The present embodiment relates to the irradiation of marked media. It finds particular application in conjunction with an irradiation system in which ultraviolet (UV) radiation is selectively applied to an imaged region of print media to fuse, cure, or dry the image. However, it is to be appreciated that the present embodiment is also amenable to other like applications.
Printing methods, such as xerographic and ink-jet printing methods, use fusing or curing as a way to provide image permanence. Ink-jet printing methods often use a water-based marking material or ink which is applied to a substrate, such as paper. The ink remains wet until air dried or heat dried. If printed pages are stacked without sufficient drying time, ink may smear or transfer to the adjacent sheet. Drying time is therefore an obstacle to high speed printing. In applications where double-side printing is used, or where printing is performed on non-absorbent substrates, the slow dry time can be an even larger obstacle to high print speeds.
UV curable inks have been developed to address problems of drying and permanence of images in ink-jet printing systems. The inks are cured with a UV flood lamp. UV curable inks have also been developed for printing systems that jet melted ink that is solid at ambient temperatures. For these inks, UV curing hardens the ink compared to its un-irradiated state, thereby improving the prints resistance to scratching, smearing, and transferring. This is particularly important for prints that may be exposed to higher pressures and/or temperatures than usual. Furthermore, the chemical crosslinking that can be achieved by UV curing can create desirable material properties for the printed ink that are not achieved with ordinary heat based curing approaches.
In typical xerographic marking devices, a dry marking material, such as toner particles adhering triboelectrically to carrier granules, is used to create an image on a photoconductive surface which is then transferred to a substrate. The toner image is generally fused to the substrate by applying heat to the toner with a heated roller and application of pressure to melt or otherwise fuse the dry marking material. The fusing process serves two functions, namely to attach the image permanently to the sheet and to achieve a desired level of gloss.
In multi-color printing, successive latent images corresponding to different colors are recorded on the photoconductive surface and developed with toner of a corresponding color. The single color toner images are successively transferred to the copy paper to create a multi-layered toner image on the paper. The multi-layered toner image is permanently affixed to the copy paper in the fusing process.
Fusers, because of the high temperatures at which they operate and frequent heating and cooling cycles that they undergo, tend to be prone to failure or suffer reliability issues. The reliability issues are of particular concern in printing systems which employ several small marking devices. These systems enable high overall outputs to be achieved by printing portions of the same document on multiple printers in which an electronic print job may be split up for distributed higher productivity printing by different marking devices, such as separate printing of the color and monochrome pages. However, since each marking device in the printing system has its own dedicated fuser, the reliability issues are compounded.
Alternative fusers have been developed which employ light for fusing images. For example, high energy laser beams have been used to fuse toner particles.
These methods for fusing and curing images all involve exposing the entire sheet to the energy source, which is both energy consuming and generates excess energy to be dissipated by the fusing system and may also cause sheet shrinkage and or curl.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,459,561 to Ingram, entitled METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR FUSING TONER INTO A PRINTED MEDIUM, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, discloses fusing a toner image with a high-energy laser beam using an optical scanner.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,436,710 to Uchiyama, entitled FIXING DEVICE WITH CONDENSED LED LIGHT, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, discloses a fixing device which includes an LED array and a cylindrical lens. The lens condenses the light from the LED array onto the toner image and fuses it to the sheet.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,536,889 to Biegelsen, et al., entitled SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR EJECTING OR DEPOSITING SUBSTANCES CONTAINING MULTIPLE PHOTOINITIATORS, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, discloses inks for use in inkjet printing which comprise UV-sensitive photoinitiators which are responsive to different UV wavelengths.
Aspects of the present disclosure in embodiments thereof include a marking system and a method of marking. In one aspect, the marking system includes at least one image applying component for applying a marking material to a substrate in forming an image on the substrate. The marking material includes a radiation sensitive material. An addressable irradiation device receives the marked substrate from the image applying component. The irradiation device provides an array of addressable irradiation elements which irradiate the marked substrate. At least some of the irradiation elements are selectively actuable. The irradiation device emits radiation within a range of wavelengths to which the radiation sensitive material is sensitive.
In another aspect, the marking system includes at least one marking device for applying a marking material to a substrate in forming an image on the substrate. The marking material includes a radiation sensitive material. An irradiation device includes an array of addressable irradiation elements, the irradiation device receiving the substrate and irradiating an area of the substrate which is substantially no larger than that covered by the image by selective activation of the array of addressable irradiation elements as the substrate moves relative to the array. In another aspect, the marking method includes applying a marking material to a substrate to form an image on the substrate, the marking material comprising a radiation sensitive material. The marked substrate is irradiated with an array of addressable irradiation elements, at least a plurality of the irradiation elements emitting radiation in a range of wavelengths within which the radiation sensitive material reacts. The plurality of irradiation elements are selectively actuated.
