Including Liquid Contacting Means Patents (Class 96/120)
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Publication number: 20100119420Abstract: Apparatus for improved treatment of effluents are provided herein. In some embodiments, an abatement system may include an exhaust conduit to flow an effluent stream therethrough; a plurality of packed beds disposed in the exhaust conduit to remove non-exhaustible effluents from the effluent stream; one or more spray jets to provide an effluent treating agent between adjacent packed beds, the effluent treating agent to remove non-exhaustible effluents from the effluent stream; and a dripper disposed in the exhaust conduit above an uppermost packed bed to provide the effluent treating agent in large droplets to wet and rinse particulate from an upper surface of the uppermost packed bed substantially without forming fine droplets.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 5, 2009Publication date: May 13, 2010Applicant: APPLIED MATERIALS, INC.Inventors: PHIL CHANDLER, DANIEL O. CLARK, FRANK HOOSHDARAN, DAN S. BROWN, BARRY PAGE, ALLEN FOX, GEORGE L. DANSEN, III, JAY JUNG
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Patent number: 7306650Abstract: A method, and systems for implementing such method, for purifying and conditioning air of weaponized contaminants. The method includes wetting a filter packing media with a salt-based liquid desiccant, such as water with a high concentration of lithium chloride. Air is passed through the wetted filter packing media and the contaminants in are captured with the liquid desiccant while the liquid desiccant dehumidifies the air. The captured contaminants are then deactivated in the liquid desiccant, which may include heating the liquid desiccant. The liquid desiccant is regenerated by applying heat to the liquid desiccant and then removing moisture. The method includes repeating the wetting with the regenerated liquid desiccant which provides a regenerable filtering process that captures and deactivates contaminants on an ongoing basis while also conditioning the air. The method may include filtration effectiveness enhancement by electrostatic or inertial means.Type: GrantFiled: February 28, 2003Date of Patent: December 11, 2007Assignee: Midwest Research InstituteInventors: Steven J. Slayzak, Ren S. Anderson, Ronald D. Judkoff, Daniel M. Blake, Todd B. Vinzant, Joseph P. Ryan
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Patent number: 7008464Abstract: A system for removing moisture from a wet gas stream including a vessel having a contact area containing deliquescing salts that produces brine as water is absorbed, the brine flowing to a collection area in the bottom of the vessel. A venturi positioned in a wet gas inlet stream produces an area of reduced pressure that is applied to a brine flow path connected to the brine collection area. In this way, the brine is recirculated into intimate contact with the wet gas inlet stream causing the brine to be diluted with water extracted from the wet gas stream.Type: GrantFiled: August 8, 2003Date of Patent: March 7, 2006Assignee: National Tank CompanyInventor: Jack A. Deetz
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Patent number: 6471739Abstract: Dehumidifier housing including a lower housing having a barrier part fitted vertically between a compressor and a water tank inside of a cabinet, a drain part formed in a horizontal direction above the barrier part for collecting condensate dehumidified at a heat exchanger and draining the water tank, and sidewalls formed at both sides of the barrier part and the drain part in a front and rear direction and supported on an inside of the cabinet, an upper housing having an orifice part with an air flow hole in a central portion, and a rim part around the orifice part in front and rear direction and supported on an inside of the cabinet, and coupling means for coupling the lower housing and the upper housing, thereby enhancing rigidity and dehumidifying effect.Type: GrantFiled: December 4, 2000Date of Patent: October 29, 2002Assignee: LG Electronics Inc.Inventor: Nam Seob Eom
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Patent number: 6453576Abstract: In a gas dryer for use in a gas transmission line in which a bed of desiccant tablets is suspended in the flow of gas, making an aqueous solution of the desiccant salts from the moisture taken from the gas, the solution is inhibited from generating solids and precipitates in a sump area by conducting the heat of hydration from the bed area to the sump area.Type: GrantFiled: March 1, 2001Date of Patent: September 24, 2002Assignee: Clearwater, Inc.Inventors: Kevin W. Smith, Lori G. Acor, Joseph Miller, Mark J. Wanner
