Printing apparatuses include printheads to form images on substrate. A printing apparatus such as an ultraviolet curable printer may include a printhead to provide ultraviolet curable ink to a substrate to form an image thereon. The ultraviolet curable printer may also include a light source to cure the ultraviolet curable ink on the substrate.
Non-limiting examples are described in the following description, read with reference to the figures attached hereto and do not limit the scope of the claims. Dimensions of components and features illustrated in the figures are chosen primarily for convenience and clarity of presentation and are not necessarily to scale. Referring to the attached figures:
Printing apparatuses include printheads to form images on substrate. A printing apparatus such as an ultraviolet (UV) curable printer may include a printhead to move across a substrate to provide UV curable ink to the substrate to form an image thereon. A gloss level of the image may be dependent on the morphology of the UV curable ink, thickness of the ink layer and a roughness of the ink layer formed on the substrate which impact how light is scattered therefrom. The UV curable printer may also include a light source to cure the UV curable ink of the image on the substrate. Generally, however, the light source may emit a same amount of UV radiation to the entire image to provide an image having a same gloss level. Thus, the printing apparatus may not be able to selectively provide different gloss levels to various areas of an image in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
In examples, a method of printing an image using UV curable ink includes printing the image on a substrate by a printhead using the UV curable ink. The method also includes selectively applying a first amount of UV radiation by a first region of a light source to a first area of the image printed by the printhead after a first amount of time passes from printing the first area to form a first gloss level area having a glossy finish. The method also includes selectively applying a second amount of UV radiation by a second region of the light source to a second area of the image printed by the printhead after a second amount of time passes from printing the second area to form a second gloss level area having a matte finish such that at least one of the second amount of UV radiation is greater than the first amount of UV radiation and the first amount of time is greater than the second amount of time. The amount of time delay between the printing of UV curable ink on the substrate and its initial exposure to UV radiation impacts the uniformity, thickness, and smoothness of the ink layer resulting in different gloss levels thereof. Further, the amount of UV radiation received by UV curable ink on the substrate also impacts the uniformity, thickness, and smoothness of the ink layer resulting in different gloss levels thereof. Thus, the printing apparatus may be able to selectively provide different gloss levels to various areas of an image in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
In some examples, the light source 14 may include a light emitting diode array, or a mercury lamp, and the like. For example, the light source 14 may be in a form of a light emitting diode array (
Referring to
The second region 14b may selectively apply a second amount of UV radiation to the second area after a second amount of time passes from printing the second area to form a second gloss level area having a matte finish. That is, the UV curable ink of the second area of the image receives and is cured by the second amount of UV radiation after passage of the second amount of time. In some examples, the second amount of UV radiation may be a higher irradiance level than the first amount of UV radiation such as a full cure irradiance level to receive and fully cure the ink drops of the second area of the image. At least one of the second amount of UV radiation may be greater than the first amount of UV radiation and the first amount of time may be greater than the second amount of time.
The control module 28 may control the light source 14 such that at least one of the second amount of UV radiation may be greater than the first amount of UV radiation and the first amount of time may be greater than the second amount of time. For example, the control module 28 may enable the second region 14b to emit a greater amount of UV radiation onto the second area 27b of the image 27 than an amount of UV radiation emitted by the first region 14a of the light source 14 onto the first area 27a of the image 27. The control module 28 may also enable the first region 14a to emit a lesser amount of UV radiation onto the first area 27a of the image 27 than an amount of UV radiation emitted by the second region 14b onto the second area 27b of the image 27.
Alternatively, the control module 28 may control the light source 14 such that the first amount of time (e.g., period of time between printing the first area of the image and emitting a first amount of UV radiation from the first region to the first area) may be greater than the second amount of time (e.g., period of time between printing the second area of the image and emitting a second amount of UV radiation from the second region to the second area). In some examples, the first amount of UV radiation may be in a first range of 0 to 100 milli Joules and the second amount of UV radiation may be in a second range of 300 to 3500 milli Joules.
In some examples, the control module 28 may be implemented in hardware, software including firmware, or combinations thereof. The firmware, for example, may be stored in memory and executed by a suitable instruction-execution system. If implemented in hardware, as in an alternative example, the control module 28 may be implemented with any or a combination of technologies which are well known in the art (for example, discrete-logic circuits, application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), programmable-gate arrays (PGAs), field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), and/or other later developed technologies. In some examples, the control module 28 may be implemented in a combination of software and data executed and stored under the control of a computing device.
