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US3844794A - Magenta couplers - Google Patents

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US3844794A
US3844794A US00268449A US26844972A US3844794A US 3844794 A US3844794 A US 3844794A US 00268449 A US00268449 A US 00268449A US 26844972 A US26844972 A US 26844972A US 3844794 A US3844794 A US 3844794A
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couplers
coupler
pyrazolone
emulsion
silver halide
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M Gandino
B Paolo
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3M Co
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Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co
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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
    • G03C7/00Multicolour photographic processes or agents therefor; Regeneration of such processing agents; Photosensitive materials for multicolour processes
    • G03C7/30Colour processes using colour-coupling substances; Materials therefor; Preparing or processing such materials
    • G03C7/32Colour coupling substances
    • G03C7/36Couplers containing compounds with active methylene groups
    • G03C7/38Couplers containing compounds with active methylene groups in rings
    • G03C7/384Couplers containing compounds with active methylene groups in rings in pyrazolone rings
    • 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
    • C09B29/00Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling
    • C09B29/34Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components
    • C09B29/36Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components from heterocyclic compounds
    • C09B29/3604Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components from heterocyclic compounds containing only a nitrogen as heteroatom
    • C09B29/3647Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components from heterocyclic compounds containing only a nitrogen as heteroatom containing a five-membered ring with two nitrogen atoms as heteroatoms
    • C09B29/3652Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components from heterocyclic compounds containing only a nitrogen as heteroatom containing a five-membered ring with two nitrogen atoms as heteroatoms containing a 1,2-diazoles or hydrogenated 1,2-diazoles
    • C09B29/366Monoazo dyes prepared by diazotising and coupling from other coupling components from heterocyclic compounds containing only a nitrogen as heteroatom containing a five-membered ring with two nitrogen atoms as heteroatoms containing a 1,2-diazoles or hydrogenated 1,2-diazoles containing hydroxy-1,2-diazoles, e.g. pyrazolone

