US3311473A - Silver halide diffusion process and products therefor - Google Patents

Silver halide diffusion process and products therefor Download PDF

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US3311473A
US3311473A US205995A US20599562A US3311473A US 3311473 A US3311473 A US 3311473A US 205995 A US205995 A US 205995A US 20599562 A US20599562 A US 20599562A US 3311473 A US3311473 A US 3311473A
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silver
layer
silver halide
colloid
semicarbazide
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US205995A
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Donald P Foster
Edward C Yackel
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Eastman Kodak Co
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Eastman Kodak Co
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Priority to US205995A priority Critical patent/US3311473A/en
Priority to FR939103A priority patent/FR1361072A/en
Priority to DEE25043A priority patent/DE1167653B/en
Priority to GB25778/63A priority patent/GB1042009A/en
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C1/00Photosensitive materials
    • G03C1/005Silver halide emulsions; Preparation thereof; Physical treatment thereof; Incorporation of additives therein
    • G03C1/06Silver halide emulsions; Preparation thereof; Physical treatment thereof; Incorporation of additives therein with non-macromolecular additives
    • G03C1/30Hardeners
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C8/00Diffusion transfer processes or agents therefor; Photosensitive materials for such processes
    • G03C8/02Photosensitive materials characterised by the image-forming section
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C8/00Diffusion transfer processes or agents therefor; Photosensitive materials for such processes
    • G03C8/02Photosensitive materials characterised by the image-forming section
    • G03C8/04Photosensitive materials characterised by the image-forming section the substances transferred by diffusion consisting of inorganic or organo-metallic compounds derived from photosensitive noble metals
    • G03C8/06Silver salt diffusion transfer
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C8/00Diffusion transfer processes or agents therefor; Photosensitive materials for such processes
    • G03C8/24Photosensitive materials characterised by the image-receiving section
    • G03C8/26Image-receiving layers
    • G03C8/28Image-receiving layers containing development nuclei or compounds forming such nuclei

