    488
    5 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00018
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00019
    485
    6 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00020
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00021
    465
    7 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00022
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00023
    470
    8 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00024
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00025
    466
    9 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00026
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00027
    462
    10 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00028
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00029
    458
    11 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00030
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00031
    455
    12 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00032
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00033
    457
    13 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00034
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00035
    460
    14 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00036
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00037
    462
    15 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00038
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00039
    472
    16 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00040
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00041
    483
    17 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00042
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00043
    475
    18 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00044
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00045
    490
    19 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00046
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00047
    495
    20 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00048
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00049
    487
    21 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00050
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00051
    489
    22 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00052
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00053
    478
    23 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00054
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00055
    485
    24 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00056
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00057
    483
    25 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00058
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00059
    489
    26 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00060
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00061
    495
    27 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00062
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00063
    492
    28 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00064
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00065
    491
    29 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00066
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00067
    494
    30 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00068
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00069
    480
    31 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00070
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00071
    483
    32 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00072
    dto.
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00073
    467
    33 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00074
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00075
    485
    34 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00076
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00077
    487
    35 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00078
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00079
    487
    36 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00080
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00081
    488
    37 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00082
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00083
    490
    38 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00084
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00085
    489
    39 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00086
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00087
    486
    40 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00088
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00089
    488
    41 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00090
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00091
    487
    42 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00092
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00093
    491
    43 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00094
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00095
    510
    44 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00096
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00097
    511
    45 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00098
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00099
    512
    46 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00100
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00101
    512
    47 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00102
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00103
    514
    48 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00104
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00105
    512
    49 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00106
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00107
    514
    50 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00108
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00109
    516
    51 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00110
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00111
    515
    52 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00112
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00113
    517
    53 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00114
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00115
    520
    54 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00116
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00117
    523
    55 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00118
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00119
    524
    56 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00120
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00121
    524
    57 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00122
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00123
    526
    58 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00124
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00125
    524
    59 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00126
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00127
    525
    60 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00128
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00129
    527
    61 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00130
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00131
    527
    62 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00132
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00133
    528
    63 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00134
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00135
    515
    64 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00136
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00137
    517
    65 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00138
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00139
    519
    66 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00140
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00141
    520
    67 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00142
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00143
    520
    68 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00144
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00145
    518
    69 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00146
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00147
    519
    70 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00148
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00149
    519
    71 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00150
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00151
    522
    72 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00152
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00153
    526
    73 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00154
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00155
    488
    74 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00156
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00157
    486
    75 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00158
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00159
    489
    76 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00160
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00161
    487
    77 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00162
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00163
    489
    78 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00164
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00165
    485
    79 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00166
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00167
    486
    80 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00168
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00169
    487
    81 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00170
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00171
    487
    82 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00172
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00173
    489
    83 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00174
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00175
    505
    84 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00176
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00177
    507
    85 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00178
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00179
    509
    86 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00180
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00181
    509
    87 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00182
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00183
    511
    88 Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00184
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00185
    508
    89 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00186
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00187
    508
    90 n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00188
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00189
    510
    91 i-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00190
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00191
    509
    92 n-Bu
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00192