Definitions

  • MAGENTA COUPLERS' Inventors Mario Gandino; Beretta Paolo, both of Savona, Italy Assignee: Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company, St. Paul, Minn.
  • ABSTRACT Magenta couplers of the S-pyrazolone type which have a phenylcarbamylamino substituent in the 3- position of the pyrazolone nucleus and which have, as a substituent in the' l-position of the pyrazolone nucleus, a 2,4'-dihalo-6'-alkoxyphenyl group or a 2',6-dihalo-4-alkoxyphenyl group.
  • the present invention relates to photographic couplers and more specifically to couplers which react with an oxidation product of developers of the paraphenylene diamine type to provide magenta dyes.
  • Magenta dyes have been produced from couplers of the l-phenyl-3-acylamino-5-pyrazolone type, as 25 shown by US. Pat. Nos. 2,348,463; 2,369,489; 2,511,231; 2,600,788; 3,062,653; and British Pat. No.. 904,852. Certain of these patents describe efforts to vary coupler properties by varying substituent groups of the couplers.
  • the present invention provides a S-pyrazolone coupler having a 5pyrazolone nucleus which contains in the 3- position thereof a phenylcarbamylamino group and which contains in the l-position thereof a 2',4'-dihalokXyPh!lZl....9 o a 2 Vietnamese-5. 2 9:i..-,. alkoxyphenyl group.
  • the preferred couplers of the present invention may be represented by the general formula wherein two of the A groups are halogen, the remaining A group is alkoxy, and wherein R is alkyl, alkoxy, or
  • R is alkyl or alkoxy.
  • the alkoxy group representing one of the A groups may have from 1-18 carbon atoms, but preferably is a lower alkoxy group.
  • the alkoxy or alkyl group represented by R or R preferably has at least five carbon atoms (so as to provide ballasting characteristics) and may have as many as about 20 carbon atoms.
  • the present invention also provides silver halide emulsions containing at least one of the aboveidentified couplers.
  • the couplers of the present invention and the magenta dyes derived therefrom exhibit improved stability characteristics in comparison to couplers and magenta dyes of the prior art.
  • the magenta dyes prepared by reacting couplers of the invention with any of a number of paraphenylene diamine-type developers exhibit unusually satisfactory light-absorption characteristics.
  • magenta dyes prepared from couplers of the invention depend primarily upon the nature of the substituent in the 3- position of the pyrazolone nucleus. If this substituent is a phenylcarbamylamino group having substituted on the phenyl group thereof an alkyl group or an alkoxy group (which groups impart to the molecule nonbleeding characteristics), the resulting dyes have absorption maxima shifted towards lower wavelengths.
  • this substituent is a phenylcarbamylamino group having substituted on the phenyl group thereof a substituent of the sulfoanilide type substituted with .an alkyl or an alkoxy (which groups also impart non-bleeding characteristics to the molecule), the resulting dyes have absorption maxima shifted towards higher wavelengths.
  • Silver halide photographic emulsions containing couplers of the present invention may readily be prepared by known techniques, such as the solvent dispersion technique described in US. Pat. Nos. 2,322,027; 2,801,170; 2,801,171 and others. in addition to hydrophilic colloidal binders such as gelatin, etc., the emulsions may contain such common photographic adjuvants as chemical sensitizers, optical sensitizers, stabilizers, plasticizers, antioxidants, u.v. absorbers, and the like. Silver halide (chloride, bromide, iodide or mixtures thereof) emulsions may have the couplers of the invention added thereto either before or after optical sensitization thereof. The emulsions may be spread on known photographic bases (e.g., polyester film, glass, paper, etc.) to form photographic elements.
  • known photographic bases e.g., polyester film, glass, paper, etc.
  • the emulsions can be developed with primary aromatic amine developers, e.g., of the paraphenylene diamine type. Developers of this type are exemplified as follows:
  • Couplers of O 1 CH;-C--NHC ONHC "H25 5 LL I or 00H;
  • Couplers of the prior art with which the couplers of the l-(2',6'-dichloro-4'-meth0xy)-phenyl-3-p-dodecylinvention y be compared include:
  • Coupler 6 Coupler 2 40 I CH;CNHCOCHO CHg-CNHC ONHSO2NHC12H25 0:!) ii 32115 5 1
  • Coupler 8 The above couplers 6, 7 and 8 are of the type described in English Pat. No. 904,852. Couplers 9 and 10 are of the type described in US. Pat. No. 2,600,788.
  • EXAMPLE 1 (COUPLER 1) A saturated solution of gaseous HCl in methanol was prepared by bubbling dry gaseous HCl in 2.4 liters of anhydrous methanol with ice-bath cooling. After saturation was complete, 290 g. of p-nitroso phenol (m.p. l33l 36 C, purified by the procedure reported in Journal of Organic Chemistry, 32, 1967, p. 156) were added with continuous stirring and bubbling of gaseous HCl through the reaction mass, the temperature of the mass being maintained in the range of l20 C.
  • COUPLER 1 2,6-dichloro-4-methoxy-aniline
  • EXAMPLE ll (COUPLER 2) To 112 ml of a 59 percent by weight solution of 4- sulfo-p-dodecylanilido-phenyl-isocyanate in toluene at 95 C were added 40 g. of the 3-amino pyrazolone of Example l. The resulting solution was refluxed at 110 C for 2 hours. A 250 ml portion of toluenated methanol was added with great care, when the distillation stabilized an additional 500 ml of methanol were added dropwise and the distillation was continued until 750 ml of distillate had been removed. The material was cooled, poured into a mixture of 3 l.
  • the hydrochloride of 4,6-dichloro-2-methoxy-aniline was prepared by chlorination in dioxane of orthoanisidine hydrochloride with sulfonyl chloride at a temperature of from room temperature to C for a period of 2-3 hours.
  • the raw product was purified by dissolution in hot methanol, the solution poured in water separated out the 4,6-dichloro-2-methoxy-aniline separating out as a dark oil upon pouring of the solution into water.
  • the oil was extracted with ether and from the extracts (dried on sodium sulfate) the hydrochloride was precipitated out with anhydrous, gaseous hydrochloric acid.
  • the so-prepared product was reacted with p-dodecyl-phenyl-isocyanate using the procedure of Example I to provide a fine white powder melting at l72-l 74 C.
  • FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the drawings are dye absorption curves wherein Log D (Density) is plotted against wavelength.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 compare the absorption curves of dyes prepared from couplers 5, 6 and 10 and 3, 6 and l0 respectively, each of the dyes being derived from the previously described developer 1. These curves indicate that the dyes resulting from couplers of the invention tend to avoid the unwanted absorption in that area of the spectrum (denoted by the arrows) which is characteristic of the prior art dyes.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 compare the absorption characteristics of dyes prepared from couplers 3, 6 and 10 and 5, 6 and 10 respectively, each dye being derived from the previously described developer 2. These curves indicate that the absorption of the dyes derived from couplers of the invention may conveniently be shifted toward longer or shorter wavelengths to meet the color balance requirements of the materials in which they may be incorporated.
  • the couplers of the invention and the dyes 35 R prepared therefrom exhibit greater stability than do the compared prior art couplers and dyes.
  • a silver halide photographic element which inof each of the resulting dispersions was added to a sil cludes a layer of the emulsion of claim 1.
  • ver chloride-bromide emulsion (sensitized to green 4.
  • a silver .halide photographic emulsion which inlight by addition of an optical sensitizer) to provide a cludes a coupler of the formula concentration of coupler equal to 35 mM per Kg of emulsion.
  • 01 c1 developer 3 bleached and fixed