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Patent number: 5766309Abstract: Solid gas-drying forms are made by heating drying salts with a polar solvent to form a saturated solution, then cooling, freezing and forming. Preferred salts are combinations of calcium and lithium bromides and chlorides in particularly effective molar ratios.Type: GrantFiled: July 16, 1997Date of Patent: June 16, 1998Assignee: Clearwater, Inc.Inventor: Todd R. Thomas
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Patent number: 5565139Abstract: A vapor extraction apparatus includes a gel sorbent capable of absorbing vapor directly into the liquid state and capable of disgorging the absorbed liquid in a phase-transition. The apparatus includes a housing adapted for movement from a first position, where it is exposed to a vapor-containing gas stream and a first environmental condition, and capable of moving to a second position, where it is exposed to a second environmental condition. A gel sorbent is disposed on at least one surface of the housing. The gel sorbs vapor from the gas stream as liquid when the sorbent is in its first position. The sorbent disgorges the liquid during phase-transition collapse when it is in the second position. A method of extracting vapor from a process gas stream includes contacting a phase transition gel sorbent with vapor under conditions sufficient for the gel sorbent to undergo a phase transition and absorb vapor as liquid inside the gel sorbent.Type: GrantFiled: June 2, 1995Date of Patent: October 15, 1996Assignee: Gel Sciences, Inc.Inventors: David H. Walker, Harris Gold, George W. McKinney, III, John F. McCoy, III, Xiaohong Yu
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Patent number: 5534186Abstract: A vapor extraction apparatus includes a gel sorbent capable of absorbing vapor directly into the liquid state and capable of disgorging the absorbed liquid in a phase-transition. The apparatus includes a housing adapted for movement from a first position, where it is exposed to a vapor-containing gas stream and a first environmental condition, and capable of moving to a second position, where it is exposed to a second environmental condition. A gel sorbent is disposed on at least one surface of the housing. The gel sorbs vapor from the gas stream as liquid when the sorbent is in its first position. The sorbent disgorges the liquid during phase-transition collapse when it is in the second position. A method of extracting vapor from a process gas stream includes contacting a phase transition gel sorbent with vapor under conditions sufficient for the gel sorbent to undergo a phase transition and absorb vapor as liquid inside the gel sorbent.Type: GrantFiled: December 15, 1993Date of Patent: July 9, 1996Assignee: Gel Sciences, Inc.Inventors: David H. Walker, Harris Gold, George W. McKinney, III, John F. McCoy, III, Xiaohong Yu
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Patent number: 4168976Abstract: A photographic element comprising a support, a layer containing certain photographically useful fragments and a layer containing a dye mordant composition comprising a polymer having recurring units of the formula: ##STR1## wherein: A comprises polymerized units of ethylenically unsaturated monomers;R is H or alkyl;R.sup.1 is H, alkyl or is a group containing at least one atomatic nucleus;Q is a linking group;Y is H or an inert group;X is a leaving group;E and F are the atoms necesary to complete a 5-7 membered heterocyclic ring;N is 0 to 2;M is 1 to 3;P is 0 or 1;X is 0 to 90 weight percent; andY is 10 to 100 weight percent of the polymer.The polymeric mordants covalently bond with dyes or dye precursors and are especially useful in diffusion transfer processes.Type: GrantFiled: April 10, 1978Date of Patent: September 25, 1979Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventors: Gerald A. Campbell, Lewis R. Hamilton
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Patent number: 4146399Abstract: Photographic additives in particular water-insoluble photographic additives are rendered easier to incorporate into photographic layers by finely dividing them, mixing them with a finely divided water soluble substance and compressing the resulting mixture into the form of a tablet. The tablets which contain from about 1 to 50% by weight of the photographic additives are then dissolved in the coating composition and this disperses the water insoluble additive uniformly throughout the coating composition.Type: GrantFiled: February 9, 1978Date of Patent: March 27, 1979Assignee: Ciba-Geigy AGInventors: Roy Trunley, Howard R. Hopwood