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00193
    512
    93 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00194
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00195
    493
    94 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00196
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00197
    490
    95 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00198
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00199
    483
    96 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00200
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00201
    485
    97 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00202
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00203
    482
    98 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00204
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00205
    482
    99 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00206
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00207
    484
    100 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00208
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00209
    486
    101 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00210
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00211
    480
    102 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00212
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00213
    523
    103 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00214
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00215
    525
    104 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00216
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00217
    520
    105 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00218
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00219
    522
    106 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00220
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00221
    487
    107 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00222
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00223
    524
    108 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00224
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00225
    520
    109 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00226
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00227
    483
    110 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00228
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00229
    485
    111 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00230
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00231
    486
    112 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00232
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00233
    483
  • TABLE II
    Ex- λmax
    ample R1 R2 R3 BR R8 R9 R10 [nm]
    113 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00234
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00235
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00236
    519
    114 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00237
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00238
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00239
    487
    115 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00240
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00241
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00242
    489
    117 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00243
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00244
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00245
    522
    118 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00246
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00247
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00248
    520
    119 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00249
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00250
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00251
    490
    120 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00252
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00253
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00254
    523
    121 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00255
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00256
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00257
    493
    122 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00258
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00259
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00260
    485
    123 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00261
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00262
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00263
    483
    124 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00264
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00265
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00266
    496
    125 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00267
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00268
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00269
    496
    126 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00270
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00271
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00272
    494
    127 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00273
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00274
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00275
    494
    128 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00276
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00277
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00278
    528
    129 n- Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00279
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00280
    Me n-Pr
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00281
    530
    130 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00282
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00283
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00284
    528
    131 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00285
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00286
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00287
    489
    132 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00288
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00289
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00290
    486
    133 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00291
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00292
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00293
    484
    134 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00294
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00295
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00296
    483
    135 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00297
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00298
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00299
    485
    136 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00300
    H
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00301
    H Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00302
    480
    137 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00303
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00304
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00305
    523
    138 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00306
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00307
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00308
    488
    139 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00309
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00310
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00311
    520
    140 Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00312
    Me
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00313
    Me Et
    Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00314
    494
  • USE EXAMPLE A
  • A dyebath at 40° C., consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.25 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of nylon-6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 98° C. at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 45-60 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 15 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange polyamide dyeing possessing good light and wet fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE B
  • A dyebath at 40° C., consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.3 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5.5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of nylon-6,6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 120° C. at a rate of 1.5° C. per minute and then left at this temperature for 15-25 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 25 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the dyebath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange polyamide dyeing with good levelness and having good light and wet fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE C
  • A dyebath at 40° C., consisting of 4000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly amphoteric levelling agent which is based on a sulphated, ethoxylated fatty acid amide and which has affinity for dye, 0.4 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 and adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of wool fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to boiling at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 40-60 minutes. Thereafter it is cooled down to 70° C. over 20 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange wool dyeing possessing good light and wet fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE D
  • 100 parts of a woven nylon-6 material are padded with a 50° C. liquor consisting of
  • 40 parts of the dye of Preparation Example 1,
    100  parts of urea,
    20 parts of a nonionic solubilizer based on butyldiglycol,
    15-20 parts of acetic acid (to adjust the pH to 4),
    10 parts of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which
    is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty
    acid amide and has affinity for dye, and
    810-815 parts of water (to make up to 1000 parts of padding liquor).
  • The material thus impregnated is rolled up and left to dwell in a steaming chamber under saturated steam conditions at 85-98° C. for 3-6 hours for fixation. The dyeing is then rinsed with hot and cold water and dried. The result obtained is an orange nylon dyeing having good levelness in the piece and good light and wet fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE E
  • A textile cut pile sheet material composed of nylon-6 and having a synthetic base fabric is padded with a liquor containing per 1000 parts
  • 1 part of dye of Preparation Example 1
    4 parts of a commercially available thickener based on carob flour ether
    2 parts of a nonionic ethylene oxide adduct of a higher alkylphenol
    1 part of 60% acetic acid.
  • This is followed by printing with a paste which per 1000 parts contains the following components:
  • 20 parts of commercially available alkoxylated fatty alkylamine
    (displace product)
    20 parts of a commercially available thickener based on carob flour
    ether.
  • The print is fixed for 6 minutes in saturated steam at 100° C., rinsed and dried. The result obtained is a level-coloured cover material having an orange and white pattern.