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  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Silver Salt Photography Or Processing Solution Therefor (AREA)

Abstract

Magenta couplers of the 5-pyrazolone type which have a phenylcarbamylamino substituent in the 3-position of the pyrazolone nucleus and which have, as a substituent in the 1position of the pyrazolone nucleus, a 2'',4''-dihalo-6''alkoxyphenyl group or a 2'',6''-dihalo-4''-alkoxyphenyl group.

Description

United States Patent Gandino et al.
MAGENTA COUPLERS' Inventors: Mario Gandino; Beretta Paolo, both of Savona, Italy Assignee: Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company, St. Paul, Minn.
Filed: July 3, 1972 Appl. No.: 268,449
Related US. Application Data Continuation of Ser. No. 43,03l, June 3, 1970, abandoned.
Foreign Application Priority Data June l3, 1969 Italy 37892/69 US. Cl. 96/100 Int. Cl G03c 1/40 Field of Search 96/100 Primary Examiner-Ronald H. Smith Assistant Examiner-Richard L. Schilling Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Alexander, Sell, Steldt & DeLal-lunt [57] ABSTRACT Magenta couplers of the S-pyrazolone type which have a phenylcarbamylamino substituent in the 3- position of the pyrazolone nucleus and which have, as a substituent in the' l-position of the pyrazolone nucleus, a 2,4'-dihalo-6'-alkoxyphenyl group or a 2',6-dihalo-4-alkoxyphenyl group.
8 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures MAGENTA COUPLERS This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 43,031, filed June 3, 1970, now abandoned.
The present invention relates to photographic couplers and more specifically to couplers which react with an oxidation product of developers of the paraphenylene diamine type to provide magenta dyes.
The formation of colored photographic images by the reaction between photographic color couplers and oxidation products of developers of the paraphenylene diamine type, is well known in silver halide color photographic technology. In the subtractive color process, such images are colored, respectively, yellow, magenta and cyan, which colors are complementary of the three primary colors blue, green and red. Good color reproduction requires the three images to appear as a balanced whole. To achieve such a color balance," couplers must often be employed which provide magenta dyes having absorption maxima which are shifted sometimes towards higher and sometimes towards lower wavelengths and which exhibit absorption curves which contain little if any undesired secondary absorption. Magenta dyes have been produced from couplers of the l-phenyl-3-acylamino-5-pyrazolone type, as 25 shown by US. Pat. Nos. 2,348,463; 2,369,489; 2,511,231; 2,600,788; 3,062,653; and British Pat. No.. 904,852. Certain of these patents describe efforts to vary coupler properties by varying substituent groups of the couplers.
Good color reproduction also requires dyes which yield good image contrast and high image color density. In addition, it is essential for preservation of the colored images that the dyes which are derived from couplers have good stability characteristics. Briefly, the present invention provides a S-pyrazolone coupler having a 5pyrazolone nucleus which contains in the 3- position thereof a phenylcarbamylamino group and which contains in the l-position thereof a 2',4'-dihalokXyPh!lZl....9 o a 2.....-5. 2 9:i..-,. alkoxyphenyl group.
The preferred couplers of the present invention may be represented by the general formula wherein two of the A groups are halogen, the remaining A group is alkoxy, and wherein R is alkyl, alkoxy, or
wherein R is alkyl or alkoxy.
The alkoxy group representing one of the A groups may have from 1-18 carbon atoms, but preferably is a lower alkoxy group. The alkoxy or alkyl group represented by R or R preferably has at least five carbon atoms (so as to provide ballasting characteristics) and may have as many as about 20 carbon atoms.