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a photographic process of the silver halide diffusion transfer type wherein undeveloped silver halide of an emulsion layer is transferred as a silver complex imagewise by diffusion to a silver precipitating or nucleating layer generally to form a silver photographic image, generally a positive, therein.
  • the diffusion transfer type process can be carried out by developing an exposed emulsion layer with a developing solution containing a silver halide solvent after which the emulsion layer is placed into contact with a second element carrying a silver precipitating layer to cause the undeveloped silver halide to transfer imagewise as a silver complex to the second element and form an image thereon.
  • the diffusion transfer process has also been carried out utilizing a multilayer element such as one carrying on a support two gelatin layers of different solubility, for
  • the layer next to the support containing a silver is the layer next to the support containing a silver.
  • the precipitating agent and being harder than the outer gelatin layer which is a gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
  • development is carried out with the silver halide solvent containing developer to obtain a silver positive in the hardened gelatin silver precipitating layer, after which the emulsion layer containing the negative silver image is washed or stripped 06, leaving the positive image on the support.
  • One object of the invention is to provide an all-gel system for a two-layer diffusion transfer process having an unhardened gelatin, silver-halide containing layer which resists hardening coated over a hardened gel, silver precipitating layer.
  • An additional object is to provide keeps unhardened gel from becoming insoluble in the presence of gel hardening agents, such as formaldehyde.
  • An additional object is to provide a gel layer which can easily be removed by washing away with water.
  • the above objects are attained by adding semicarbazide salt to the unhardened gelatin layer which is coated over the hardened gel layer.
  • the semicarbazide is added in an amount of 3 to 16% by weight based on the gelatin content.
  • a representative sensitive element includes a support 10, such as paper, cellulose ester or synthetic resin, if desired carrying a subbing layer not shown, and on the support the silver precipitating layer 11, for example, a gelatin layer containing a colloidal heavy metal or heavy metal sulfide and thereon an emulsion layer 12 containing silver halide grains dispersed in gelatin containing semicarbazide.
  • a support 10 such as paper, cellulose ester or synthetic resin, if desired carrying a subbing layer not shown
  • the silver precipitating layer 11 for example, a gelatin layer containing a colloidal heavy metal or heavy metal sulfide and thereon an emulsion layer 12 containing silver halide grains dispersed in gelatin containing semicarbazide.
  • an agent which ice the element is exposed to a light, halftone or continuous tone subject in a suitable manner, preferably so as to obtain a right-reading reproduction, the exposure being shown as taking place in area 13 of the emulsion layer 12.
  • the exposed element is then developed with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide solvent, such as sodium thiosulfate, with the result that a silver image is developed in area 13 and shortly thereafter the residual undeveloped silver halide is transformed to a soluble silver complex, a portion of which diffuses imagewise to a silver precipitating layer 11, where an argental image is formed by reaction of the silver complex with the silver precipitating agent of the silver precipitating layer.
  • the emulsion layer 12 containing the negative silver image is then merely washed free from the support with an excess of water to obtain the reproduction shown in stage 2 of the drawing wherein the argental positive image occupies areas 14 of the silver precipitating layer 11.
  • the silver precipitating layer or stratum referred to herein is a water-permeable, organic colloid layer, preferably gelatin, containing a silver precipitating agent; that is, an agent capable of yielding with silver ion a darkcolored argental or silver-containing substance, when dissolved silver salts from the emulsion layer come into contact with it.
  • the silver precipitating agent may comprise either physical development nuclei or a chemical precipitant for silver ions.
  • Suitable silver precipitating agents for use in the silver precipitating layer for forming the argental image include sulfides, selenides, polysulfides, polyselenides, thiourea, mercaptans, stannous halides, heavy metals and heavy metal salts, and fogged silver halide.
  • Heavy metal sulfides such as lead, silver, zinc, antimony, cadmium and bismuth sulfides are useful, particularly the sulfides of lead and zinc alone or in admixture, or complex salts of these with thioacetamide, dithiol-oxamide, or dithiolbiuret.
  • the heavy metals include silver, gold, platinum, palladium and mercury, preferably in the colloidal form. The noble metals are particularly eflicacious.
  • the silver precipitating agents may be applied directly to a support, such as paper, or to suitable subbed cellulose derivative supports, or synthetic polymer supports, from solutions or dispersions of the silver precipitating agents in colloidal vehicles, such as gelatin.
  • colloidal vehicles such as gelatin.
  • the gelatin can be hardened using hardeners known in the art, such as formaldehyde, chromic chloride, muchloric acid, diketones (bis-acetyl), or the like. In general, the aldehyde-type hardeners are preferred.
  • the colloidal vehicle When a gelatin substitute is used, the colloidal vehicle must be hardened or else must be rendered insoluble in the wash solution used to remove the unhardened gelatin layer from the surface.
  • the silver halide gelatino emulsion can be applied directly over the silver precipitating layer, but a thin layer of gelatin or an alkaline-soluble polymeric material sufficiently sensitive to salts so that solution does not occur during processing but occurs as soon as water is applied as in washing may be first applied, followed 'by the emulsion layer.
  • This thin layer is not essential; however, it has been found to facilitate the clean removal of the emulsion from the silver precipitating layer.