Aspects of the exemplary embodiment relate to a marking system comprising at least one marking device which applies a marking material to a substrate, such as print media, the marking material comprising a radiation-sensitive material which reacts upon exposure to radiation within a range of wavelengths and an irradiation device which irradiates the substrate with radiation within the range of wavelengths, the irradiation device including an array of selectively addressable irradiation elements.
The marking system may be a printing system, such as a xerographic system in which dry toner is applied to a substrate, or an ink-jet, gravure, or offset system, in which a liquid marking material is applied to the substrate. In both liquid ink systems and solid toner systems, the marking material forms an image on the substrate. The marking system may include one or a plurality of marking devices, such as one, two, three, four, six, eight, or more marking devices. In various aspects, each marking device may be associated with its own dedicated irradiation device. In other aspects, a plurality of marking devices is associated with a common irradiation device. In various aspects, the marking device includes a primary fixing (e.g., fusing) device which serves to at least tack the marked media to the substrate, the irradiation device applying a further fixing treatment to the marked substrates. In one specific aspect, the irradiation device is a common fusing device which augments the fusing performance of primary fusing devices resident in a plurality of marking devices.
The substrate may be a usually flimsy physical sheet of paper, plastic, or other suitable physical print media for images, whether precut or web fed.
The array of addressable irradiation elements may include a single irradiation source, such as a laser, e.g., a raster output scanner (ROS) which scans across the sheet. A scanning laser beam of this type is described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,459,561 to Ingram, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. Alternatively, the array may include a plurality of irradiation sources, such as a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) array, or an array of light emitting diodes or laser diodes, both of which will be referred to herein as LEDs. In one embodiment, an array is formed by a string of addressable elements in the shape of a spiral wound around a cylindrical core which is rotated relative to the substrate. Similarly, an array of addressable elements may be achieved by a single irradiation source which follows a spiral path, the path being rotated relative to the substrate.
Each of the addressable irradiation elements may be independently controllable. For example, an addressing system selectively addresses the elements of the array to cause the elements to change state. In this way, the array is capable of selectively irradiating portions of a marked substrate as the substrate moves relative to the array. In various aspects, the addressable irradiation elements each have at least two intensity states, such as on and off. The radiation from two or more addressable irradiation elements may be combined to provide different levels of irradiation to a single point on a substrate. In other aspects, at least some of the addressable fusing elements have a range of states, such that the radiation energy is variable over a range of intensities between maximum and minimum values. In various aspects, the elements can change state in a time which is substantially less than the time required for a sheet to pass the array, thereby allowing multiple portions of an image to be selectively irradiated.
In one embodiment, the addressable irradiation elements are actuated to expose marked areas of a substrate to the radiation while unmarked areas are substantially unexposed. In one aspect, where several marking materials are applied to a substrate, such as marking materials comprising cyan, magenta, yellow, and black colorants, respectively, the irradiated portion of the substrate includes only the immediate neighborhood of the applied marking materials, which may be minimally larger than the union of those portions of the substrate which have been marked by the marking materials. As a result, portions which are outside the immediate neighborhood of the applied marking material(s) receive little or no irradiation. This reduces the amount of radiation applied to a substrate which has incomplete coverage of marking media. Further, it will be appreciated that the where different images are applied, different portions of the respective substrates can be irradiated. Additionally, by varying the intensity of the radiation marked portions which benefit from higher irradiation, such as those with greater ink drop density or toner pile heights can be exposed to higher radiation intensity than those for which lesser intensities are satisfactory. The intensity of the radiation can also be varied to accommodate different substrate weights, which may benefit from higher radiation intensities. The UV radiance typically required to cure opaque inks is in the range of 1-20 watts/cm2.