The present invention also provides silver halide emulsions containing at least one of the aboveidentified couplers.
The couplers of the present invention and the magenta dyes derived therefrom exhibit improved stability characteristics in comparison to couplers and magenta dyes of the prior art. The magenta dyes prepared by reacting couplers of the invention with any of a number of paraphenylene diamine-type developers exhibit unusually satisfactory light-absorption characteristics. These highly desirable characteristics of the 5- pyrazolone couplers of the present invention are dependent upon the fact that the pyrazolone nucleus bears in the 1-position a 2',6'-dihalo-4-alkoxyphenyl or a 2',4-dihalo-6-alkoxyphenyl substituent, and bears in the 3-position a phenylcarbamylamino substituent.
The particular absorption properties of the magenta dyes prepared from couplers of the invention depend primarily upon the nature of the substituent in the 3- position of the pyrazolone nucleus. If this substituent is a phenylcarbamylamino group having substituted on the phenyl group thereof an alkyl group or an alkoxy group (which groups impart to the molecule nonbleeding characteristics), the resulting dyes have absorption maxima shifted towards lower wavelengths. lf this substituent is a phenylcarbamylamino group having substituted on the phenyl group thereof a substituent of the sulfoanilide type substituted with .an alkyl or an alkoxy (which groups also impart non-bleeding characteristics to the molecule), the resulting dyes have absorption maxima shifted towards higher wavelengths.
Silver halide photographic emulsions containing couplers of the present invention may readily be prepared by known techniques, such as the solvent dispersion technique described in US. Pat. Nos. 2,322,027; 2,801,170; 2,801,171 and others. in addition to hydrophilic colloidal binders such as gelatin, etc., the emulsions may contain such common photographic adjuvants as chemical sensitizers, optical sensitizers, stabilizers, plasticizers, antioxidants, u.v. absorbers, and the like. Silver halide (chloride, bromide, iodide or mixtures thereof) emulsions may have the couplers of the invention added thereto either before or after optical sensitization thereof. The emulsions may be spread on known photographic bases (e.g., polyester film, glass, paper, etc.) to form photographic elements.
The emulsions can be developed with primary aromatic amine developers, e.g., of the paraphenylene diamine type. Developers of this type are exemplified as follows:
Developer 1 Part A H O wdroxylamine hydrochloride 1 .N-diethylparaphenylene diamine sulfate Part B Sodium tripolyphosphute 2 Anhydrous sodium carbonate 65 Anhydrous sodium sulfitc 2 Potassium bromide 1 Sodium hydroxide 2 Solution A is poured into solution B to yield the devel- I oper bath. l-(2'-methoxy-4,6 dichloro)-phenyl-3-p- Developer 2 dodecylphenyl-ureido-S-pyrazolone Coupler 4 Sodium hexametaphosphate 5 Anhydrous sodium sulfite 4 g 2-amino-5-diethyluminotoluene CH;FNHC 0 NII- hydrochloride 3 g Sodium carbonate. monohydrate g 00mm Potassium bromide 2 g N Water to make l000 ml. 10
Cl OCH;
Developer 3 2-amino-S-N.N-ethyLfi-methancsulfonamidol 5 Cl ethyl-toluene sulfonate Anhydrous sodium sulfite Sodium hydroxide Sodium metaborate l Sodium sulfate -0 b man ho:
can
The following examples are illustrative of couplers of O: 1 CH;-C--NHC ONHC "H25 5 LL I or 00H;
v c1 c1 1 CH3 3 l-(2-methoxy:4,6-dichloro):phenyl-3-(4-sulfo-p- 5 dodecyl-amhdo)-phenyl-ureldo-5-pyrazolone Couplers of the prior art with which the couplers of the l-(2',6'-dichloro-4'-meth0xy)-phenyl-3-p-dodecylinvention y be compared include:
phenylureido-S-pyrazolone Coupler 6 Coupler 2 40 I CH;CNHCOCHO CHg-CNHC ONHSO2NHC12H25 0:!) ii 32115 5 1| tsHal 0: N N