  • the silver halide component of the photographic emulsion is not especially critical and can include various silver halides and mixtures of silver halide, such as silver bromoiodide, silver chloride or silver bromide, etc. They may be optically sensitized in the usual manner.
  • the emulsion may be developing-out emulsions, designed for development to negative images in which case the image obtained in the silver precipitating layer is a positive with respect to the original subject.
  • the emulsion can be of the direct positive type, with the result that the silver image developed in the emulsion is a positive and the image in the silver precipitating layer a negative in respect to the original subject.
  • the procedures of Leermakers, U.S. Patent No. 2,184,013, and Kendal et al., US. Patent No. 2,541,472 are useful in conferring the direct positive characters to the emulsions.
  • the silver halide developing solution used for initiating the development of the exposed sensitive element described above is not especially critical and can be of the conventional type used for developing film or papers with the exception that a silver halide solvent such as sodium thiosulfate, sodium thiocyanate, etc., is present in the quantity required to form the soluble silver complex, which diffuses imagewise to the silver precipitating layer.
  • Silver halide developing agents useful in the developing solution include hydroquinones, e.g. halogenated hydroquinones, toluhydroquinones, aminophenols, e.g.
  • 3-pyrazolidone developing agents such as l-phenyl-S-pyrazolidone, such as combinations of 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidones with hydroquinones, ascorbic acid, reductones, and the like, may be used.
  • Yackel et al. US. Patent No. 3,020,155, issued February 6, 1962, discloses a photographic diffusion transfer process in which a silver halide emulsion in a vehicle of alkali-soluble cellulose derivative is used to obviate hardening from in the emulsion layer. It will be appreciated that modifications disclosed in connection with Yackel et al. product, such as improving the tone of the image, and the like, may also be used in connection with our invention.
  • the silver halide developing agent may be incorporated in either the developing solution or the emulsion itself. In the latter case, it is preferable to use a substantially nondiffusing developing agent, such as 3,4-dihydroxydiphenyl, in the emulsion layer.
  • Example I A coating was prepared which contained 0.270 g. gelatin, 16 micrograms zinc sulfide, and 0.018 g. formaldehyde per square foot of film base. Over this was coated a silver halide gelatino sensitized emulsion at a coverage to yield .625 g. gelatin, 0.360 g. silver, and 0.050 g. semicarbazide HCl-sodium salt. Evaluation was carried out by processing, after exposure, in a developer con taining the following:
  • the negative top layer could be washed off easily. After four weeks incubation at 120 F., 50% relative humidity, however, the negative layer of the control could not be removed, whereas the negative layer of the coating containing the semicarbazide salt could be readily removed.
  • the semicarbazide salt can be incorporated in a barrier layer between the nuclei and emulson layers if such a barrier layer is used.
  • the semicarbazide salt can be placed in a wateror alkali-permeable layer where it will be readily available to the emulsion layer to prevent hardening of this layer from migration of the hardener from the nuclei layer.
  • the semicarbazide salt might be placed instead in a permeable overcoat over the emulsion layer where it would be free to diffuse into the emulsion layer to inhibit hardening therein.
  • Example 2 A coating was prepared which contained 0.270 g. gelatin, 1.6 l0 g. nickel sulfide, and 0.018 g. formaldehyde per square foot of film base. Samples of this coating were over coated with a sensitized gelatino-silver halide emulsion at a coverage to yield 0.530 g. gelatin, 0.360 g. silver and the level of semicarbazide salt listed below.
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof.
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum and unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and 316% by weight semicarbazide, based on the gelatin in the emulsion.
  • a method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containmg silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time sufficient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diffuse imagewise to said silver precipitating stratum and the silver of said portion of said silver complex to he precipitated in said stratum
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and semicarbazide hydrochloride-sodium salt.
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and 316% by weight semicarbazide hydrochloride-sodium salt, based on the gelatin in the emulsion.
  • a method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and semicarbazide hydrochloridesodium salt, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time sufiicient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diffuse imagewise to said silver precipitating stratum and the silver of said portion of said silver complex to be precipitated in said stratum and removing the emulsion layer from said stratum
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardner, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing 316% by weight of a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the Water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
  • a method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts capable of reacting with an aldehyde to form semicarbazones, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time suflicient to form a
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing semicarbazide.
  • a light-sensitive photographic element comprising a a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing 316% by weight of a semicarbazide and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
  • a method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a semicarbazide, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the watersoluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time suflicient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diifuse imagewise to said