In various aspects, the marking system includes a control system in communication with the addressing system which identifies portions of a digital image, or corresponding marked substrate from which the image is derived, that are marked or are to be marked, which enables the addressing system to determine which of the plurality of addressable elements to actuate to effect irradiation of the image. To register the area of cure to the area which has been marked, various techniques exist. For example, Video Path Electronic Registration (ViPER), which was developed for registration of color separations may be adapted for this purpose. Electronic registration of images is described, for example, in US Published Application No. 2004/0212853, published Oct. 28, 2004, for ELECTRONIC IMAGE REGISTRATION FOR A SCANNER by Kelly, et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The marking material may comprise dry toner particles, a liquid ink, or a liquefiable ink which is melted before applying to the substrate (often referred to as a solid ink because the ink is solid at room temperature. The marking material, whether it comprises toner particles, typically associated with a carrier material, or a liquid or liquefiable ink, includes at least one radiation sensitive material that reacts upon exposure to a range of wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation. Subsequently, the marking material is irradiated with an amount of electromagnetic radiation in the range of wavelengths effective to cause the radiation sensitive material(s) to react. In the case of a xerographic system this effects what is typically referred to as fusing. In an ink-jet system, the result may be expressed in terms of curing. In both cases, the irradiation may influence the permanence of the marked substrate, such that the marking material is more securely attached to the substrate. Alternatively or additionally, the viscosity of the marking material can be altered to shorten the drying time of the marking material or to make the marking material sufficiently cured for immediate stacking or handling prior to achieving its final state. Material properties such as color, hardness, or electrical conductivity of the marking material can also be altered by the irradiation.
The radiation sensitive material may comprise a photosensitive resin that polymerizes upon exposure to ranges of wavelengths of radiation specific to the radiation sensitive material. Where a plurality of radiation sensitive materials is present in the marking material, these may each respond to a different, distinct wavelength range. In the case of an ink, the marking material may comprise a pigment dispersed in an aqueous or organic solvent such as water, toluene, methylethylketone, or the like. The radiation sensitive material may comprise a polymerizable resin comprising a monomer or monomers which polymerize in the presence of the radiation typically together with a suitable photoinitiator, as is known in the art. Exemplary resins include urethanes and acrylates, such as aliphatic urethane-based oligomers, ester-based acrylates, and the like. Or, the solvent itself may be a polymerizable material. In the case of a dry toner composition, the radiation sensitive material may be incorporated into or comprise the resin material for the toner particles. Suitable UV curable inks are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,978,969 to Chieng, U.S. Pat. No. 6,428,862 Noguchi, U.S. Pat. No. 6,790,875 to Noguchi, et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 6,310,115 to Vanmaele, et al., the disclosures of which are incorporated herein in their entireties by reference. UV curable gelators for use in liquid or solid inks are described, for example, in application Ser. No. 11/034,866, filed Jan. 14, 2005, for “RADIATION CURABLE INKS CONTAINING CURABLE GELATOR ADDITIVES,” by Breton. The gelators may include amphiphilic structures, such as N-acyl-1,n-amino acid derivatives, trans-1,2-bis(ureido)cyclohexane derivatives, as well as ortho-bis(ureido)benzene derivatives.
The marking material may be deposited on the substrate as a single material or as separate materials. For example, toners or inks each comprising a different pigment, such as cyan, magenta, yellow, or black pigment, may be separately laid down on the substrate.
The marking material may include a first photoinitiator that responds to exposure to a first range of wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation and a second initiator that responds to exposure to a second range of wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation that is distinct from the first range of wavelengths. Subsequently, the marking material is irradiated with an amount of electromagnetic radiation in the first range of wavelengths effective to cause the first photoinitiator to react, and then irradiating the at least one marking material with an amount of electromagnetic radiation in the second range of wavelengths effective to cause the second photoinitiator to react, as described, for example, in above-mentioned U.S. Pat. No. 6,536,889.
The addressable elements may emit electromagnetic radiation in a range of wavelengths, including a wavelength or range of wavelengths to which the radiation sensitive material reacts. In one aspect, the addressable irradiation elements emit electromagnetic radiation in the ultraviolet (UV) range of the spectrum and the radiation sensitive material(s) reacts to electromagnetic radiation in the ultraviolet (UV) range of the spectrum. The UV range is typically considered to be the range between soft X-rays and visible violet light, ranging from about 10 nanometers (nm) to about 375 or 400 nm. The range includes wavelengths classified as UV-A (315-400 nm), UV-B (280-315 nm), and UV-C (100-280 nm). An exemplary wavelength range is from about 250 to about 300 nm. In one specific embodiment, at least about 80% of the radiation emitted by the addressable elements falls within this range. Suitable elements include ultraviolet light emitting semiconductor devices such as an AlxGal-x N LEDs, wherein changing the relative proportions of Al and Ga can affect the wavelength of emitted light. Such devices are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,777,350 and WO 97/48138 to Philips Electronics, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The array may include groups of addressable elements, each group irradiating in a different wavelength range. For example, the array may include a plurality of elements which irradiate the substrate with radiation in a first wavelength range and elements which irradiate the substrate in a second wavelength range. For example, a first set of elements irradiates in a wavelength range at which a first radiation sensitive material reacts, such as a photoinitiator in a cyan colored marking material, a second set of elements irradiates in a wavelength range at which a second photoinitiator reacts, such as a photoinitiator in a magenta colored marking material, and so forth for yellow and black marking materials. Each of the elements may be actuated so as to irradiate substantially only those portions of the image comprising the corresponding marking material.