  • USE EXAMPLE F
  • A dyebath at 40° C. consisting of 2000 parts of water, 1 part of a weakly cation-active levelling agent which is based on an ethoxylated aminopropyl fatty acid amide and has affinity for dye, 0.2 part of the dye of Example 1, 1.5 parts of a commercially available preparation of C.I. Acid Yellow 236 (Nylosan Yellow F-L) and 0.5 part of the blue dye of Preparation Example 46 of the patent application WO99/51681 and EP 1066340 B1:
  • Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00315
  • Preparation Example 46 of the patent application WO99/51681 and EP1066340 B1, which is adjusted to pH 5 with 1-2 parts of 40% acetic acid is entered with 100 parts of woven nylon-6,6 fabric. After 10 minutes at 40° C., the dyebath is heated to 98° C. at a rate of 1° C. per minute and then left at the boil for 45 to 60 minutes. This is followed by cooling down to 70° C. over 15 minutes. The dyeing is removed from the bath, rinsed with hot and then with cold water and dried. The result obtained is a level grey polyamide dyeing having good light and wet fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE G
  • 100 parts of a chrome-tanned and synthetically retanned shave-moist grain leather are dyed for 30 minutes in a bath of 300 parts of water and 2 parts of the dye of Preparation Example 1 at 55° C. After addition of 4 parts of a 60% emulsion of a sulphited fish oil, the leather is fatliquored for 45 minutes. It is then acidified with 8.5% fommic acid and milled for 10 minutes (final pH in the bath 3.5-4.0). The leather is then rinsed, allowed to drip dry and finished as usual. The result obtained is a leather dyed in a level clear orange hue with good fastnesses.
  • Use Examples A to G can also be carried out with dyes 2 to 140 with similar results.
  • USE EXAMPLE H
  • 3 parts of the dye of Preparation Example 3 are dissolved in 82 parts of demineralized water and 15 parts of diethylene glycol at 60° C. Cooling down to room temperature gives an orange printing ink which is very highly suitable for ink jet printing on paper or polyamide and wool textiles.
  • Use Example H can also be carried out with dyes 1 or 2 and 4 to 140 with similar results.
  • USE EXAMPLE I
  • A dyebath consisting of 1000 parts of water, 80 parts of calcined Glauber salt, 1 part of sodium nitrobenzene-3-sulphonate and 1 part of dye from Example 79 is heated to 8° C. in the course of 10 minutes. Then, 100 parts of mercerized cotton are added. This is followed by dyeing at 80° C. for 5 minutes and then heating to 95° C. in the course of 15 minutes. After 10 minutes at 95° C., 3 parts of sodium carbonate are added, followed by a further 7 parts of sodium carbonate after 20 minutes and another 10 parts of sodium carbonate after 30 minutes at 95° C. Dyeing is subsequently continued at 95° C. for 60 minutes. The dyed material is then removed from the dyebath and rinsed in running demineralized water for 3 minutes. This is followed by two washes for 10 minutes in 5000 parts of boiling demineralized water at a time and subsequent rinsing in running demineralized water at 60° C. for 3 minutes and with cold tap water for one minute. Drying leaves a brilliant orange cotton dyeing having good fastnesses.
  • USE EXAMPLE J
  • 0.2 part of the dye of Preparation Example 1 is dissolved in 100 parts of hot water and the solution is cooled down to room temperature. This solution is added to 100 parts of chemically bleached sulphite pulp beaten in 2000 parts of water in a Hollander. After 15 minutes of commixing the stuff is sized with resin size and aluminium sulphate in a conventional manner. Paper produced from this stuff has an orange shade with good wet fastnesses.
  • Use Examples I and J can also be carried out with dyes 1 to 140 with similar results.

Claims (12)

1. A compound of the general formula (I)
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00316
wherein
R1, R2, R9 and R10 are independently selected from the group consisting of: unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, aryl, and —(CH2)p-aryl wherein p=1, 2, 3 or 4,
R3 and R8 is selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy, substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, substituted branched C3-6alkoxy, halogen, —NHCO—(C1-6alkyl) with an unbranched C1-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with a branched C3-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, and —NHCONH2,
BR is a bridge of the formula -A-B-A- wherein
A is selected from the group consisting of: substituted phenyl, substituted naphthyl, unsubstituted phenyl, and unsubstituted naphthyl, and
B is a bridging —[(CR6R7)— (CR6′R7′)m—(CR6″R7″)n—(CR6′″R7′″)o]— where m, n and o are independently 1 or 0, and R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″, R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted phenyl, and substituted phenyl, or
B is a bridging sulphon, or
B is a bridging sulphonamide, or
B is a bridging carboxamide, or
B is a bridging
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00317
and
the compound of the formula (I) contains 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups and wherein there are no anionic groups in the bridging member BR.