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Description

March 28, 1967 FOSTER ET AL 3,311,473
SILVER HALIDE DIFFUSION PROCESS AND PRODUCTS THEREFOR Filed June 28. 1962 EXPOSURE LWage 1 13 JSILVER HAUDE-GELAT/N LAYER 1:1- =-':i:-ji 5- j ,f \SILVER PREC/PlTAT/NG LAYER I 0 I {I IJ-SUPP0RT 1 DEVELOPMENT, DIFFUSION TRANSFER OF RESIDUAL SILVER HAUDE AND REMOVAL OF EMULSION LAYER fi'figez Donald]? Foster Edward C.Yackel IN V EN TORJ United States l atent O 3,311,473 SILVER HALIDE DIFFUSION PRGCESS AND PRODUCTS THEREFOR Donald P. Foster and Edward C. Yackel, Rochester, N.Y., assignors to Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y., a corporation of New Jersey Filed June 28, 1962, Ser. No. 205,995 12 Claims. (Cl. 96-29) This invention relates to a photographic process of the silver halide diffusion transfer type wherein undeveloped silver halide of an emulsion layer is transferred as a silver complex imagewise by diffusion to a silver precipitating or nucleating layer generally to form a silver photographic image, generally a positive, therein.
As is known in the art, the diffusion transfer type process can be carried out by developing an exposed emulsion layer with a developing solution containing a silver halide solvent after which the emulsion layer is placed into contact with a second element carrying a silver precipitating layer to cause the undeveloped silver halide to transfer imagewise as a silver complex to the second element and form an image thereon.
The diffusion transfer process has also been carried out utilizing a multilayer element such as one carrying on a support two gelatin layers of different solubility, for
example, the layer next to the support containing a silver.
precipitating agent and being harder than the outer gelatin layer which is a gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide. After exposure of the element, development is carried out with the silver halide solvent containing developer to obtain a silver positive in the hardened gelatin silver precipitating layer, after which the emulsion layer containing the negative silver image is washed or stripped 06, leaving the positive image on the support.
As a practical matter, it is difiicult to harden the underlying gelatin nucleating layer of an element of this type without unduly hardening the outer gelatin emulsion layer and, even then, over a period of time, the silver halide emulsion layer tends to harden which makes the differential removal in the final step of the process difficult or impossible.
We have discovered a method of keeping the unhardened gelatin from becoming insoluble when coated over hardened gelatin while not affecting the hardness of the hardened layer.
One object of the invention is to provide an all-gel system for a two-layer diffusion transfer process having an unhardened gelatin, silver-halide containing layer which resists hardening coated over a hardened gel, silver precipitating layer.
An additional object is to provide keeps unhardened gel from becoming insoluble in the presence of gel hardening agents, such as formaldehyde. An additional object is to provide a gel layer which can easily be removed by washing away with water.
The above objects are attained by adding semicarbazide salt to the unhardened gelatin layer which is coated over the hardened gel layer. The semicarbazide is added in an amount of 3 to 16% by weight based on the gelatin content.
In the accompanying drawing is illustrated, in greatly enlarged cross-sectional view, a sensitive element illustrating one embodiment of our invention. As shown therein, in stage 1, a representative sensitive element includes a support 10, such as paper, cellulose ester or synthetic resin, if desired carrying a subbing layer not shown, and on the support the silver precipitating layer 11, for example, a gelatin layer containing a colloidal heavy metal or heavy metal sulfide and thereon an emulsion layer 12 containing silver halide grains dispersed in gelatin containing semicarbazide. As shown in stage 1,
an agent which ice the element is exposed to a light, halftone or continuous tone subject in a suitable manner, preferably so as to obtain a right-reading reproduction, the exposure being shown as taking place in area 13 of the emulsion layer 12.
In carrying out the process of our invention, the exposed element is then developed with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide solvent, such as sodium thiosulfate, with the result that a silver image is developed in area 13 and shortly thereafter the residual undeveloped silver halide is transformed to a soluble silver complex, a portion of which diffuses imagewise to a silver precipitating layer 11, where an argental image is formed by reaction of the silver complex with the silver precipitating agent of the silver precipitating layer. The emulsion layer 12 containing the negative silver image is then merely washed free from the support with an excess of water to obtain the reproduction shown in stage 2 of the drawing wherein the argental positive image occupies areas 14 of the silver precipitating layer 11.
The silver precipitating layer or stratum referred to herein is a water-permeable, organic colloid layer, preferably gelatin, containing a silver precipitating agent; that is, an agent capable of yielding with silver ion a darkcolored argental or silver-containing substance, when dissolved silver salts from the emulsion layer come into contact with it. The silver precipitating agent may comprise either physical development nuclei or a chemical precipitant for silver ions.
Suitable silver precipitating agents for use in the silver precipitating layer for forming the argental image include sulfides, selenides, polysulfides, polyselenides, thiourea, mercaptans, stannous halides, heavy metals and heavy metal salts, and fogged silver halide. Heavy metal sulfides such as lead, silver, zinc, antimony, cadmium and bismuth sulfides are useful, particularly the sulfides of lead and zinc alone or in admixture, or complex salts of these with thioacetamide, dithiol-oxamide, or dithiolbiuret. The heavy metals include silver, gold, platinum, palladium and mercury, preferably in the colloidal form. The noble metals are particularly eflicacious.
The silver precipitating agents may be applied directly to a support, such as paper, or to suitable subbed cellulose derivative supports, or synthetic polymer supports, from solutions or dispersions of the silver precipitating agents in colloidal vehicles, such as gelatin. The gelatin can be hardened using hardeners known in the art, such as formaldehyde, chromic chloride, muchloric acid, diketones (bis-acetyl), or the like. In general, the aldehyde-type hardeners are preferred. When a gelatin substitute is used, the colloidal vehicle must be hardened or else must be rendered insoluble in the wash solution used to remove the unhardened gelatin layer from the surface.
The silver halide gelatino emulsion can be applied directly over the silver precipitating layer, but a thin layer of gelatin or an alkaline-soluble polymeric material sufficiently sensitive to salts so that solution does not occur during processing but occurs as soon as water is applied as in washing may be first applied, followed 'by the emulsion layer. This thin layer is not essential; however, it has been found to facilitate the clean removal of the emulsion from the silver precipitating layer.
The silver halide component of the photographic emulsion is not especially critical and can include various silver halides and mixtures of silver halide, such as silver bromoiodide, silver chloride or silver bromide, etc. They may be optically sensitized in the usual manner.
The emulsion may be developing-out emulsions, designed for development to negative images in which case the image obtained in the silver precipitating layer is a positive with respect to the original subject. If desired, the emulsion can be of the direct positive type, with the result that the silver image developed in the emulsion is a positive and the image in the silver precipitating layer a negative in respect to the original subject. The procedures of Leermakers, U.S. Patent No. 2,184,013, and Kendal et al., US. Patent No. 2,541,472, are useful in conferring the direct positive characters to the emulsions.