i C! -OOHa Coupler 7 l-( 2 ',6-dichloro-4 -methoxy )-phenyl-3-[ 4 '-sulfo-pdodecylanilidol-phenyl-ureido-S-pyrazolone 5 5 Coupler 3 CHz--CNHCOOH-O CH CNHCONH 0 E 0:23 IJI Q 12 25 I O= 1m (IJZHS Q o1 OCH:
Coupler 8 The above couplers 6, 7 and 8 are of the type described in English Pat. No. 904,852. Couplers 9 and 10 are of the type described in US. Pat. No. 2,600,788.
EXAMPLE 1 (COUPLER 1) A. 2,6-dichloro-4-methoxy-aniline A saturated solution of gaseous HCl in methanol was prepared by bubbling dry gaseous HCl in 2.4 liters of anhydrous methanol with ice-bath cooling. After saturation was complete, 290 g. of p-nitroso phenol (m.p. l33l 36 C, purified by the procedure reported in Journal of Organic Chemistry, 32, 1967, p. 156) were added with continuous stirring and bubbling of gaseous HCl through the reaction mass, the temperature of the mass being maintained in the range of l20 C. After stirring for an additional half an hour with bubbling gaseous HCl, the material was filtered, washed with ether and dried. The product was dissolved in 1.5 liters of methanol and 120 ml of water; the solution was refluxed, decolorizing charcoal was added and the filtrate was poured, with stirring, into liters of cold water. The solid was filtered out and the product was crystallized from 800 ml of toluenated methanol to yield 203 g. of 2,6-dichloro-4-methoxy-aniline in the form of fine small white needles melting at 72-74 C. B. 2,6-dichloro-4-methoxy-phenyl-hydrazine A mixture of g. of 2,6-dichloro-4-methoxyaniline, 420 ml of concentrate HCl, and 210 ml of distilled water were vigorously stirred for 1 hour at room temperature. The mass was then cooled to between +2 C and -2 C, and a solution of 55 g. of sodium nitrite in m1 of demineralized water was added dropwise thereto. At the end of the reaction, the mass was stirred for an additional half an hour and the excess of nitrous acid present was destroyed with urea. The resulting solution was rapidly filtered and slowly poured into a solution of 700 g. of SnC1 '2l-l O, 3.5 l. of concentrated HCl and 1.7 l. of demineralized water, maintained at 0 C with stirring. After continued stirring for an additional 4 hours, the mass was permitted to stand undisturbed overnight in a refrigerator. The solid formed was filtered off, washed thoroughly with cold water, and was suspended in 3.0 liters of demineralized water. The mass was cooled to 10 C and made basic under stirring with a 30% NaOH solution, taking care that the temperature did not exceed 12 C. The solid was filtered and extracted with ether, and the extract dried overnight over sodium sulfate. The ether was evaporated to dryness and the residue was crystallized from heptane. 77 g. of the hydrazine having a m.p. of 124-l25 C were obtained. (Analysis; N% Calculated: 13.59; Found 13.53).
C. l-(2',6'-dichloro-4-methoxy)-phenyl-3-amino-5- pyrazolone The so-prepared hydrazine was condensed with ,B-ethoxy-B-imino-ethyl-propionate to give the 3-aminopyrazolones by the method of US. Pat. No. 2,600,788. The product, crystallized by toluenated methanol, melted at 23l-232 C.
N% Calculated: Cl% Calculated:
Found 15.20
Analysis:
Fo und 25.5 3
D. Coupler To 720 ml of pure nitrobenzene were added 232 g. of anhydrous aluminum trichloride in small portions. During this addition the temperature rose to 45 C. Then 240 g. of l-(2',6'-dichloro-4'-methoxy)-phenyl- 3-amino-5-pyrazolone were added in small portions, the temperature rising to 55 C. Thereafter, 252 g. of p-dodecyl-phenyl isocyanate (obtained by phosgenation in toluene of p-dodecyl-aniline) were added drop-- Analysis: C% Calculated: 62.00; Found: 62.20
H% Calculated: 6.89; Found: 6.99
N% Calculated: 9.98; Found: 9.99
