The present invention relates to a blade coating method and apparatus for applying a coating liquid on a flat substrate.
A coating method such as roll coating, gravure coating and extrusion coating is heretofore known as a coating method for applying a coating liquid on a support.
A blade coating method as described in JP-A-5-220966 is also known as a coating method for applying a coating liquid on a flat substrate.
The blade coating apparatus 10 is used for applying a coating liquid on a flat substrate to form a coating layer. A disk-like recording medium (hereinafter referred to as “disk”) D which is an example of the flat substrate is used as a subject of coating.
The disk D is supported by a support member 40 (
A plate-like mask 30 is provided above the disk D. The mask 30 has an aperture 30a for exposing a to-be-coated surface D1 as an upper surface of the disk D on which a coating layer will be formed. The aperture 30a is shaped like a circle with a diameter of about 120 mm. Incidentally, the shape of the aperture 30a can be formed in accordance with the shape of the coating layer which will be formed on the disk D. When the shape of the aperture of the mask 30 is changed suitably, the shape of the coating layer can be set desirably. At the time of coating the disk D, the supported disk D is attached onto a lower surface of the mask 30 and retained in the condition that an outer circumferential edge of the disk D overlaps with a circumferential edge of the aperture of the mask 30 in view from above.
A blade 20 is provided above the mask 30. The blade 20 is a long member made of a metal material such as a stainless steel material. Particularly, it is preferable that the chromium content of the blade 20 is selected to be not lower than the chromium content of SUS316. In this manner, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, heat resistance and releasability of the blade 20 can be improved more greatly. As shown in
The blade coating apparatus 10 is provided with a coating liquid supply unit 60 for supplying a coating liquid to an upper surface of the mask 30. The coating liquid supply unit 60 supplies a predetermined amount of a coating liquid P onto the upper surface of the mask 30 and between the aperture 30a and the blade 20 before coating or at every coating.
As shown in
It is preferable that a coating liquid with a viscosity of 150 cP to 800 cP is used as the coating liquid P. It is especially preferable that a coating liquid with a viscosity of 200 cP to 700 cP is used as the coating liquid P.
It is preferable that an angle α between the pressure surface 20b and the front surface 20a of the blade 20 is set to be in a range of 110°≦α≦150°. In addition, it is preferable that an angle β between the pressure surface 20b and a rear surface 20c of the blade 20 is set to be in a range of 60°≦β≦100°. Moreover, it is preferable that the gap G between the pressure surface 20b of the blade 20 and the mask 30 is set to be in a range of 20 μm≦G≦150 μm.
Next, a method using the blade boating apparatus 10 for applying the coating liquid will be described.
In this blade coating method, a coating liquid P is applied on a to-be-coated surface D1 of a disk D exposed from the aperture 30a of the mask 30 under the condition that at least one of straightness and center-line average surface roughness satisfies the aforementioned ranges to make the blade 20 satisfy the aforementioned ranges.
First, the disk D is disposed on the support member 40 shaped like a table. As shown in
Then, as shown in
By the movement of the blade 20 from right to left in
Then, as shown in
In this manner, a circular step portion D2 which is not coated with the coating liquid P is formed in a central portion of the disk D. Then, as shown in
The disk D completely coated with the coating liquid P as described above is removed from the support member 40 and transferred to a coating liquid drying process as a next process not shown.
After the coating liquid is applied on the disk D, the mask cap 50 (
For example, this coating method can be applied to a means of forming a printing surface on a disk-like substrate by blade coating (or doctor blade coating) in a process for producing a magnetic recording medium including the substrate.
Such a printing method is a high-aperture-ratio coating method which is unconceivable from any other method such as screen printing. Accordingly, a phenomenon unconceivable from the screen printing which is small in rate of coating liquid consumption used at one stroke appears in the blade coating using the high-aperture-ratio mask.
The present inventor inspected a coating layer formed on a surface of a disk by blade coating using such a high-aperture-ratio mask. As a result, it was found that stripes occurred in end portions of the coating layer on the surface of the disk D in one case, a swollen coating portion occurred at an upstream end of the disk D in another case, and thickness irregularity occurred on the whole surface of the disk D in a further case.
Therefore, causes of these disadvantages were pursued. As a result, it was ascertained that the quantity of a coating liquid supplied initially and the quantity of coating liquid consumption used at one stroke are correlated with each other, and that these disadvantages are caused by the correlation. In order to solve these problems, therefore, an object of the invention is to provide a blade coating method in which a coating layer with a very uniform thickness can be formed without occurrence of any stripe in end portions of the coating layer on a surface of a disk D, without occurrence of any swollen coating portion at an upstream end of the disk D and without occurrence of any thickness irregularity on the whole surface of the disk D.
In the blade coating method according to the invention, a coating layer with a very uniform thickness can be formed without occurrence of any stripe in end portions of the coating layer on a surface of a disk D, without occurrence of any swollen coating portion at an upstream end of the disk D and without occurrence of any thickness irregularity on the whole surface of the disk D.