The silver halide developing solution used for initiating the development of the exposed sensitive element described above is not especially critical and can be of the conventional type used for developing film or papers with the exception that a silver halide solvent such as sodium thiosulfate, sodium thiocyanate, etc., is present in the quantity required to form the soluble silver complex, which diffuses imagewise to the silver precipitating layer. Silver halide developing agents useful in the developing solution include hydroquinones, e.g. halogenated hydroquinones, toluhydroquinones, aminophenols, e.g. monomethyl-p-arninophenol sulfate and glycerine, 3-pyrazolidone developing agents, such as l-phenyl-S-pyrazolidone, such as combinations of 1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidones with hydroquinones, ascorbic acid, reductones, and the like, may be used.
Yackel et al., US. Patent No. 3,020,155, issued February 6, 1962, discloses a photographic diffusion transfer process in which a silver halide emulsion in a vehicle of alkali-soluble cellulose derivative is used to obviate hardening from in the emulsion layer. It will be appreciated that modifications disclosed in connection with Yackel et al. product, such as improving the tone of the image, and the like, may also be used in connection with our invention.
In the Yackel et a1. process and the process of the present invention in the examples hereinafter, the silver halide developing agent may be incorporated in either the developing solution or the emulsion itself. In the latter case, it is preferable to use a substantially nondiffusing developing agent, such as 3,4-dihydroxydiphenyl, in the emulsion layer.
The following examples illustrate our invention, ,but are not intended to limit it in any way.
Example I A coating was prepared which contained 0.270 g. gelatin, 16 micrograms zinc sulfide, and 0.018 g. formaldehyde per square foot of film base. Over this was coated a silver halide gelatino sensitized emulsion at a coverage to yield .625 g. gelatin, 0.360 g. silver, and 0.050 g. semicarbazide HCl-sodium salt. Evaluation was carried out by processing, after exposure, in a developer con taining the following:
Water to make 1 liter.
With fresh samples of the above coating and a control coating without the semicarhazide, the negative top layer could be washed off easily. After four weeks incubation at 120 F., 50% relative humidity, however, the negative layer of the control could not be removed, whereas the negative layer of the coating containing the semicarbazide salt could be readily removed.
The semicarbazide salt can be incorporated in a barrier layer between the nuclei and emulson layers if such a barrier layer is used. The semicarbazide salt can be placed in a wateror alkali-permeable layer where it will be readily available to the emulsion layer to prevent hardening of this layer from migration of the hardener from the nuclei layer. The semicarbazide salt might be placed instead in a permeable overcoat over the emulsion layer where it would be free to diffuse into the emulsion layer to inhibit hardening therein.
Example 2 A coating was prepared which contained 0.270 g. gelatin, 1.6 l0 g. nickel sulfide, and 0.018 g. formaldehyde per square foot of film base. Samples of this coating were over coated with a sensitized gelatino-silver halide emulsion at a coverage to yield 0.530 g. gelatin, 0.360 g. silver and the level of semicarbazide salt listed below.
Coating A--.033 g. semicarbazide-HCl-sodium salt per sq. ft.
Coating B.050 g. semicarbazide-HCl-sodium salt per sq. ft.
Coating C.067 g. semicarbazide-HCl-sodium salt per sq. ft.
These samples were evaluated as described in Example 1 and were all found to yield the useful results described for the experimental coating described in Example 1.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention as described hereinabove and as defined in the appended claims.
We claim:
1. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof.
. 2. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum and unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and 316% by weight semicarbazide, based on the gelatin in the emulsion.
3. A method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containmg silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time sufficient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diffuse imagewise to said silver precipitating stratum and the silver of said portion of said silver complex to he precipitated in said stratum and removing the emulsion layer from said stratum.
4. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and semicarbazide hydrochloride-sodium salt. I
5. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide and 316% by weight semicarbazide hydrochloride-sodium salt, based on the gelatin in the emulsion.
6. A method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, and adhered to said stratum an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and semicarbazide hydrochloridesodium salt, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time sufiicient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diffuse imagewise to said silver precipitating stratum and the silver of said portion of said silver complex to be precipitated in said stratum and removing the emulsion layer from said stratum.
7. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
8. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardner, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing 316% by weight of a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the Water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
9. A method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts capable of reacting with an aldehyde to form semicarbazones, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the water-soluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time suflicient to form a silver 10. A light-sensitive photographic element comprisinga support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing semicarbazide.
11. A light-sensitive photographic element comprising a a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing 316% by weight of a semicarbazide and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatin emulsion layer containing silver halide.
12. A method of forming a photographic image which comprises developing an exposed silver halide emulsion comprising the top layer in a photographic element including a support, a silver precipitating stratum containing silver precipitating nuclei and hardened colloid on the support, said colloid hardened with an aldehyde type hardener, a colloid barrier layer on said stratum containing a semicarbazide, and adhered to said barrier layer an unhardened light-sensitive gelatino-silver halide emulsion layer containing silver halide and a compound selected from the class consisting of semicarbazide and the watersoluble semicarbazide salts thereof, by developing a latent image in the emulsion layer with a silver halide developing solution containing a silver halide developing agent and a silver halide solvent for a time suflicient to form a silver image and an imagewise distribution of a soluble silver complex in the emulsion layer, allowing a portion of said silver complex to diifuse imagewise to said silver precipitating stratum and the silver of said portion of said silver complex to :be precipitated in said stratum and removing the emulsion layer from said stratum.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS OTHER REFERENCES Mees: Theory of the Photographic Process, Macmillan, NY. (1954), pp. 541-544.
Noller: Chemistry of Organic Compounds, 2nd edition Saunders, Philadelphia (1957), p. 211.
NORMAN G. TORCHIN, Primary Examiner. G. H. BJORGE, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (2)