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Patent number: 4140530Abstract: Photographic additives in particular water insoluble photographic additives are rendered easier to incorporate into photographic layers by finely dividing them, mixing them with a finely divided water soluble substance and preparing granules of the mixture using a hydrophilic colloid as the binder. The granules which contain from about 1 to 50% by weight of the photographic additives are then dissolved in the coating composition and this disperses the water insoluble additive uniformly throughout the coating composition.Type: GrantFiled: February 9, 1978Date of Patent: February 20, 1979Assignee: Ciba-Geigy AGInventors: Roy Trunley, Howard R. Hopwood
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Patent number: 4138266Abstract: A method of spectrally sensitizing a photographic light-sensitive emulsion where a water-soluble solution, prepared by dissolving a methine dye having at least one water-soluble group in water in the presence of a "Red Shift Compound", as hereinafter defined, is added to a photographic light-sensitive emulsion to provide a photographic light-sensitive emulsion spectrally sensitized with increased sensitizing efficiency and with reduced fog. The disadvantages caused by the use of high organic solvent contents are avoided and photographic light-sensitive emulsions suitable for high-speed coating are obtained.Type: GrantFiled: February 3, 1977Date of Patent: February 6, 1979Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Masanao Hinata, Yuji Mihara, Tadao Shishido, Keiichi Adachi
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Patent number: 4135929Abstract: A novel class of redox releasing compounds contains an N,N-disubstituted carbamoyl ballast group. These compounds can be used in photographic elements and processes to release a dye or other photographically useful group as a function of silver halide development.Type: GrantFiled: September 9, 1977Date of Patent: January 23, 1979Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventors: Jose M. Fernandez, Michael D. McCreary, Robert E. Ross, Jon T. Staples
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Patent number: 4080496Abstract: Novel methyne dyes comprising two auxochromic groups of the type used in a cyanine or merocyanine dye linked by a carbon atom chain wherein each of the carbon atoms have an unsaturated linkage to at least one adjacent carbon atom in the chain and at least one pair of carbon atoms in the chain being joined by a triple bond or, in an alternate resonance form, the chain including three consecutive carbon to carbon double bonds. The dyes are useful as spectral sensitizing dyes for silver halide emulsions and as intermediates for synthesizing chain-substituted methine dyes.Type: GrantFiled: December 10, 1976Date of Patent: March 21, 1978Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventor: John David Mee
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Patent number: 4073652Abstract: A method is described of increasing the stability of direct-positive silver halide emulsions comprising reduction- and gold-fogged silver halide grains by the step of adding to the emulsion subsequent to the fogging, a sulphite and a gold compound.Type: GrantFiled: August 26, 1975Date of Patent: February 14, 1978Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT N.V.Inventor: Raymond L. Florens
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Patent number: 4059450Abstract: Direct positive silver halide emulsions are provided which contain fogged silver halide grains with a layered grain structure wherein the external shell of the silver halide grains comprise up to 20 mole % of silver iodide based on the silver halide of the shell. The emulsions show improved sensitivity and produce images of improved maximum density.Type: GrantFiled: November 20, 1973Date of Patent: November 22, 1977Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT N.V.Inventors: Willy Joseph Vanassche, Herman Alberik Pattyn, Erik Moisar, Sieghart Klotzer
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Patent number: 4053315Abstract: Direct-print images of improved stability against prolonged light-exposure are obtained in a photodevelopable element by spectrally sensitizing the photodevelopable emulsion, providing in the emulsion layer or a superposed layer a compound absorbing radiation in the inherent sensitivity range of the silver halide, and effecting image-wise exposure with radiation comprising light of the spectral range for which the silver halide has been spectrally sensitized.Type: GrantFiled: August 8, 1974Date of Patent: October 11, 1977Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT, N.V.Inventors: Hendrik Alfons Borginon, Willy Joseph Vanassche