In an alternative embodiment, an addressable irradiation device includes optics and radiation source resembling a traditional ROS. In this embodiment, a switchable UV source with a faceted rotating UV mirror is directed at the marked sheet. The source can write at different irradiation levels and can have a spot size somewhat larger than the pixel size of the marking device.
In various aspects of the exemplary embodiment, a marking method includes irradiating the marking material with an amount of radiation in a range of wavelengths which causes the radiation sensitive material to react. The method includes marking a substrate with a marking material which includes a radiation sensitive material to form an image on the substrate and irradiating the marked substrate with an array of addressable irradiation elements, the array being operable to irradiate an area of the substrate which is only minimally larger than the image. The marking method may serve to achieve different humanly visible process colors, for example, in the cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK) system or the red, green, blue, and black (RGBK) system, which is useful in printing on transparent substrates.
In various exemplary embodiments, the systems and methods described herein can also include transferring the marking material from the substrate to a second substrate after irradiating the marking material. In various exemplary embodiments, transferring the substance from the first substrate to the second substrate includes transferring the substance from an intermediate transfer belt or drum to a sheet of paper.
By way of example,
With reference also to
In an alternative embodiment, adjacent columns of addressable elements 32 are shifted relative to one another, e.g., by half the width of an element. This arrangement allows for a higher resolution in irradiated area to be obtained by overlapping the irradiated areas of adjacent shifted elements and providing an amount of power to each element such that the overlapped irradiated areas have sufficient irradiation to process marking material on the substrate (e.g., fuse of cure the marking material).
The exemplary array 30 is an LED array (e.g., an LED bar), a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) array, a liquid crystal pixel illuminated by a line illuminator or an edge-emitting laser diode array, e.g., such as that associated with a raster output scanner (ROS) configuration. The array 30 includes a relatively coarse distribution of addressable irradiation elements 32 as compared to the resolution of the image forming component 16, which is typically expressed in terms of pixels or dots per inch (dpi). Thus, exemplary array 30 includes on the order of about 1 to 20 addressable irradiation elements 32 per centimeter, such as about 2-10.
As illustrated in
In one embodiment, the drive system includes a driver for Y direction translation of an array which can be less than a full width of the image and thereby provide selectively addressable elements across the full width of the image.
With reference again to
In the exemplary embodiment, driver 50 and electronic image storage device 56 are part of a single controller 60 that also includes a programmable processor 62. Controller 60 is coupled to marking device 12 and to array 30 and lens drive system 44, and may be adapted to coordinate the operation of these and other elements in the marking system, as described below. In one embodiment, the coordinated operation of the controller 60 is achieved through a set of operating instructions (e.g., software) programmed into programmable processor 62.
In the operation of marking system 10, an electronic image of marked image 22 is captured upstream of irradiation device 20 via known techniques associated with the operation of marking device 12 in creating the marked image. The captured electronic image is embodied in electronic-image signal 58, which is then provided to electronic image storage device 56, where the electronic image is stored. Information regarding the (X, Y, θ) registration of the marked image 22 relative to substrate 13 in the upstream marking process that creates marked image 22 is recorded or is otherwise included in the electronic-image signal 58. For example, the electronic image is stored in rasterized format such as is created using a raster output scanner (ROS). Alternatively, the electronic image is stored as a bitmap. The electronic image is then provided to controller 60 and driver 50.
Substrate 13 proceeds from marking device 12 to irradiation device 20. As substrate 13 proceeds under the addressable elements 32, or shortly prior to the image reaching the elements 32, the addressable elements 32 in array 30 are selectively activated by driver 50 based on the information in the electronic image so that substantially only those portions of substrate surface 18 that include marking material 14 are irradiated.
In the selective activation of irradiation elements 32, as described above, it should be noted that the amount of radiation (UV radiation in the illustrated embodiment) provided by each addressable element 32 need not be the same for all elements 32 and that some of the elements may irradiate the portion of image 22 passing in radiative contact therewith at greater or lesser intensities than other elements. In other embodiments, selective actuation of two or more elements 32 in a single row 34 can provide a range of intensities of radiation to a pixel which is irradiated by the two or more elements 32. In some circumstances, it may be advantageous for each element 32 to provide a fixed amount of radiation. Such fixed irradiation may be suited, for example, to when untreated image 22 is relatively uniform in nature.
