A printer may apply print agents to a paper or another substrate. One example of a printer is a Liquid Electro-Photographic (“LEP”) printer, which may be used to print using a fluid print agent such as an electrostatic printing fluid. Such electrostatic printing fluid includes electrostatically charged or chargeable particles (for example, resin or toner particles which may be colorant particles) dispersed or suspended in a carrier fluid).
In an example of LEP printing, a printer system may form an image on a print substrate by placing an electrostatic charge on a photoconductive element, and then utilizing a laser scanning unit to apply an electrostatic pattern of the desired image on the photoconductive element to selectively discharge the photoconductive element. The selective discharging forms a latent electrostatic image on the photoconductive element. The printer system includes a development station to develop the latent image into a visible image by applying a thin layer of electrostatic print fluid (which may be generally referred to as “LEP print fluid”, or “electronic print fluid” “LEP ink”, or “electronic ink” in some examples) to the patterned photoconductive element. Charged particles (sometimes referred to herein as “print fluid particles” or “colorant particles”) in the LEP print fluid adhere to the electrostatic pattern on the photoconductive element to form a print fluid image. In examples, the print fluid image, including colorant particles and carrier fluid, is transferred utilizing a combination of heat and pressure from the photoconductive element to an intermediate transfer member (referred herein as a “blanket”) attached to a rotatable blanket drum. The blanket is heated until carrier fluid evaporates and colorant particles melt, and a resulting molten film representative of the image is then applied to the surface of the print substrate via pressure and tackiness. In examples the blanket that is attached to the blanket drum is a consumable or replaceable blanket.
For printing with colored print fluids, the printer system may include a separate development station for each of the various colored print fluids. There are typically two process methods for transferring a colored image from the photoconductive element to the substrate. One method is a multi-shot process method in which the process described in the preceding paragraph is repeated a distinct printing separation for each color, and each color is transferred sequentially in distinct passes from the blanket to the substrate until a full image is achieved. With multi-shot printing, for each separation a molten film (with one color) is applied to the surface of the print substrate. A second method is a one-shot process in which multiple color separations are acquired on the blanket via multiple applications (each with one color) from the photoconductive element to the blanket, and then the acquired color separations are transferred in one pass as a molten film from the blanket to the substrate.
A significant challenge in LEP printing is that the blanket held by the blanket drum is prone to contamination. After a number of transfers have taken place from the photoconductive element to the blanket, and subsequent transfers from the blanket to a substrate, contaminants such as print agent residue, dust, machine oil and the like will build up on the surface of the blanket. The accumulation of such contaminants on the blanket can greatly reduce print quality. Using a cleaning roller or belt to clean a blanket can reduce the amount of contaminants, but the blanket surface may be a non-uniform surface after such cleaning due to contaminants not accumulating evenly on the cleaning roller or belt. In certain situations, if the print agent uniformity on the cleaning roller or belt accumulates to 10 μm, deformations may exist on the next print agent transfers from photoconductive element to blanket, and blanket to substrate, such that print quality of production jobs is impacted. In certain situations, if the print agent uniformity on the cleaning roller or belt accumulates to 50 μm, print quality of production jobs can be severely impacted and the blanket may be deformed by the cleaning process to an extent to compel replacement.
To address these issues, various examples described in more detail below provide, a system and a method that enables servicing of the blanket to remove accumulated contaminants. In an example of the disclosure, a blanket is to receive thermoplastic print agent from a photoconductive element. A layer of the thermoplastic print agent is to be transferred from the blanket to a rotatably mounted endless cleaning surface. Residue from the blanket is, to be transferred to the layer of thermoplastic print agent at the endless cleaning surface. The endless cleaning surface is to be scraped to transfer the residue to a collection element.
In examples, the endless cleaning surface utilized to receive the layer of thermostatic print agent and to collect the residue from the blanket may be a surface of a roller or a surface of a belt. In an example, a heater may be utilized to heat the endless cleaning surface, as it is engaged by the scraper. In an example, the heater may heat the endless cleaning surface as it receives the layer of thermoplastic print agent from the blanket. In an example, the layer of thermoplastic print agent obtained by the endless cleaning surface includes thermoplastic print agent received by the blanket from a photoconductive element and is thermoplastic print agent that has not encountered a substrate.