In some examples, each one of the first region 14a and the second region 14b of the light source 14 may be configured to apply the respective amounts of UV radiation during a same pass of the carriage 26 across the substrate 25. For example, the first amount of UV radiation by the first region 14a and the second amount of UV radiation by the second region 14b may be simultaneously applied to respective areas 27a and 27b of the image 27. In some examples, an intersection between the first section 30a and the second section 30b of the printhead 10 may be aligned with an intersection between the first region 14a and the second region 14b of the light source 14. Further, in some examples, the first section 30a and the second section 30b may have different sizes that correspond to a multiple of an image advance.
For example, the image 27 may be printed on the substrate 25 by a printhead 10 during a succession of carriage passes. That is, UV curable ink may be selectively applied on the substrate 25 after a respective substrate and image advance between carriage passes in which a new portion of the substrate 25 becomes addressable by the printhead 10 and the light source 14. The substrate movement in the substrate advancement direction ds may be perpendicular to the carriage transport direction dc. Consequently, an amount of substrate and image advance may be such that the first section 30a may apply a first amount of UV radiation on a respective first area 27a of the image 27, and the second section 30b may apply a second amount of UV radiation on a respective second area 27b of the image 27.
Alternatively, each one of the first region 14a and the second region 14b of the light source 14 may apply the respective amounts of UV radiation during different passes of the carriage 26 across the substrate 25. For example, during a respective pass of the carriage 26, the first group of nozzles 12 may be configured to print the first area 27a of the image 27. Additionally, the first region 14a of the light source 14 may be configured to selectively apply the first amount of UV radiation to the first area 27a of the image 27 after the first amount of time passes from printing the first area 27a to form the first gloss level area having the glossy finish. Subsequently, during another respective pass of the carriage 26, the second group of nozzles 13 may be configured to print the second area 27b of the image 27. Additionally, the second region 14b of the light source 14 may be configured to selectively apply the second amount of UV radiation to the second area 27b of the image 27 after the second amount of time passes from printing the second area 27b to form the second gloss level area having the matte finish.
In block S614, a second amount of UV radiation is selectively applied by a second region of the light source to a second area of the image printed by the printhead after a second amount of time passes from printing the second area to form a second gloss level area having a matte finish. The second amount of UV radiation is selectively applied such that at least one of the second amount of UV radiation is greater than the first amount of UV radiation and the first amount of time is greater than the second amount of time. For example, the second area of the image may be printed by a second group of nozzles of the printhead and the second amount of UV radiation may be selectively applied to the second area of the image by the second region by a LED array. The second amount of UV radiation may be selectively applied after the second amount of time passes from printing the second area to form the second gloss level area having the matte finish during another respective pass of the carriage across the substrate. In some examples, the first amount of time may be greater than the second amount of time. In some examples, the second amount of UV radiation may be greater than the first amount of UV radiation. In some examples, each one of the first and second amount of UV radiation may be based on at least one of an amount of time UV radiation is applied, an intensity of applied UV radiation, and an amount of time between printing of UV curable ink on a portion of the substrate and an application of UV radiation thereto.
It is to be understood that the flowchart of
The present disclosure has been described using non-limiting detailed descriptions of examples thereof that are not intended to limit the scope of the general inventive concept. It should be understood that features and/or operations described with respect to one example may be used with other examples and that not all examples have all of the features and/or operations illustrated in a particular figure or described with respect to one of the examples. Variations of examples described will occur to persons of the art. Furthermore, the terms “comprise,” “include,” “have” and their conjugates, shall mean, when used in the disclosure and/or claims, “including but not necessarily limited to.”
It is noted that some of the above described examples may include structure, acts or details of structures and acts that may not be essential to the general inventive concept and which are described for illustrative purposes. Structure and acts described herein are replaceable by equivalents, which perform the same function, even if the structure or acts are different, as known in the art. Therefore, the scope of the general inventive concept is limited only by the elements and limitations as used in the claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/026269 | 2/15/2013 | WO | 00 |