By way of example, image 22 shown on substrate surface 18 in
In one embodiment, the registration of the image as it reaches the array 18 is assumed to be the same as that during the marking process. This assumes that reasonable tolerances can be achieved. Calibration prints may be used as a measure of the registration tolerance. In another embodiment, the toner image is sensed directly prior to the substrate reaching the array 30. In another embodiment, a local autocorrelation of image 22 (or information relating thereto) with printing data is used to determine image properties such as the (X, Y, θ) registration and warpage.
In a more robust embodiment that can measure the dynamic and static registration, the (X, Y, θ) registration of image 22 on substrate 13 as it reaches the array 30 is measured and compared to the registration of image 22 as formed on substrate surface 18 during the upstream marking process. This is accomplished, for example, by capturing a second electronic image of the image via an image sensor 70, such as a digital camera, arranged upstream of array 30 and optically coupled to substrate 13 as it passes under the image sensor. Image sensor 70 is operably (e.g., electrically) coupled to driver 50, for example, through electronic image storage device 56, as shown. The second electronic image is embodied in a second electronic-image signal 72 provided from image sensor 70 to storage device 56. The relative (X, Y, θ) registrations of the first and second electronic images are then compared (e.g., with the assistance of processor 62) and any offset or warpage is accounted for in the selective activation of addressable irradiation elements 32.
In various aspects, image 22 includes cyan, yellow, magenta, and black images, and addressable elements 32 are activated so that an area on substrate surface 18 that is at most only minimally larger than that defined by the union of these images is irradiated.
The radiation from the array 30 causes the radiation sensitive material(s) in the marking material 14 to react by irradiating the marking material 14 with radiation having a wavelength within the range of wavelengths to which the radiation sensitive material(s) react, with an amount of radiation effective to achieve a desired property in the at least one marking material. Where two or more photoinitiators are employed different ones of the elements 32 may emit radiation in different wavelength ranges which match those of the two or more photoinitiators.
The marking system 10 may also include other components, such as a paper feeder (not shown) upstream of the marking device 12 and at least one output destination (not shown), such as a stacker, downstream of the fuser.
In various aspects of the exemplary embodiment, addressable fusing or irradiation is performed on both sides of the substrate being processed. The irradiation device may be configured for two sided irradiation of the substrate or separate irradiation devices may irradiate a respective side, as disclosed, for example in above-mentioned copending application Ser. No. 11/000,168.
The fuser 120 includes a hollow cylindrical fuser member in the form of a roll 126 with an outer surface 128, a longitudinal axis 130 and an interior 132. Fuser 126 also includes an opposing cylindrical pressure roll 134 with an outer surface 136 and a longitudinal axis 138 parallel to and coplanar with axis 130. The axes 130, 138 may be generally aligned in the Y-direction. Fuser roll 126 may be made, for example, of UV-transmitting glass, such as fused quartz or a heat-resistant borosilicate glass (e.g., PYREX™ from Corning, Inc., Corning, N.Y.). Alternatively, the fuser member may in the form of a flexible belt. The belt may be joined at ends thereof to form a continuous loop and held in contact with the pressure roll 134 by suitable pressure applying members, or a disposable belt, as described, for example, in copending application Ser. No. 11/000,168.
Fuser roll 126 and pressure roll 134 are in pressure contact at a point on their respective outer surfaces 128,136, thereby forming a nip 140 therebetween, and are rotatably driven about their respective axes in the directions indicated by the respective arrows, via respective motors or other drive sources (not shown).
The substrate 13, having opposed upper and lower surfaces 18, 38, respectively, is conveyed through the nip. Upper surface 18 includes thereon marking material 114, such as toner, that collectively forms a toner image 122. The marking material comprises a radiation sensitive material, as discussed above. The marking material may arrive at the fuser 120 in an unfused state or in a partially fused state. Toner image 122 may be a black and white (K) image, a process color (P) image, a magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) image, a custom color image (C), combinations thereof, or the like.
The toner image 122 may be formed upstream of fuser 120 using conventional xerographic processes. In general, the marking device 112 includes xerographic subsystems which together comprise an image forming component 150 capable of forming an image on the substrate. The image forming component 150 typically includes a charge retentive surface, such as a photoconductor belt or drum, a charging station for each of the colors to be applied, an image input device which forms a latent image on the photoreceptor, and a toner developing station associated with each charging station for developing the latent image formed on the surface of the photoreceptor by applying a toner to obtain a toner image. A pretransfer charging unit charges the developed latent image. A transferring unit transfers the toner image thus formed to the surface 18 of the substrate.