1. A LIGHT-SENSITIVE PHOTOGRAPHIC ELEMENT COMPRISING A SUPPORT, A SILVER PRECIPITATING STRATUM CONTAINING SILVER PRECIPITATING NUCLEI AND HARDENED COLLOID ON THE SUPPORT, SAID COLLOID HARDENED WITH AN ALDEHYDE TYPE HARDENER, AND ADHERED TO SAID STRATUM AN UNHARDENED LIGHT-SENSITIVE GELATIN EMULSION LAYER CONTAINING SILVER HALIDE AND A COMPOUND SELECTED FROM THE CLASS CONSISTING OF SEMICARBAZIDE AND THE WATER-SOLUBLE SEMICARBAZIDE SALTS THEREOF.
7. A LIGHT-SENSITIVE PHOTOGRAPHIC ELEMENT COMPRISING A SUPPORT, A SILVER PRECIPITATING STRATUM CONTAINING SILVER PRECIPITATING NUCLEI AND HARDENED COLLOID ON THE SUPPORT, SAID COLLOID HARDENED WITH AN ALDEHYDE TYPE HARDENER, A COLLOID BARRIER LAYER ON SAID STRATUM CONTAINING A COMPOUND SELECTED FROM THE CLASS CONSISTING OF SEMICARBAZIDE AND THE WATER-SOLUBLE SEMICARBAZIDE SALTS THEREOF AND ADHERED TO SAID BARRIER LAYER AN UNHARDENED LIGHT-SENSITIVE GELATIN EMULSION LAYER CONTAINING SILVER HALIDE.
US205995A 1962-06-28 1962-06-28 Silver halide diffusion process and products therefor Expired - Lifetime US3311473A (en)