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Patent number: 4052211Abstract: A multilayer image-forming material which comprises an organic sulfur compound and a metal capable of interreacting upon irradiation with electromagnetic radiation to form an interreaction product or products (hereinafter product and products will simply termed "product"). When the image-forming material is imagewise irradiated with electromagnetic radiation, an interreaction product of the organic sulfur compound and the metal is formed in the irradiated portions of the material, and the physical, chemical and pysico-chemical properties of the thus formed interreaction product are different from those of the respective organic sulfur compound and metal in the non-irradiated portions. Utilizing this difference in properties, the present image-forming material is useful for various applications.Type: GrantFiled: December 24, 1975Date of Patent: October 4, 1977Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Eiichi Inoue, Hiroshi Kokado, Takashi Yamaguchi, Yukio Tokunaga, Takao Nakayama, Toshihiro Yamase
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Patent number: 4045228Abstract: Direct positive silver halide emulsions are provided which contain fogged homodisperse silver halide grains having a silver iodide content of more than 10 mole % and at most 20 mole % relative to the total amount of silver halide. These emulsions have higher sensitivity than corresponding fogged emulsions with less silver iodide content.Type: GrantFiled: November 20, 1973Date of Patent: August 30, 1977Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT N.V.Inventors: Willy Joseph Vanassche, Herman Alberik Pattyn, Otto Lapp, Sieghart Klotzer, Erik Moisar
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Patent number: 4040825Abstract: The present invention relates to light-sensitive photographic material with a light-sensitive heavy metal compound, e.g. a silver halide, and a spectral sensitizer. The spectral sensitizer is a compound in which the radicals of a sensitizing dyestuff are covalently bonded to amino, imino, hydroxyl, mercapto, carboxylic acid or carboxylic acid amide groups of a natural hydrophilic colloid, preferably gelatin.The invention also relates to new sensitizing dyes which are dinuclear cyanine dyes or merocyanine dyes which have attached either to a heterocyclic nucleus of the dye or to its methine chain a group which is reactive with a hydrophilic colloid.Type: GrantFiled: March 11, 1976Date of Patent: August 9, 1977Assignee: Ciba-Geigy AGInventors: Rolf Steiger, Jean-Francois Reber, Aaron David Ezekiel, Geoffrey Ernest Ficken
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Patent number: 4026884Abstract: Novel methyne dyes comprising two auxochromic groups of the type used in a cyanine or merocyanine dye linked by a carbon atom chain wherein each of the carbon atoms have an unsaturated linkage to at least one adjacent carbon atom in the chain and at least one pair of carbon atoms in the chain being joined by a triple bond or, in an alternate resonance form, the chain including three consecutive carbon to carbon double bonds. The dyes are useful as spectral sensitizing dyes for silver halide emulsions and as intermediates for synthesizing chain-substituted methine dyes.Type: GrantFiled: April 14, 1975Date of Patent: May 31, 1977Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventor: John David Mee
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Patent number: 4025349Abstract: Novel methyne dyes comprising two auxochromic groups of the type used in a cyanine or merocyanine dye linked by a carbon atom chain wherein each of the carbon atoms have an unsaturated linkage to at least one adjacent carbon atom in the chain and at least one pair of carbon atoms in the chain being joined by a triple bond or, in an alternate resonance form, the chain including three consecutive carbon to carbon double bonds. The dyes are useful as spectral sensitizing dyes for silver halide emulsions and as intermediates for synthesizing chain-substituted methine dyes.Type: GrantFiled: March 5, 1975Date of Patent: May 24, 1977Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventor: John David Mee
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Patent number: 4023972Abstract: A method is described of preparing a blend of direct-positive silver halide emulsions that has a pAg value of at least 8.35 from two or more direct-positive silver halide emulsions of different average grain-sizes comprising fogged silver halide grains and having pAg values below 8.35, without inducing physical ripening, by raising the pAg to the value of at least 8.35 before or after blending the emulsions, and providing at least one electron-accepting or halogen-conducting compound, at the surface of the fogged silver halide grains prior to raising the pAg to the value of at least 8.35.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 1974Date of Patent: May 17, 1977Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT N.V.Inventors: Willy Joseph Vanassche, Herman Alberik Pattyn