The array 30 is arranged so that addressable irradiation elements (not shown) are in radiative communication with substrate upper surface 18 when substrate 13 is passing through the nip, or shortly before the substrate passes through the nip. In the illustrated embodiment, a focusing lens 40 is optionally arranged adjacent array 30 to focus radiation at a focal plane coincident with nip 140. While the illustrated array irradiates the nip it is also contemplated that the array may irradiate the substrate upstream of the nip, such that when the toner reaches the nip it has been at least partially melted. In one embodiment, the array 30 may be exterior to the roller 126, for example, located upstream of the nip (i.e., to the left of the roller 126 in
The toner image 124 exiting the fuser 120 is at least partially fused. In one embodiment, the image is at least tacked to the substrate when it exits fuser 120. A further fusing treatment may be applied subsequent to the fusing treatment applied by fuser 120.
The marking system 100 may further include a cleaning unit 154 downstream of fuser 120. Cleaning unit 154 is adapted to remove unfused toner 114 from substrate upper surface 18 after the substrate has passed through fuser 120. Cleaning unit 154 may include, for example, air jets, air knives, a vacuum, electrostatic transfer elements, brushes or the like (not shown).
In the operation of xerographic system 100, an electronic image of toner image 122 may be captured upstream of the fuser via known techniques associated With the operation of marking device 112 in creating the toner image, as described for the embodiment of
Substrate 13 proceeds from marking device 112 and is then fed into nip 140 of fuser 120. As substrate 13 proceeds through nip 140, or shortly prior to reaching the nip, the addressable elements 32 in array 30 are selectively activated by driver 50 based on the information in the electronic image so that substantially only those portions of substrate surface 18 that include unfused toner 114 are irradiated. As substrate 13 passes through and exits nip 140, the irradiation, in combination with the applied pressure of fuser roll 126 and pressure roll 134 fixes previously unfused toner 122 to substrate surface 18, thereby forming thereon fixed toner and a corresponding fixed toner image 124. This may be accomplished by only irradiating an area of substrate surface 18 that is minimally larger than that defined by the area covered by unfused toner 114.
In one embodiment, the registration of the image as it reaches the fuser is assumed to be the same as that during the marking process. This assumes that reasonable tolerances can be achieved. Calibration prints may be used as a measure of the registration tolerance. In another embodiment, the toner image is sensed directly prior to the substrate entering nip 140 with a sensor 70. In another embodiment, a local autocorrelation of toner image 22 (or information relating thereto) with printing data is used to determine image properties such as the (X, Y, θ) registration and warpage.
In a more robust embodiment that can measure the dynamic and static registration, the (X, Y, θ) registration of substrate 13 as it enters nip 140 is measured and compared to the registration of toner image 40 as formed on substrate surface 34 during the upstream marking process. This is accomplished, for example, by capturing a second electronic image of the toner image via an image sensor 70, such as a digital camera, arranged upstream of fuser 120 and optically coupled to substrate 13 as it passes under the image sensor.
In various aspects, toner image 22 includes cyan, yellow, magenta, and black images, and addressable elements 32 are activated so that an area on substrate surface 18 that is at most only minimally larger than that defined by the union of these images is irradiated.
After being processed by fuser 120 according to one or more of the exemplary embodiments described above, substrate 13 then passes to cleaning unit 154, which is in operable communication with substrate upper surface 18. Controller 60 directs cleaning unit 154 to remove unfused toner from substrate upper surface 18 (e.g., via blanket clean). By fusing an area of substrate upper surface 18 that is at most only minimally larger than that defined by the unfused toner image 22, any unfused toner remnants (e.g., background streaks, bands and flecks) falling outside of the fused area will be removed from the substrate during cleaning. Without selective fusing, such remnants would be fused to the substrate and not be removable by the cleaning unit.
In an exemplary embodiment, the amount and distribution of UV radiation provided to substrate surface 18 by addressable irradiation elements 32 is varied by driver 50 to accommodate the type and quantity of toner and/or surface finish (e.g. gloss level) desired. Information relating to the type of finish of substrate surface 18 may be input to controller 60 via input device 160. Thus, different surface finishes can be provided to different portions of the substrate or aspects of the type of image to be formed, e.g., a matte finish for pictorials and glossy finish for text, or vice versa. In certain printing applications, variations in the absorptive properties of the toner and the substrate could lead to undesirable variations in printing quality. In such instances, it would be preferred that the transfer of heat to the substrate not depend on the toner and/or the surface characteristics of the substrate.
In another exemplary embodiment, addressable heating elements 32 are used to make the gloss in fused toner image 22 non-uniform, thereby achieving a differential gloss effect. For example, black (e.g., text) portions of an image are irradiated less than color portions such that the black portions may be relatively matt and the color portions may have more gloss.