EXAMPLE ll (COUPLER 2) To 112 ml of a 59 percent by weight solution of 4- sulfo-p-dodecylanilido-phenyl-isocyanate in toluene at 95 C were added 40 g. of the 3-amino pyrazolone of Example l. The resulting solution was refluxed at 110 C for 2 hours. A 250 ml portion of toluenated methanol was added with great care, when the distillation stabilized an additional 500 ml of methanol were added dropwise and the distillation was continued until 750 ml of distillate had been removed. The material was cooled, poured into a mixture of 3 l. of ice water and 200 ml of concentrated HCl, stirred, filtered, thoroughly washed with water, and dried at 50 C to yield a product melting at ll30 C. The product was boiled in petroleum ether, dissolved in benzene and precipitated with ligroin. After filtration the product was triturated in ligroin-petroleum ether l:l filtered, and dried at 50 C. A white, fine powder melting at ll38 C was obtained.
Found: 9.5 Found: 4.2
N% Calculated: 9.7; 8% Calculated: 4.4;
Analysis:
The hydrochloride of 4,6-dichloro-2-methoxy-aniline was prepared by chlorination in dioxane of orthoanisidine hydrochloride with sulfonyl chloride at a temperature of from room temperature to C for a period of 2-3 hours. The raw product was purified by dissolution in hot methanol, the solution poured in water separated out the 4,6-dichloro-2-methoxy-aniline separating out as a dark oil upon pouring of the solution into water. The oil was extracted with ether and from the extracts (dried on sodium sulfate) the hydrochloride was precipitated out with anhydrous, gaseous hydrochloric acid. The amine which was obtained was diazotized and reduced as described in the preceding preparation to give the corresponding phenylhydrazine which was converted to pyrazolone as described in paragraph C of Example I above. The l-(2'-methoxy-4',6'-dichloro)- phenyl-3-aminopyrazolone which was obtained melted at 198-l99 C.
Analysis: N% Calculated: 15.32; Found: 15.45 Cl% Calculated 25.90; Found: 25.90
The so-prepared product was reacted with p-dodecyl-phenyl-isocyanate using the procedure of Example I to provide a fine white powder melting at l72-l 74 C.
Analysis: CZ Calculated: 62.00; Found: 6|.84 H} Calculated: 6.82: Found: 6.77 N% Calculated: 9.98; Found: 9.96
EXAMPLE lV (COUPLER 4) nitrile and ethanol yielded the coupler, mp. 15 2l 5 5 C.
Analysis: C% Calculated: 62.50; Found: 62.70 H% Calculated: 7.26: Found: 7.49 N% Calculated: 8.80; Found: 8.70
EXAMPLE V (COUPLER 5) Example II was repeated utilizing the 3-amino pyrazolone of Example Ill. A white powder melting at l28l32 C was obtained.
EXAMPLE Vl 2 grams of each of couplers l to 10 were individually dissolved in a solution of 6 ml of butyl phthalate and 12 ml of ethyl acetate, and each solution was then emulsified with 40 ml of a 4 percent gelatine solution. The resulting emulsions were then diluted with water to l00 ml and a fraction of each emulsion thereof, containing 2 mM of coupler, was mixed with 200 ml of a nonoptically sensitized, 7 percent gelatin-silver bromidechloride emulsion. The resulting emulsions were each spread on a cellulose acetate base, dried, exposed in a wedge exposimeter, developed with the abovementioned developers 1 and 2, bleached and fixed.
In Table l the absorption maxima of the dyes obtained, expressed in ma, are shown.
FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the drawings are dye absorption curves wherein Log D (Density) is plotted against wavelength.
FIGS. 1 and 2 compare the absorption curves of dyes prepared from couplers 5, 6 and 10 and 3, 6 and l0 respectively, each of the dyes being derived from the previously described developer 1. These curves indicate that the dyes resulting from couplers of the invention tend to avoid the unwanted absorption in that area of the spectrum (denoted by the arrows) which is characteristic of the prior art dyes.