2. A compound according to claim 1 wherein
R1 and R9 are independently selected from the group consisting of: unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, and substituted branched C3-6alkyl,
R2 and R10 are independently aryl, or —(CH2)p-aryl wherein p is 1, 2, 3 or 4,
R3 and R8 are independently selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy, substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, and substituted branched C3-6alkoxy,
BR is a bridge of the formula -A-B-A- wherein
A is selected from the group consisting of: substituted phenyl, substituted naphthyl, unsubstituted phenyl, and unsubstituted naphthyl, and
B is a bridging —[(CR6R7)—(CR6′R7′)m—(CR6″R7″)n—(CR6′″R7′″)o]— where m, n and o are independently 1 or 0, and R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″, R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted phenyl, and substituted phenyl or, or
B is a bridging sulphon, or
B is a bridging sulphonamide, or
B is a bridging carboxamide, or
B is a bridging
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00318
and
the compound of the formula (I) contains 1, 2 or 3 sulpho groups.
3. A compound according to claim 1 wherein the compound of the formula (I) contains 2 sulpho groups.
4. A compound according to claim 1 wherein the bridge BR is selected from the group consisting of
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00319
wherein
R4, R4′, R5 and R5′ are independently selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkyl, substituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, substituted branched C3-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted branched C3-6alkoxy, substituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, substituted branched C3-6alkoxy, halogen, —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with an unbranched C1-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, —NHCO—(C3-6alkyl) with a branched C3-6alkyl group, which is substituted or unsubstituted, and —NHCONH2
R6, R7, R6′, R7′, R6″,
R7″, R6′″ and R7′″ are independently selected from the group consisting of: hydrogen, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkyl, unsubstituted unbranched C1-6alkoxy, unsubstituted phenyl and substituted phenyl, or
m, n and o are independently of 1 or 0.
5. A process for preparing a compound of the formula (I) according to claim 1, comprising the step of diazotizing and coupling both the amine functions of a compound of the formula (II)

H2N—BR—NH2  (II)
onto a total of two equivalents of a compound of the formula (IIIa) and of a compound of the formula (IIIb)
Figure US20090126128A1-20090521-C00320
wherein the substituents are each as defined above.
6. A process for dyeing and/or printing an organic substrate comprising the step of contacting at least one compound of the formula (I) according to claim 1 with the organic substrate.
7. A process for dyeing and/or printing a substrate comprising wool, silk and/or synthetic polyamide comprising the step of contacting at least one compound of formula (I) according to claim 1 with the substrate comprising wool, silk and/or synthetic polyamide.
8. A process for preparing a printing ink, comprising the step of adding at least one compound of formula (I) according to claim 1, to at least one further component of a printing ink.
9. A process for preparing an inkjet printing ink, comprising the step of adding at least one compound of formula (I) according to claim 1, to at least one further component of a inkjet printing ink.
10. An inkjet printing ink, comprising at least one compound of formula (I) according to claim 1.
11. A printing ink, comprising at least one compound of formula (I) according to claim 1.
12. A substrate dyed and/or printed by the process according to claim 6.
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KR101340101B1 (en) 2013-12-10
US20110203058A1 (en) 2011-08-25
US8357210B2 (en) 2013-01-22
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CA2646126A1 (en) 2007-11-22
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BRPI0711651B1 (en) 2017-02-21
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WO2007131957A3 (en) 2008-02-07
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AU2007251589A1 (en) 2007-11-22
CN101448901A (en) 2009-06-03
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BRPI0711651A2 (en) 2011-11-29
NO20084804L (en) 2009-02-16

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