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US205995A US3311473A (en) 1962-06-28 1962-06-28 Silver halide diffusion process and products therefor
FR939103A FR1361072A (en) 1962-06-28 1963-06-24 New photographic product usable in the inversion-transfer process
DEE25043A DE1167653B (en) 1962-06-28 1963-06-25 Photographic material for the silver salt diffusion transfer process
GB25778/63A GB1042009A (en) 1962-06-28 1963-06-28 Photographic diffusion transfer processes and materials

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US3436217A (en) * 1963-04-09 1969-04-01 Agfa Ag Highly sensitive direct positive photographic material with extremely steep gradation
US3552315A (en) * 1966-02-14 1971-01-05 Dick Co Ab Offset master for imaging by diffusion transfer with nucleating agent, cadium salt and a salt of zirconium, thorium or titanium
US3853557A (en) * 1970-01-26 1974-12-10 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic diffusion transfer element
US3874944A (en) * 1969-12-31 1975-04-01 Polaroid Corp Diffusion transfer processes employing permanent laminate film units
US4047956A (en) * 1975-11-17 1977-09-13 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Low coating weight silver halide element and process
US5202219A (en) * 1990-04-13 1993-04-13 Mitsubishi Paper Mills Limited Image receiving material for silver complex diffusion transfer with uppermost layer
US5272041A (en) * 1990-10-19 1993-12-21 Agfa-Gevaert, N.V. Negative type lithographic printing plate
US5578415A (en) * 1988-09-12 1996-11-26 Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording materials, method for preparing the same and optical cards having the same

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US2419975A (en) * 1943-08-26 1947-05-06 Eastman Kodak Co Increasing speed and contrast of photographic emulsions
GB654631A (en) * 1939-11-02 1951-06-27 Gevaert Photo Prod Nv Improvements in and relating to the manufacture of photographic reversal images
US2588982A (en) * 1950-10-26 1952-03-11 Eastman Kodak Co Direct positive photographs using hydrazine in the emulsion
US2644756A (en) * 1947-02-08 1953-07-07 Polaroid Corp Photographic process for forming a positive transfer image
US3000736A (en) * 1958-03-31 1961-09-19 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic silver halide diffusion transfer process
US3062643A (en) * 1959-05-22 1962-11-06 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic diffusion transfer process

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US2126318A (en) * 1937-02-09 1938-08-09 Eastman Kodak Co Print-out emulsion
US2245236A (en) * 1939-04-28 1941-06-10 Eastman Kodak Co Method of increasing infrared sensitivity
GB654631A (en) * 1939-11-02 1951-06-27 Gevaert Photo Prod Nv Improvements in and relating to the manufacture of photographic reversal images
US2419975A (en) * 1943-08-26 1947-05-06 Eastman Kodak Co Increasing speed and contrast of photographic emulsions
US2644756A (en) * 1947-02-08 1953-07-07 Polaroid Corp Photographic process for forming a positive transfer image
US2588982A (en) * 1950-10-26 1952-03-11 Eastman Kodak Co Direct positive photographs using hydrazine in the emulsion
US3000736A (en) * 1958-03-31 1961-09-19 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic silver halide diffusion transfer process
US3062643A (en) * 1959-05-22 1962-11-06 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic diffusion transfer process

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3436217A (en) * 1963-04-09 1969-04-01 Agfa Ag Highly sensitive direct positive photographic material with extremely steep gradation
US3552315A (en) * 1966-02-14 1971-01-05 Dick Co Ab Offset master for imaging by diffusion transfer with nucleating agent, cadium salt and a salt of zirconium, thorium or titanium
US3552316A (en) * 1966-02-14 1971-01-05 Dick Co Ab Dtr offset master and composition for preparation of same
US3874944A (en) * 1969-12-31 1975-04-01 Polaroid Corp Diffusion transfer processes employing permanent laminate film units
US3853557A (en) * 1970-01-26 1974-12-10 Eastman Kodak Co Photographic diffusion transfer element
US4047956A (en) * 1975-11-17 1977-09-13 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Low coating weight silver halide element and process
US5578415A (en) * 1988-09-12 1996-11-26 Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording materials, method for preparing the same and optical cards having the same
US5202219A (en) * 1990-04-13 1993-04-13 Mitsubishi Paper Mills Limited Image receiving material for silver complex diffusion transfer with uppermost layer
US5272041A (en) * 1990-10-19 1993-12-21 Agfa-Gevaert, N.V. Negative type lithographic printing plate

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DE1167653B (en) 1964-04-09

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