The printing system 10, 100 may incorporate “tandem engine” printers, “parallel” printers, “cluster printing,” “output merger,” or “interposer” systems, and the like, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,579,446; 4,587,532; 5,489,969 5,568,246; 5,570,172; 5,596,416; 5,995,721; 6,554,276, 6,654,136; 6,607,320, and in copending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/924,459, filed Aug. 23, 2004, for Parallel Printing Architecture Using Image Marking device Modules by Mandel, et al., and application Ser. No. 10/917,768, filed Aug. 13, 2004, for Parallel Printing Architecture Consisting of Containerized Image Marking devices and Media feeder Modules, by Robert Lofthus, the disclosures of all of these references being incorporated herein by reference. In general, a parallel printing system feeds paper from a common paper stream to a plurality of printers, which may be horizontally and/or vertically stacked. Printed media from the various printers is then taken from the printer to a finisher where the sheets associated with a single print job are assembled. Variable vertical level, rather than horizontal, input and output sheet path interface connections may be employed, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,326,093 to Sollitt.
In operation, the marked substrate is irradiated by the first irradiation device 220 with the driver 50 actuating the addressable elements to irradiate substantially only those portions of an image 22 formed from the first marking material 14 comprising the first initiator. The marked substrate is irradiated by the second irradiation device with the driver 50 actuating the addressable elements to irradiate substantially only those portions of the image 22 formed from the second marking material 214 comprising the second initiator. It will be appreciated that there may be more than two image forming components 216, 217, such as three, four or more, such as one for each color to be applied, e.g., one for each of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black marking material.
In another embodiment, both irradiation devices 220, 221 may irradiate with the same wavelength and both marking materials may comprise the same photoinitiator. In this embodiment, irradiation devices 220, 221 may selectively irradiate different portions of the image by selectively addressing appropriate irradiation elements such that one of the irradiation devices irradiates the portion applied by the first image forming component 216 and the other irradiation device irradiates the portion applied by the second image forming component 217.
As will be appreciated, in the system 300 of
The printing system 300 includes a control system 360 which is in communication with a marking device controller 361, 362, associated with each marking device 312, 313. Marking device controllers 361, 362 may be similarly configured to controller 60 shown in
The marking devices 312, 313 each comprise an image applying component 16, 370, respectively, which serves to apply the marking material, such as ink or toner, to the substrate of the substrate 13 and which may be similarly configured to image applying component 16 of
In conventional systems, a sheet which is imaged and fused two or more times tends to have a higher gloss than a sheet which is fused only once, resulting in differences in image appearance between the pages of a finished document. In the present system, where both marking engines 312, 313 apply an image to the same sheet, the gloss of the twice fused sheet can be more closely matched to that of a once-fused sheet by substantially only irradiating the portions imaged in each marking device.
As will be appreciated, in the system 400 of
In the case of a xerographic system, the primary irradiation devices 412, 413 perform at least a partial fusing of the image applied by the image forming component 16, 470. By partial fusing, it is meant that the fixing of the image is not up to the desired level for the final printed media and/or the appearance of the image, e.g., gloss level, is not within desired tolerances, over at least a portion of the image. For example, the primary fusing device serves to at least tack the toner image to the print media (i.e., a partial fixing) in such a way as to allow the print media and toner image to be transported to the secondary fusing device 440, which completes the fusing of the image, for example by modification of the gloss and/or further fixing. In this embodiment, both primary and secondary fusing devices contribute to the fusing of the image on at least a portion of the substrate sheets. The primary fusing device may thus serve to provide what will be referred to as “in situ permanence,” while the secondary fusing device is used to generate a desired level of archival permanence and final image appearance. In this embodiment, both primary and secondary fusing devices contribute to the fixation of the image and/or the image quality of at least a portion of the sheets, and/or portions of individual sheets.
To minimize the demands on the integral fusing devices 420, in one embodiment, only enough heat (in the case of a fusing device incorporating heat) or other fusing parameter, such as pressure, light, or other electromagnetic radiation, is used to provide in situ permanence. The gloss level of the imaged media arriving at the secondary fusing device 440 can thus be lower than that desired for its final appearance. Additionally, the level of fixing can be lower than that desired for archival permanence. As a result, reliability and lifetime of the individual marking device is improved. Additionally, higher throughputs can be achieved by reducing the constraints the integral fusing devices 420 place on the marking devices 412, 413. In a conventional printing system, the throughput of the fusing device often limits the throughput of the respective marking device and thus of the overall printing system. Providing a secondary fuser or fusers 440 which take on some of the fusing functions allows higher throughputs for each of the marking devices and thus a higher total productivity to be achieved. Additionally, or alternatively, the secondary fuser can be employed to reduce image inconsistencies in the outputs of the first and second marking devices, e.g., reducing gloss variations between images applied by the first marking device and images applied by the second marking device.
