The present application is a United States national stage application of International patent application PCT/EP2016/080939 filed on Dec. 14, 2016 designating the United States, and claims foreign priority to European patent application EP 15201862.8 filed on Dec. 22, 2015, the contents of both documents being herewith incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The present invention relates to a device for fine embossing of packaging material with at least two embossing rolls, according to the pre-characterizing clause of patent claim 1.
Packaging foils for the tobacco industry or for the food industry have already for some time been embossed with embossing-roll devices, wherein, for example, so-called innerliners, which are wrapped around a number of cigarettes, or packaging material for chocolate, butter or similar foods, electronic components, jewellery or watches can be involved.
The so-called innerliners initially consisted of pure aluminium foils, such as domestic foils, and these were embossed in that they were led through between two rolls, of which at least one roll had a relief, the so-called logo. Until about 1980, such a pair of rolls preponderantly comprised a steel roll, on which a relief was formed, and a mating roll made of a resilient material, for example rubber, paper or Perspex. As a result of pressing the relief of the male embossing roll into the mating embossing roll=female embossing roll, the mirror-image imprint was produced.
For more demanding logos, the relief of the male embossing roll was transferred to a layer on the female embossing roll, and the depressions corresponding to the elevated points were etched out or machined out in another way. In recent times, lasers were also used for this engraving.
Since this production of female embossing rolls for demanding logos is complicated, beginning from about 1980, following the application of U.S. Pat. No. 5,007,271 from the same applicant, a so-called pin-up-pin-up system made progress, wherein two identical steel rolls having a very large number of pyramidal teeth with a lateral length at the lower edge of 0.1 to 0.4 mm interengage and emboss an innerliner running through between. Logos are produced with this device by teeth on one roll being wholly or partly removed.
As a result, it also became possible to produce so-called calendering, the previously glossy surface obtaining a matt and, as a result, also a more superior appearance as a result of the large number of small depressions which were caused by the teeth.
In parallel with the developments of embossing technology and the production of the embossing rolls, the change was also completed in the packaging materials, whereby the originally wholly metal aluminium foils were replaced by paper films, the surfaces of which were coated with thinner and thinner metal layers as a result of environmental considerations, ultimately the metal layer being sputtered on. In more recent time and also in the future, the metallization of the innerliner will become still less or vanish entirely.
At the same time, attempts are underway to move away from the classic packaging system of cigarettes packed in innerliners and this pack pushed into a carton casing, to so-called soft packs, only a wrapping film being provided to perform the two functions, namely keeping the cigarettes moist and protecting the same against the influences of external odours, on the one hand, and a certain stiffness for the mechanical protection of the cigarettes, on the other hand.
The developments in the production of the embossing rolls, in particular known from the same applicant, see, for example U.S. Pat. No. 7,036,347, led to a greater and greater range of decorative effects on the innerliners and to a greater technical offering for advertising purposes, which was applied not only in the cigarette industry but also in the food industry. Recently, however, attempts have been underway to reduce the advertising for smoking articles to a great deal or to eliminate it entirely, so that embossing the innerliner with advertising designs will no longer be possible to the previous extent. Therefore, to an increasing extent, ways are being sought to produce new decorative effects without the use of striking embossings, gold edges or such like embellishments.
New ways are also being sought for product identification which, until now, has primarily been ensured in world-wide cultivated brand names. Nowadays, for example, use is being made of so-called tactile effects, which are produced by specific surface structures of the papers or by special engravings. Textiles such as papers are provided with inflatable inks optimized for IR absorption, which produce so-called pseudo-embossings. The effect of this technique can be a noticeable relief formation, in order for example to produce a velvet-like surface or a matt effect. In the case of use for food-safe purposes, wetting techniques are, however, questionable.
In the case of tactile surfaces, the consumer identifies the product through his sense of touch. In addition, this can lead to use for Braille or for the production of hidden security features. Information produced by tactile means can be read, for example, by means of laser beams as a result of the reflectance dependent on the surfaces. Nowadays, there are also developments, the object of which is to produce acoustically audible effects by coating the surface.
Another area of the tobacco industry deals with the cigarette itself, for example with its mouthpiece, also called tipping.
The more and more restrictive legislation with regard to smoking products, and the endeavour to produce further features such as tactile, acoustic or other optical features, on the one hand, and the ever greater multiplicity of various types of packaging materials such as aluminium foils, metal-coated papers, tipping papers, hybrid films, plastic films, cardboard or semi-board, on the other hand, lead to the conventional pin-up-pin-up embossing rolls, in which both the driven roll and the mating rolls have a large number of teeth, although they can continue to be used completely and successfully for the embossing of innerliners, running up against their limit for the objectives specified above.