FIGS. 3 and 4 compare the absorption characteristics of dyes prepared from couplers 3, 6 and 10 and 5, 6 and 10 respectively, each dye being derived from the previously described developer 2. These curves indicate that the absorption of the dyes derived from couplers of the invention may conveniently be shifted toward longer or shorter wavelengths to meet the color balance requirements of the materials in which they may be incorporated.
EXAMPLE VII 6 grams of each of couplers l, 3, 8 and 9 were dissolved in a mixture of 1.8 ml of dibutyl phthalate, 1.8 ml of tricresyl phosphate, and l6 ml of ethyl acetate.
Each solution was then emulsified with 60 ml of a 4 What we claim is:
percent gelatin solution and diluted to l ml with wal. A silver halide photographic emulsion which inter. A portion of each dispersion (containing an antioxcludes a coupler of the formula idizing agent and a U.V. absorber) was added to a nonoptically sensitized silver chloride-bromide emulsion to provide a coupler concentration of 35 mM per Kg of & {1
emulsion. M \N/ R Each emulsion was spread on a paper base, dried, exposed in a shaded wedge" exposimeter, developed A A wlth the afore-mentloned developer 3, bleached and fixed. The sensitometric data of Table 2 were derived from fresh images and from images subjected to storage under the indicated conditions.
T A B L E 2 Non-stored image Stored image Exposure in fadometer Stored 24 hours (xenon lamp) at 90C and Coupler Do D ADoB Sr 'y B G D max h h 20 h 40 h A D Sr relative sensitivity expressed in log It required to provide a density of L0;
contrast;
minimum density (fog) measured under bluelight (B) and green light (G) maximum density maximum density differential fog differential measured under blue light (indicating stability of residual coupler) ll ll ll ll II ll In comparison to the prior art couplers, the couplers wherein two of the A groups are halogen, the remaining of the invention are thus shown to impart to the emul- A group is alkoxy, and wherein R is alkyl, alkoxy, or sion greater sensitivity, contrast and maximum density.
Moreover, the couplers of the invention and the dyes 35 R prepared therefrom exhibit greater stability than do the compared prior art couplers and dyes.
EXAMPLE wherein R is alkyl or alkoxy. 6 grams of each of couplers l, 8 and 9 were dissolved 4o 2. The emulsion of claim 1 wherein the A group in amixture of 3.6 ml of dibutyl phthalate, 3.6 ml of triwhich is alkoxy contains l-l8 carbon atoms, and cresyl phosphate and l6 ml of ethyl acetate. Each soluwherein the alkoxy or alkyl group represented by R or tion was emulsified with 60 ml of a 4 percent gelatin so- R contains 5-20 carbon atoms,
lution and diluted to 100 ml with water, and a portion 3. A silver halide photographic element which inof each of the resulting dispersions was added to a silcludes a layer of the emulsion of claim 1.
ver chloride-bromide emulsion (sensitized to green 4. A silver .halide photographic emulsion which inlight by addition of an optical sensitizer) to provide a cludes a coupler of the formula concentration of coupler equal to 35 mM per Kg of emulsion. Each emulsion was spread on a paper base H: l NHOONHCuHn 'and dried. Some specimens were stored for 7 days at o= 38 C and 70 percent R. H. and others were stored for this period at 22- -2C and 40-45 percent R.H. Each specimen was then developed with the above-described 01 c1 developer 3, bleached and fixed, and the differences, between the two sets of specimens were evaluated. The
pertment data are set out 1r1 Table3. 7 my 6 5. A silver halide photographic emulsion which in- T A B L E 3 cludes a coupler of the formula l 0.04 0.0 O: 8 0.18 27.2 9 0.26 23.7 N
. ASr change in relative sensmvlty 1 1 A7 '70 change in contrast. percent.
This data is indicative of the unusual stability of couplers of the present invention. W W oo in Q 12 6. A silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula T Q CmHz:
01 OCH:
7. A silver halide photographic emulsion which in- I cludes a coupler of the formula