An embodiment of the invention as to a blade coating apparatus and a disk printing surface coating apparatus using the blade coating apparatus will be described below in detail with reference to the drawings.
The quantity of a coating liquid supplied by a coating liquid supply unit 60 (
While paying attention to this phenomenon, the present inventor made an experiment on variation in film thickness allowed in accordance with the relation between the quantity of a coating liquid initially supplied and the quantity of coating liquid consumption used at one stroke. According to this experiments the time of arrival of the blade at a member (serving as a subject of coating) from the start of movement of the blade was not shorter than 0.05 sec, preferably not shorter than 0.1 sec but shorter than 1 sec. Based on this fact, the time was set at 0.5 sec here and the speed of the blade was set at 120 mm per 1.5 sec.
(I) P2 was 2.1 g per sheet when a certain mask 30 was used and a gap t1 (see
Therefore, while the whole quantity P1 of the coating liquid supplied was changed variously, the situation of coating at that time was observed. Incidentally, in this case, a part of the whole quantity P1 of the supplied coating liquid was used because a coating liquid P′ (see
Table 1 shows results of the experiment in the case where P1 varied within a range of from 2 g to 8 g in the case of (I). According to Table 1, the results were:
(1) dislocation occurred in the coating layer unfavorably when P1=2 g (magnifying power [P1/P2]=0.95);
(2) stripes occurred in end portions unfavorably when P1=4 g (magnifying power=1.90);
(3) coating was excellent when P1=6 g (magnifying power=2.86); and
(4) coating was excellent when P1=8 g (magnifying power=3.81).
(II) P2 was 1.3 g per sheet when t1 was equal to 200 μm.
Table 2 shows results of the experiment in the case where P1 varied within a range of from 2 g to 10 g in the case of (II).
According to Table 2, the results were:
(1) stripes occurred unfavorably when P1=2 g (magnifying power=1.54);
(2) coating was excellent when P1=6 g (magnifying power=4.62);
(3) swollen coating occurred at the upstream end unfavorably when P1=8 g (magnifying power=6.15); and
(4) thickness unevenness occurred in the whole surface unfavorably when P1=10 g (magnifying power was 7.69).
As apparent from Tables 1 and 2, it is most preferable that the quantity P1 of the coating liquid remaining in a liquid reservoir on the upstream side of the blade 20 is selected to be in a range of from two times to five times as much as the quantity P2 of the coating liquid applied on one sheet of disk D at one stroke of the blade 20.
If the quantity P1 of the coating liquid was smaller than two times as much as the quantity P2 of the coating liquid, scratches or stripes occurred. On the other hand, if the quantity P1 of the coating liquid was larger than five times as much as the quantity P2 of the coating liquid, swollen coating or thickness unevenness occurred.
Generally, in the case of screen printing, P1 was in a range of from 100 P2 to 1000 P2 because printing was repeated in a range of from 100 times to 1000 times continuously until exhaustion of the coating liquid after P1 was once supplied. In the case of screen printing even in the aforementioned order, the ratio of an aperture of the screen to the whole area of a product was so low that the ratio of the quantity of coating liquid consumption used at one stroke to the whole quantity of the coating liquid was low. For this reason, difference in film thickness between the upstream side and the downstream side or thickness unevenness in the whole surface did not cause a problem in the screen printing.
The present inventor, however, has found that difference in film thickness between the upstream side and the downstream side or thickness unevenness in the whole surface occurs because the blade coating printing uses such a mask that the ratio of the aperture of the mask 30 to the whole area of the disk D is nearly 100%. While paying attention to this problem, the present inventor has finally solved this problem by selecting the quantity P1 of the coating liquid to be in a range of from two times to five times as much as the quantity P2 of the coating liquid applied on a sheet of disk D at a stroke of the blade 30.
In the background art in the field of blade coating printing, it was less possible to take notice of stripes generated in end portions because the quantity P1 of the coating liquid was set to be equal to the quantity P2 of the coating liquid required for one coating cycle so that a minimum quantity necessary for avoiding coating dislocation was used as the quantity P1 of the coating liquid in consideration of production efficiency, etc. It was much less possible to hit on the idea P1=2P2 because of consideration of production efficiency, etc.
Particularly when the subject of coating is a printable surface of a printable optical disk, such printing that the aperture ratio of the mask to the printable surface is nearly 100% is required. When the coating method according to the invention is executed on the printable surface, effectiveness is improved greatly.
As described above, when the coating method according to the invention is carried out in the field which requires such printing that the aperture ratio of the mask to the to-be-coated surface is nearly 100%, a coating layer with a very uniform thickness can be obtained without occurrence of any stripe in end portions of the coating layer on the surface of the disk D, without occurrence of swollen coating at the upstream end of the disk D and without occurrence of thickness unevenness in the whole surface of the disk D.
This application is based on Japanese Patent application JP 2005-35740, filed Feb. 14, 2005, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference, the same as if set forth at length.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P. 2005-035740 | Feb 2005 | JP | national |