Known roll systems having a male embossing roll with male embossing structures and a female embossing roll with female embossing structures inversely congruent thereto can certainly widen the range of decorative elements but, because of the pair-wise fabrication and grading, are very costly in production and above all time-consuming, so that their production is not suitable for industrial embossing of, for example, metallized innerliners for the tobacco industry.
In addition, fine embossing can be ensured only with very high outlay in the production of such rolls. Added to this is the fact that, in this case, when a male embossing roll and an inversely congruent female embossing roll are used, during embossing the foil located in between is crushed in such a way that stresses arise in the transverse direction, which are unacceptable for tobacco goods papers. In addition, the result is a limit for hole formation which is difficult to manage and very high pressures are needed for a high-speed online process, wherein the embossing times lie in the millisecond range. Finally, there is a trend to use thicker papers.
In WO 2013156256 A1 from the same applicant, in order to achieve the general object of specifying a method for producing a set of embossing rolls with which it is possible to carry out fine embossing for the extremely different surface structures described of the specified materials of an extremely wide range of types in the online operation of a packaging system, it is proposed that, in a male/female embossing roll system, the female embossing surface structure be produced independently of a previously produced or physically already existing male embossing surface structure.
In the case of fine structures, this statement is sufficient, since this type of production permits a very large multiplicity of possible designs.
If, however, relatively larger freely shaped surfaces of logos are involved, their embossing with a satisfactory aesthetic quality is problematic. In order that these surfaces, for example in the case of innerliners, have the same reflectivity everywhere, the same minimum specific embossing pressure must be applied everywhere. However, this is not possible without suitable measures if there are extremely small local deviations of the geometry between male embossing and female embossing rolls, which allow the local embossing pressure to vary highly. Given excessively close tolerances and high pressures, the embossing produces holes. High pressures can impair the sandwich structure of an innerliner which, at elevated temperatures, leads to its degradation, in that varnish blotching arises on the rear side of the paper.
The solution proposed in EP 2 842 730 A1 from the same applicant, to provide the surfaces and/or side faces of the logo with facets, provides a substantial improvement in the pressing quality for a number of substrates.
In the case of certain paper underlayers, for example coloured paper, however, both the male/female structures and the structural elements with facets lead to a locally intense brilliance and therefore to aesthetically disturbing effects.
Starting from this prior art, the object of the present invention is to specify an embossing device with an embossing roll set having one male embossing and female embossing rolls each cooperating with each other, which not only permits fine embossing to be carried out for the extremely different surface structures described of the specified materials of an extremely wide range of types in the online operation of a packaging system, but, furthermore, to carry out the high-quality fine embossing, striking to the eye, of demanding logos such as, for example, mythical creatures, letters and the like with visual emphasis as a result of graduating the brilliance from brilliant to matt of these logos or parts thereof, in order to achieve an improvement in the aesthetic aspect of the logo and therefore the overall image, in particular in coloured papers.
In general, fine embossing with the male/female system is understood to mean that the contours of the fine embossing structures of the rolls exhibit an overall linear error in the axial and radial direction of less than +/−10 μm and/or an angular error of less than 5°.
Further objects and advantages are given by the dependent claims and the following description.
The invention will be explained in more detail below by using drawings of exemplary embodiments, in which:
In the present exemplary embodiment, the surfaces S1 of the male embossing structural elements PL1, the male embossing roll P1 and the bases B1 of the female embossing structural elements ML1 are provided with light-scattering elements D1 and DM1.
As a result of the scattering effect of the light-scattering elements, a matt appearance is produced at these points. The contrast which is produced with the surroundings as a result increases the perception of the logo. The exact shape or dimension of the light-scattering elements is not important within certain limits for the light scattering that is produced, since it lies at the perceptibility limit for the human eye. Thus, the light-scattering elements, instead of being formed in the shape of pyramids with a square, can also be formed with a rectangular or another cross section, or have a conical, half-round or half-moon shape or any other shape.
As emerges from the following figure descriptions, the light-scattering elements can be arranged either only on the male embossing structural elements or only on the female embossing structural elements or on both structural elements or on all or individual side surfaces of the structures or around structures.
In a departure from the idealized representation of the light-scattering elements in
In
In order that the light-scattering elements meet the requirements, the following conditions must be fulfilled:
Here:
Hk=Rf1+H+Rf2
Hg=Rf1+H+Rf2
H is the average height (=arithmetic mean formed from all heights belonging to N1, N2, . . . ).
In
According to
As mentioned further above, for simplicity all the light-scattering elements are shown as pyramids with a square cross section; however trials have shown that a multiplicity of other shapes such as half-round, half-moon-shaped or conical produce similar and, under certain circumstances, even better results.
Female embossing structural elements assigned to the female embossing roll correspond to the male embossing structural elements shown in
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15201862 | Dec 2015 | EP | regional |
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PCT/EP2016/080939 | 12/14/2016 | WO | 00 |
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WO2017/108516 | 6/29/2017 | WO | A |
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