In an example, a biasing device may be utilized to bias the scraper against the endless cleaning surface. In a particular example, the biasing may be implemented with force control. A sensor may be utilized to record a variance in thickness and/or density of the endless cleaning surface. A force with which the scraper is to be biased towards the endless cleaning surface can be determined in view of the observed variance. The biasing device can then be adjusted to exert the determined biasing force towards the endless cleaning surface.
In an example, the scraper may be moved along a linear track to traverse and engage a width of the endless cleaning surface. In an example, the scraper may do the scraping of the endless cleaning surface concurrent with the endless cleaning surface cleaning the blanket. In a particular example, the scraper may scrape the endless cleaning surface, the endless cleaning surface cleaning the blanket, and the blanket being utilized in a printing operation may all occur concurrently.
In an example, the scraper may scrape the residue from the blanket into a collection element that is a collection tray. In a particular example, the collection element may include a heater to heat the residue to a melting point within the collection element, and a mold to collect melted residue and allow the melted residue to cool to transform into a hardened state. In another particular example, the collection element may be situated at a printer above an impression drum, and a screw may engage with the residue in the collection tray to chop the residue into pieces and cause the pieces to accumulate into a second collection tray that is not situated above the impression drum.
In this manner the disclosed apparatus and method enables use of a rotatably mounted endless cleaning surface for blanket cleaning by leveling the surface of the cleaning roller after the cleaning roller accumulates blanket residues. The disclosed method and system enables frequent, or even continuous, blanket cleaning with minimal consumables usage and without interruption to the printing process or costumer workflow. The ability to effectively utilize an endless cleaning surface to evacuate large amounts of print agent and substrate residues from the blanket is highly advantageous for printing on structured substrates such as canvas and wall paper.
Users and providers of LEP printer systems and other printer systems will appreciate the improvements in print quality, the ability to clean the blanket and level the cleaning roller frequently and without disrupting the printing process, longer blanket life, and ease in collecting accumulated blanket residue that are afforded by utilization of the disclosed examples. Installations and utilization of LEP printers that include the disclosed apparatus and methods should thereby be enhanced.
In the example of
In examples, the thermoplastic print agent is a thermoplastic ink. As used herein, the term “print agent” refers generally to any material or to any substance that can be applied upon a media by a printer during a printing operation, including but not limited to aqueous inks, solvent inks, UV-curable inks, dye sublimation inks, latex inks, liquid electro-photographic inks, liquid or solid toners, powders, primers, and overprint materials (such as a varnish). As used herein, an “ink” refers generally to any fluid that is to be applied to a substrate during a printing operation to form an image upon the substrate.
Continuing with the example of
Residue transfer engine 106 represents generally a combination of hardware and programming to transfer residue from the blanket to the layer of thermoplastic print agent at endless cleaning surface 110. As used herein, “residue” on a blanket refers generally to a substance that remains at the blanket after the blanket has been used to transfer an inked image to a substrate. In examples, the residue may include leftover print agent, paper dust, varnish, colorant, and/or resin.
Continuing with the example of
In a particular example, scraper 112 may be a scraper that has a convex surface and is movable along a linear track in a horizontal plane. In some circumstances, a scraper with a convex shape will have enhanced rigidity relative to a flat scraper. In examples, a rounded portion of the convex scraper is to engage the endless cleaning surface. In many circumstances utilizing a scraper with a small surface area relative to the endless cleaning surface (e.g., traversing such scraper along a horizontal linear track to engage a width of the endless cleaning surface) will require less torque and will better handle bumps of residue (with less scraper bounce) than a system that utilizes a large fixed blade.
In examples, scraper 112 is to scrape endless cleaning surface 110 concurrent with endless cleaning surface 110 cleaning the blanket. In certain examples, scraper 112 is to scrape endless cleaning surface 110 concurrent with the blanket being utilized in a printing operation (e.g., the blanket receiving print agent from a photoconductor or the blanket transferring print agent to a substrate). These concurrent scraping, cleaning, and printing operations are made possible by the utilization of the endless cleaning surface 110 in conjunction with an endless blanket (a blanket that is, or is mounted to, a drum, roller or belt). In a particular example, the endless cleaning surface is positioned abutting the blanket at a point in the blanket rotation that is after a blanket-to-substrate nip and before a blanket-to-photoconductor nip.
In the example of
In certain examples, system 100 includes a heater 218 to heat endless cleaning surface 110. In such examples, scraper 112 is to engage with endless cleaning surface 110 while endless cleaning surface 110 is being heated. Heating the residue which has accumulated on endless cleaning surface 110 to a softening point can assist in the removal process as smoother surface finish on the endless cleaning surface 110 informed and scattering of debris is avoided. In one example, the endless cleaning surface may be heated to approximately 100 C+−10 C at the time scraper engages the endless cleaning surface.