Claims (8)

1. A SILVER HALIDE PHOTOGRAPHIC EMULSION WHICH INCLUDES A COUPLER OF THE FORMULA
2. The emulsion of claim 1 wherein the A group which is alkoxy contains 1-18 carbon atoms, and wherein the alkoxy or alkyl group represented by R or R'' contains 5-20 carbon atoms.
3. A silver halide photographic element which includes a layer of the emulsion of claim 1.
4. A silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula
5. A silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula
6. A Silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula
7. A silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula
8. A silver halide photographic emulsion which includes a coupler of the formula
US00268449A 1969-06-13 1972-07-03 Magenta couplers Expired - Lifetime US3844794A (en)

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US00268449A US3844794A (en) 1969-06-13 1972-07-03 Magenta couplers
US05/490,733 US3939176A (en) 1972-07-03 1974-07-22 Magenta couplers

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT3789269 1969-06-13
US4303170A 1970-06-03 1970-06-03
US00268449A US3844794A (en) 1969-06-13 1972-07-03 Magenta couplers

Related Parent Applications (1)

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US4303170A Continuation 1969-06-13 1970-06-03

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US05/490,733 Division US3939176A (en) 1972-07-03 1974-07-22 Magenta couplers

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4490460A (en) * 1982-03-03 1984-12-25 Konishiroku Photo Industry Co., Ltd. Silver halide color photographic materials

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB904852A (en) * 1960-02-18 1962-08-29 Kodak Ltd Colour couplers and photographic silver halide emulsions containing them
US3558319A (en) * 1966-07-13 1971-01-26 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Color photographic silver halide emulsion containing magenta couplers

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB904852A (en) * 1960-02-18 1962-08-29 Kodak Ltd Colour couplers and photographic silver halide emulsions containing them
US3558319A (en) * 1966-07-13 1971-01-26 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Color photographic silver halide emulsion containing magenta couplers

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4490460A (en) * 1982-03-03 1984-12-25 Konishiroku Photo Industry Co., Ltd. Silver halide color photographic materials

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