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Patent number: 4009041Abstract: The present invention relates to photography and, more particularly, to a novel radiation recording photographic element which comprises a direct positive photosensitive element which includes, in combination, a particulate dispersion of fogged silver halide crystals, adapted to discharge the fogged silver halide upon exposure to electromagnetic radiation actinic thereto, having associated therewith in electron accepting relationship a semiconductor adapted to accept electrons from said silver halide crystals as a function of the exposure of the crystals to incident electromagnetic radiation actinic thereto.Type: GrantFiled: October 3, 1974Date of Patent: February 22, 1977Assignee: Polaroid CorporationInventor: Boris Levy
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Patent number: 4003748Abstract: A photographic silver halide material with at least one halide emulsion layer and at least one substance in heterogeneous contribution emulsified in oilformer compounds and a process of preparing the said photographic silver halide materials. The substances are introduced into photographic emulsions prior to coating by way of adding a hydrophilic phase containing in emulsified form the substances which are emulsified in the hydrophilic phase in form of a solution containing at least one substantially diffusion-resistant, substantially water-insoluble, substantially non-coupling dispersible .beta.-diketo compound with at least 9 carbon atoms, .beta.-keto carboxylic acid ester, .beta.-keto carboxylic acid amide, cyanoacetyl compound or .beta.-dicarboxylic acid ester with at least 13 carbon atoms as oilformer. The photographic material shows advantageous results i.a. with respect of stability of the emulsified substances in the layers and excellent sensitometric results.Type: GrantFiled: March 3, 1975Date of Patent: January 18, 1977Assignee: AGFA-Gevaert, A.G.Inventors: Hans Langen, Erwin Ranz, Rudolf Meyer, Johannes Sobel
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Patent number: 3984249Abstract: A process is disclosed for increasing the sensitivity of negative-forming radiation sensitive silver halide layers by treating such silver halide layers with hydrogen. The layers thus treated manifest a reduced or substantial absence of reciprocity law failure as well as increased sensitivity to electromagnetic radiation. The products so treated can contain spectral and chemical sensitizers and/or color forming dye-couplers and/or other suitable addenda conventionally employed with photosensitive elements. The products can also exhibit the ability to increase still further in photosensitivity even after imagewise exposure thereof upon prolonged storage of the exposed products under ambient conditions before they are developed.Type: GrantFiled: February 4, 1975Date of Patent: October 5, 1976Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventors: Thomas A. Babcock, William C. Lewis, Thomas H. James
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Patent number: 3979213Abstract: This invention relates to improved spectral sensitization of silver halide emulsions containing silver halide grains having metal dopants occluded therein. In one aspect, methine dyes having a primary absorption peak at less than 700 millimicrons and a cathodic halfwave potential less positive than -1.0 volt can be incorporated in silver halide emulsions containing grains having metal dopants occluded therein at high concentrations which would normally cause considerable desensitization in a conventional surface-sensitive silver bromoiodide emulsion.Type: GrantFiled: August 19, 1974Date of Patent: September 7, 1976Inventors: Paul B. Gilman, Jr., Francis J. Evans, Gene L. Oliver
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Patent number: 3976489Abstract: The present invention relates to photography and, more particularly, to a novel radiation recording photographic diffusion transfer process film unit which comprises a photosensitive element which includes, in combination, a particulate dispersion of photosensitive crystals, preferably, photosensitive silver halide crystals adapted to be reduced to silver, upon contact with a silver halide reducing agent, as a function of the crystals' exposure to incident actinic electromagnetic radiation, having associated therewith an inorganic semiconductor adapted to donate electrons to the photosensitive crystals as a function of the exposure of the element to incident actinic electromagnetic radiation.Type: GrantFiled: April 8, 1974Date of Patent: August 24, 1976Assignee: Polaroid CorporationInventor: Boris Levy