Continuing at
In other examples, collection element 220 may be, or may include, a stationary tray, a movable tray, a heated tray, a heated tray with a removable mold, or any other type of tray for collecting residue that is scraped from endless cleaning surface 110 by scraper 112.
Continuing at
In certain examples, system 100 may include a variance recording engine 222, a determination engine 224, and an implementation engine 226. Variance recording engine 222 is to utilize a sensor to record a variance in thickness and/or density of endless cleaning surface 110. In examples, variance recording engine 222 may trigger a cleaning of endless cleaning surface 110 upon determining that a predetermined level of residue buildup, or a predetermined amount nature of residue buildup (e.g., identified peaks and valleys). Determination engine 224 is to determine a force with which scraper 112 is to be biased towards endless cleaning surface 110 given the amount or nature of the observed or recorded variance. Implementation engine 226 is to adjust biasing device 216 to exert the biasing force that was determined by determination engine 224 towards endless cleaning surface 110. In examples, system 100 may access or utilize a look-up table in calculating the force with which scraper 112 is to be biased towards endless cleaning surface 110. In examples, the biasing device 216 to be utilized in conjunction with variance recording engine 222, determination engine 224, and implementation engine 226 may be a variable spring or a variable stiffness spring.
In the foregoing discussion of
Memory resource 330 represents generally any number of memory components capable of storing instructions that can be executed by processing resource 340. Memory resource 330 is non-transitory in the sense that it does not encompass a transitory signal but instead is made up of a memory component or memory components to store the relevant instructions. Memory resource 330 may be implemented in a single device or distributed across devices. Likewise, processing resource 340 represents any number of processors capable of executing instructions stored by memory resource 330. Processing resource 340 may be integrated in a single device or distributed across devices. Further, memory resource 330 may be fully or partially integrated in the same device as processing resource 340, or it may be separate but accessible to that device and processing resource 340.
In one example, the program instructions can be part of an installation package that when installed can be executed by processing resource 340 to implement system 100. In this case, memory resource 330 may be a portable medium such as a CD, DVD, or flash drive or a memory maintained by a server from which the installation package can be downloaded and installed. In another example, the program instructions may be part of an application or, applications already installed. Here, memory resource 330 can include integrated memory such as a hard drive, solid state drive, or the like.
In
System 100 includes a rotatably mounted endless cleaning surface 110 to receive thermoplastic print agent 410 from photoconductor element 402. This thermoplastic print agent 410 has not been in contact with a substrate during a printing process. In this example, endless cleaning surface 110 is rotatably mounted and is an endless roller surface as the cleaning surface is wrapped around a cleaning surface drum 412 that is it rotate around a drum axis 418.
Rotatably mounted endless cleaning surface 110 is to receive a layer (which may include all or a portion of thermoplastic print agent 410 that blanket 214 received from photoconductor element 402 from blanket 214 at a second nip 420. Second nip 420 is formed as blanket 214 and endless cleaning surface 110 rotate in opposite directions (first direction 450 and second direction 416 respectively) in contact with one another.
After receipt of the print agent layer, endless cleaning surface 110 is to engage with blanket drum 404 to transfer residue from blanket 214 to the layer of thermoplastic print agent 410 on endless cleaning surface 110. Such transfer may also be referred to as a collection of residue from blanket 214 onto the print agent layer that is at endless cleaning surface 110.
Continuing with the example of
In a particular example, system 100 may utilize a sensor 502 to record a variance in thickness and/or density of the endless cleaning surface 110. In examples, the measured variance in thickness and/or density is a product of build-up of residue (the residue collected from blanket 214) upon endless cleaning surface 110. In this example, system 100 is to determine a force with which scraper 112 is to be biased towards endless cleaning surface 110 in view of the observed variance. System 100 is to then adjust biasing device 216 (e.g., moving biasing device 216 to cause a shortening or lengthening of a spring included within biasing device 216) to exert the determined biasing force towards endless cleaning surface 110.