The secondary fusing device 440 may be called upon only in cases where there is a fusing shortfall (fixing, image gloss, image gloss uniformity, productivity) of the primary fusing devices. In this embodiment, the secondary fusing device 440 does not treat all the printed substrates. For example, the primary fusing devices may have sufficient fusing capability such that full fusing of the images on a particular type of paper, at a selected gloss level and desired level of fixing, and at a given productivity, is achieved without operation of the secondary fusing device. Thus, at some times during printing, the primary fusing devices 420, 421 may have the ability to complete the fusing of the printed images (in terms of both fixing and desired appearance characteristics), without the need for the secondary fusing device 440. In such cases, the secondary fusing device 440 is optionally bypassed and the printed media is directed from the respective marking device(s) directly to the finisher 444. At other times, for example, in order to maintain full productivity and/or when the substrate to be used or gloss level desired is such that the primary fusing device cannot maintain complete fusing, the primary fusing device of one or more of the marking devices effects a partial fusing, e.g., it at least serves to tack the toner image to the substrate in such a fashion as to avoid image disturbance as the sheet is transported by the conveyor system 402 to the secondary fusing device 440, where the fusing process is completed. The secondary fusing device 440 can be designed such that it has fusing latitude to accomplish the specified final image fixing and appearance of the media.
In another embodiment, all of the printed media is directed through the secondary fusing device 440. In this embodiment, the secondary fusing device may apply a fusing treatment to all the media, to only to selected substrate sheets, and/or to selected portions of sheets.
The secondary fusing device 440 allows a high gloss mode to be specified. In this mode, a gloss level higher than that which can be achieved by an individual marking device at the desired productivity for the particular print media selected is achieved.
The printing system 400 includes a control system 460 which is in communication with a marking device controller 461, 462, associated with each marking device. Marking device controllers 461, 462 may be similarly configured to controller 60 shown in
For example, the control system 460 addresses the secondary fusing device to correct unwanted variations in gloss both across the sheet and between sheets from different marking devices. The control system 460 may determine the appropriate level of secondary fusing to apply to the substrate to achieve preselected final fusing characteristics (appearance and/or level of fixing).
In one embodiment, the secondary fusing or curing device 440 is used to apply the equivalent of a watermark to the substrate by providing an area of the substrate imaged surface, which has a modified property, e.g., an altered marking material property that is either visible or machine readable, such as a higher gloss level, a color shift, the modified UV reflectance, or a change in electrical conductivity. The area may be of a preselected shape, e.g., the shape of a company logo, or may carry encoded information for the purpose of authentication or job integrity control. For example, an area of different gloss is distinguishable to the eye when the substrate is tilted at a sufficient angle. Information on the shape and location of the gloss watermark may be stored in the control system algorithm. Where the gloss watermark comprises an area of higher gloss than the surrounding area, the control system addresses the secondary fusing device to selectively apply UV radiation to the area of the substrate where the gloss watermark is to be formed. Another example employs a machine to read an invisible authentication code recorded in a portion of an image in the form of a UV written pattern where the UV exposure modifies the UV reflectance of the material.
In other aspects, gloss variations within the image are reduced by selectively irradiating portions of the image with different radiation intensities. For example, some colorants or colorant combinations may yield differences in gloss which can be reduced by selectively irradiating the portion of the image at a higher or lower intensity than other portions.
A sensor 470, such as a gloss meter, detects a property of the marked substrates, such as gloss. The sensor may be located anywhere in the conveyor system 402 which is accessible to substrates marked by the first and second marking devices 412, 413. In the illustrated embodiment, the sensor 470 is located upstream of the secondary fusing device 440. In another embodiment, the sensor 470 is located downstream of the secondary fusing device 440, such as between the secondary fusing device and the finisher 444. In yet another embodiment, the sensor is an offline sensor. The sensor 470 may periodically evaluate substrates, e.g., test sheets, marked and irradiated by the first and second marking devices 412, 413, and may communicate the measurements made to the control system 360, which stores information from the sensor in an algorithm. Measurements on gloss and/or other fusing characteristics can thus be used by the control system to determine appropriate settings for the secondary fusing device 440 and or provide instructions to the marking device controllers 461, 462, so as to make adjustments to the operation of the irradiation systems 420, 420.
The exemplary marking systems 10, 100, 200, 300, and 400 may receive image data from a computer network, scanner, digital camera, or other image generating device (not shown).
With reference to
With reference to
It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
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