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Patent number: 3966476Abstract: High sensitive silver halide emulsions are obtained by the production of a new kind of sensitivity nuclei which are called troglodyte nuclei and which are described hereinafter.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1974Date of Patent: June 29, 1976Assignee: AGFA-Gevaert, A.G.Inventor: Manfred Becker
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Patent number: 3963493Abstract: Direct-positive silver halide emulsions are described which have been fogged so that a test portion thereof when coated at a coverage of 0.50 to 5.50 g of silver per sq.m. gives a density below 0.50 upon processing without exposure for 6 min. at 20.degree.C in a developer I and an identical coated test portion gives a density that is at least twice that of the first test portion with a minimum of 0.50 upon processing without exposure for 3 min. at 20.degree.C in a developer II.The emulsions have high photographic speed and though fogged to a very low degree can yield direct-positive images of satisfactory density.Type: GrantFiled: December 27, 1972Date of Patent: June 15, 1976Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT N.V.Inventors: Willy Joseph Vanassche, Herman Alberik Pattyn, Hendrik Alfons Borginon
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Patent number: 3960568Abstract: A silver halide photographic material having increased sensitivity and gradient and being free from fog formation on storage, comprising a support and an emulsion layer containing very fine silver halide grains and containing a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic organic compound having a hydroxylamino group, such as 2-hydroxylamino-4,6-di(ethylamino)-1,3,5-triazine or 2,4-di(hydroxylamino)-6-diethylamino-1,3,5-triazine. The photographic material is useful for recording fine images with a superior sharpness, and the incorporation of the heterocyclic compound increases the sensitivity in spite of the fine grain size of the silver halide.Type: GrantFiled: November 18, 1975Date of Patent: June 1, 1976Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Tohru Sueyoshi, Yoshiyuki Nakazawa, Yoshuhara Nakamura, Reiichi Ohi, Tokiharu Kondo
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Patent number: 3954481Abstract: Sensitization of silver halide emulsions by merocyanines and cationic cyanines and the stability of this sensitization is improved by addition of heterocyclically substituted thioureas of the formula ##EQU1## wherein R.sup.1 is alkyl, alkenyl or arylR.sup.2 is alkyl, cycloalkyl or aryln is 0 or 1, andZ completes a 5- or 6-membered heterocyclic group, preferably one which also contains a sulfur atom.Type: GrantFiled: September 24, 1974Date of Patent: May 4, 1976Assignee: AGFA-Gevaert, A.G.Inventors: Hans Ohlschlager, Oskar Riester
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Patent number: 3954478Abstract: A silver halide light-sensitive material which comprises a light-sensitive silver halide emulsion containing a compound represented by the following formula (I): ##SPC1##wherein R.sub.1, R.sub.2, R.sub.3, R.sub.4 and R.sub.5 each represents a hydrogen atom or a lower alkyl group; and R.sub.6 and R.sub.7 each represents a hydrogen atom, a lower alkyl group or a lower alkoxy group or can combine to form a condensed ring, and X.sup.- represents an anion.Type: GrantFiled: December 23, 1974Date of Patent: May 4, 1976Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Naoki Arai, Reiichi Ohi
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Patent number: 3947274Abstract: A photographic light-sensitive material comprising a support having thereon at least one silver halide photographic emulsion layer with at least one of the layers of the photographic light-sensitive material containing a compound represented by the following general formula (I) or (II) ##EQU1## wherein R.sub.1, R.sub.2, and R.sub.3 each represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an aryl group or a heterocyclic ring residue, and R.sub.2 and R.sub.3 can combine to form an alkylene group; R.sub.4 represents those groups other than a hydrogen atom as described for R.sub.1, R.sub.2 and R.sub.3 ; and R.sub.5 represents an alkylene group of a polyoxyalkylene group having at least 4 carbon atoms, or the organic acid salt or mineral acid salt thereof.Type: GrantFiled: May 14, 1974Date of Patent: March 30, 1976Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Akikazu Mikawa, Ikutaro Horie, Keiichi Adachi, Hisashi Shiraishi