In this example, system 100 includes a heater 218 to heat endless cleaning surface 110. In this example, scraper 112 is to engage with endless cleaning surface 110 while endless cleaning surface 110 is being heated. In this manner, the residue which accumulated on endless cleaning surface 110 is heated to a softening point that assists in transfer of the residue from endless cleaning surface 110 to a collection element 220. In an example, the endless cleaning surface 110 may be heated to approximately 100 C+−10 C at the time scraper 112 engages endless cleaning surface 110. In certain examples, heater 218 may also be utilized to heat endless cleaning surface 110 as endless cleaning surface 110 receives the layer of thermoplastic print agent 410 from the blanket 214.
Continuing at
In other examples, the mold 506 may be constructed such that when cooled the residue can be removed from mold 506 by an automatic removal system (e.g., a combination of hardware and software for removing a block of residue from mold 506 with little or no user activity). In a particular example, system 100 may include a second collection tray 510, and a screw conveyor 508 or other transport to engage with the residue in the collection element (first collection tray) 220 to chop the residue into pieces and cause the pieces to accumulate in the second collection tray 510. In one example, screw conveyor 508 may engage with the, residue in mold 506 of first collection tray 220 to chop the residue into pieces and cause the pieces to accumulate in the second collection tray 510.
System 100 includes a scraper 112 to scrape endless cleaning surface 110 to transfer the residue from endless cleaning surface 110 to a collection element (not visible in
According to the example of
Charging element 804 may include a charging device, such as a charge roller, corona wire, scorotron, or any other charging device. A uniform static charge is deposited on the photoconductive element 402 by the charging element 804. As the photoconductive element 402 continues to rotate, it passes the imaging unit 806 where one or more laser beams dissipate localized charge in selected portions of the photoconductive element 402 to leave an invisible electrostatic charge pattern (“latent image”) that corresponds to the image to be printed. In some examples, the charging element 804 applies a negative charge to the surface of the photoconductive element 402. In other implementations, the charge is a positive charge. The imaging unit 806 then selectively discharges portions of the photoconductive element 402, resulting in local neutralized regions on the photoconductive element 402.
Continuing with the example of
The print fluid is transferred from the photoconductive element 402 to blanket 202. The blanket may be in the form of a blanket attached to the rotatable second cylindrical drum 404. In other examples, the blanket may be in the form of a belt or other transfer system. In this particular example, the photoconductive element 402 and blanket 202 are on drums 406, 404 that rotate relative to one another, such that the color separations are transferred during the relative rotation. In the example of
Once the layer of print fluid has been transferred to the blanket 202, it is next transferred to a print substrate. In this example, the print substrate is a web substrate 850 moving along a substrate path in a substrate path direction 860. In other examples, the print substrate may a sheet substrate that travels along a substrate path. This transfer from the blanket 202 to the print substrate may be deemed a “second transfer”, which takes place at a point of engagement between the blanket 202 and the print substrate. The impression cylinder 810 can both mechanically compress the print substrate into contact with the blanket 202 and also help feed the print substrate. In examples, the print substrate may be a conductive or a non-conductive print substrate, including, but not limited to, paper, cardboard, sheets of metal, metal-coated paper, or metal-coated cardboard. In examples, the print substrate with a printed image may be moved to a position to be scanned by an inline color measurement device 826, such as a spectrometer or densimeter, to generate optical density and/or background level data.
Controller 828 refers generally to any combination of hardware and software that is to control part, or all, of the LEP printer 800 print process. In examples, the controller 828 can control the voltage level applied by a voltage source, e.g., a power supply, to one or more of the developer assemblies 812, the blanket 202, a drying unit, and other components of LEP printer 800. In this example controller 828 includes system 100 for servicing blankets utilizing thermoplastic print agent that is discussed in detail with respect to
A layer of the thermoplastic print agent is transferred from the blanket to a rotatably mounted endless cleaning surface (block 904). Referring back to
Residue is transferred from the blanket to the layer of thermoplastic print agent at the endless cleaning surface (block 906). Referring back to
The endless cleaning surface is scraped with a scraper to transfer the residue to a collection element (block 908). Referring back to
Although the flow diagram of
It is appreciated that the previous description of the disclosed examples is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present disclosure. Various modifications to these examples will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other examples without departing from the spirit or scope of the disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the examples shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein. All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the blocks or stages of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features, blocks and/or stages are mutually exclusive. The terms “first”, “second”, “third” and so on in the claims merely distinguish different elements and, unless otherwise stated, are not to be specifically associated with a particular order or particular numbering of elements in the disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17051091 | Oct 2020 | US |
Child | 17477089 | US |