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Patent number: 3945829Abstract: Heterocyclic mercapto compounds are added to a binder layer containing colloidal silver which is comprised in a color photographic multilayer material. The colloidal silver layer may be a yellow filter layer to prevent exposure of the green, and red recording layers to blue light, or an antihalation layer arranged between the layer support and the lowermost light sensitive silver halide emulsion layer. The heterocyclic mercapto compounds reduce the contact fog produced in the (first) developer and increase color density in reversal processing. Additionally there can be present in the colloidal silver layer a sensitizer for the blue, green or red spectral region.Type: GrantFiled: July 15, 1974Date of Patent: March 23, 1976Assignee: Agfa-Gevaert AktiengesellschaftInventors: Hugo Zorn, Karl Kuffner, Hans Glockner, Jozef Frans Willems, Robrecht Julius Thiers
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Patent number: 3942986Abstract: Photographic direct-positive materials are described which comprise in admixture in a single layer or in superposed layers a monodispersed direct-positive emulsion and a heterodispersed direct-positive emulsion. By the use of both types of emulsions it is possible to obtain reduced contrast and good detail rendering in the high-light areas.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 1974Date of Patent: March 9, 1976Assignee: AGFA-GEVAERT, N.V.Inventor: Raymond Leopold Florens
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Patent number: 3936303Abstract: A silver halide photographic photosensitive element having a hydrophilic colloidal layer prepared by dispersing photographic additives in a fatty oil which is liquid at room temperature; which boils at temperatures higher than 250.degree.C under atmospheric pressure; which is soluble in water in a proportion of less than about 10% by weight at 25.degree.C; and which dissolves water in a proportion of less than about 5% by weight at 25.degree.C, and a developing method thereof.Type: GrantFiled: July 3, 1974Date of Patent: February 3, 1976Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Keisuke Shiba, Seiiti Kubodera, Hideki Naito, Takeshi Hirose
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Patent number: 3935010Abstract: My invention is directed to a photographic element capable of forming either a positive or a negative image, depending upon the choice of electromagnetic wavelengths to which it is exposed. The element inludes internally fogged photographic silver halide grains which are substantially free of surface fog. Associated with the grains is a desensitizer containing an imidazoquinoxaline nucleus having a reduction potential more positive than -0.90 volts and an oxidation potential more positive than +0.80 volt. The desensitizer is present in an amount of no more than that required to cover 25 percent of the silver halide grain surfaces. Also associated with the grains is a spectral sensitizing dye having an absorption peak at least 20 nm removed from any absorption peak exhibited by the desensitizer.Type: GrantFiled: September 3, 1974Date of Patent: January 27, 1976Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventor: Paul B. Gilman, Jr.
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Patent number: 3933505Abstract: A silver halide photographic emulsion for direct positives, containing a fluorene compound having at least one nitro group as a substituent.Type: GrantFiled: December 18, 1973Date of Patent: January 20, 1976Assignee: Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.Inventors: Keisuke Shiba, Masanao Hinato, Reiichi Ohi
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Patent number: 3933507Abstract: Heat developable light-sensitive photographic material having a layer which contains a light-sensitive combination of a silver compound substantially insensitive to light, a reducing agent for that silver compound and a polymethine sensitizer. The exposed material is heated so that the silver compound in the exposed areas is reduced and a visible silver image is formed.Type: GrantFiled: August 10, 1972Date of Patent: January 20, 1976Assignee: AGFA-Gevaert, A.G.Inventors: Anita VON Konig, Helmut Kampfer, Eric Maria Brinckmann, Frans Clement Heugebaert
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Patent number: RE29930Abstract: Very high speed direct-positive photographic emulsions comprising silver halide grains fogged with both reduction and gold fogging agents are described. For some applications other fogging agents, e.g. compounds of metals more electropositive than silver, can be substituted for the gold fogging agent. Photographic elements employing such emulsions and processes for preparing them are also disclosed.Type: GrantFiled: November 7, 1977Date of Patent: March 13, 1979Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventor: Bernard D. Illingsworth, deceased