The present invention relates to inkjet printing, and more particularly to a method and system for drying a printed document.
Inkjet printing has commonly been used for printing conventional documents, but is increasingly common in printing color photographs as well. Many inkjet printouts remain wet for several seconds, and even several minutes or hours, after printing, making them vulnerable to smearing. This relatively long drying time requires the printed medium to be handled carefully before it is completely dry to avoid damage.
Accordingly, the present invention is directed to a system for drying a printed medium, comprising a heated roll and a transport mechanism for moving the printed medium against the heated roll to dry the printed medium.
The invention is also directed to an inkjet printing mechanism having a system for drying a printed medium comprising a heated roll, a backing roll, and a transport mechanism for moving the printed medium between the heated roll and the backing roll to dry the printed medium.
The invention is further directed to a method for drying a printed medium, comprising the steps of disposing a heated roll in a medium transport path and transporting the printed medium along the medium transport path against the heated roll to dry the printed medium.
Further aspects and embodiments of the invention will be apparent from the description and claims set forth below.
To improve image quality, durability, and permanence, a thermal transfer overcoat (“TTO”) is often applied as a laminate to printed inkjet media, such as plain office paper or photo media, although other medias may also be overcoated in some implementations, such as fabric media. However, the TTO should not be applied to the image until the ink is sufficiently dry; otherwise, the application process may compromise image quality. The ink drying time depends on both the type of media used in the printed document and the amount of ink saturation in the printed image. For some papers, such as plain office papers or porous photo media, the drying process occurs quickly enough to allow for almost immediate application of the TTO. But for other papers, such as swellable media, the ink will not be dry enough for TTO application on the order of minutes or even hours. Although it is possible to simply wait for the ink to dry before applying the TTO, the long drying period makes the total printing process slow and inconvenient for some users.
The illustrated embodiments of the invention generally involve using a heated roll 100 to dry printed media. Although the examples discussed below focus on drying inkjet printed media, the illustrated drying system may be incorporated into any printing system or method where a drying mechanism is desired.
The heated roll 100 may be made from any material having a high specific heat, such as a metal, to optimize heat retention and heat transfer to the printed medium. Fuser rolls, which may be similar to those used in laser printers, may be incorporated into an inkjet printing mechanism, such as printer 90, to carry out the drying process. A variety of different inkjet printing mechanisms may employ the system described herein, such as plotters, cameras, facsimile or multi-function hardcopy devices, as well as auxiliary devices for use in conjunction with such printing mechanisms, but for convenience, a printer 90 is illustrated and described. The illustrated printer 90 defines a printzone 92 in which ink 94 is selectively deposited by one or more printheads 96 of one or more inkjet cartridges 98. A variety of different suitable ink application systems are known to those skilled in the art, such as those employing reciprocating printheads which scan across the printzone 92 or those that are stationary during printing and span the entire printzone 92, known in the art as page-wide-array print bars, which for diagrammatic purposes may also be illustrated by cartridge 98. Other heated roll 100 characteristics, such as size, hardness and applied pressure, may be adjusted according to desired printing and drying characteristics and will be described in greater detail below.
Moreover, in the various embodiments of the invention, one or more of the associated backing rolls may be heated or otherwise provide heat or energy to the printed media. Such heated backing roll may, for example and depending upon its placement in the configuration, assist with the drying of ink and/or with the attachment of an overcoat material.
Allowing the sheet 106′ to travel along the transport path 103 through the nip 108 while the ink is still wet does create some risk of damaging the image, but the nip area and pressure in the nip 108 may be adjusted to accommodate different paper and ink characteristics to minimize this risk. For example, if the sheet contains a photographic image printed on swellable media, the desired nip characteristics would be different than if the sheet had simple text printed on conventional paper (e.g., simple text tends to be insensitive to nip characteristics) because photographic images, in general, are more saturated with ink and require a longer drying time than plain text.
In this and other embodiments, the area in the nip may be increased by increasing the roll pressure and/or decreasing the roll hardness. For example, vulcanized rubber may be used to decrease the roll hardness, while steel or another metal may be used to increase roll hardness. A larger nip area 108 distributes the pressure from the heated roll 100 over a greater surface area on the printed sheet 106′. At first glance, allowing contact between the heated roll 100 and the sheet 106′ would appear to increase the likelihood that the image will be damaged during the drying process. However, the combined heat and pressure in the nip over a larger area actually promotes rapid drying and reduces or eliminates potential damage to the image for certain ink/paper types, which is an unexpected result.
Alternatively, increasing the heated roll 100 hardness and/or reducing the roll pressure using a pressure adjustment mechanism 111 that moves in the direction of vertical arrow 111′ reduces the nip area, creating a system that is gentler to the printed sheet 106′. The system shown in
Regardless of the specific nip characteristics, the heated roll 100 may be coated with a non-wetting material to further reduce possible damage to the image from the roll's surface. The non-wetting material may be, for example, a polyethylene, polypropylene, silcone rubber or Teflon(R). An optional heater or fan 107 may also be included to further aid the drying process. For instance, if the heater or fan 107 moved upwardly from the view of
After the entire sheet has been dried by the heated roll 100, it may be ejected out of the drying slot 102 as indicated by arrow 103′. At this point, the dried sheet 106″ should be dry enough for safe handling without damaging the printed image. If thermal transfer overcoat (TTO) material application is desired, the dried sheet 106″ may be inserted into a separate overcoating slot 104, in the system 101 of
As can be seen in
As noted above, however, allowing contact between the freshly printed sheet 106 and the heated roll 100 may potentially damage the printed image because the roll 100 needs to touch the image before it is completely dry to complete the drying process. Because of this potential risk, the configuration shown in
Because the printed sheet 106′ passes through the same system 200 for both the drying and the TTO application process, a user does not have to reinsert the sheet 106′ into the system through two different slots as is required in the embodiment shown in
The configuration 300 shown in
During TTO application, the dried printed sheet 106″ continues to travel along the transport path 301, without retracing any previous path portions, through a nip 302 formed by the heated roll 100 and a second heated roll 304. The TTO medium 112 is also trapped between the two heated rolls 100, 304, causing the TTO material 118 to melt away from the substrate 120 and fuse to the printed side 92 of the sheet 106″. As in the other embodiments, the TTO material 118 may be dispensed from a dispensing roll 122 and the substrate may be collected onto a take-up roll 124. The coated sheet 106′″ may then continue along its transport path until it is ejected from the system 300. The dual functionality of the heater roll 100 and the continuous paper path in this embodiment provides a compact system design that dries and coats sheets quickly.
Note that any roll combination may be used in the inventive system 101, 200, 300 as long as it contains at least one heated roll 100. For example, the system 101, 200, 300 may incorporate two heated rolls to form the nip, thereby heating the printed sheet 106′ simultaneously on its printed side 92 and its back side 92′ to increase drying efficiency. Using two heated rolls also facilitates melting and transfer of the TTO material onto the printed and dried sheet 106″. The residual heat from the drying process also helps improve TTO application. Also, although the illustrated embodiments show systems acting as both a dryer and a fuser, the TTO sheet 112 may be omitted from these embodiments to operate the system as a dryer only.
Allowing the heated roll 100 to contact the wet image surface without damaging the image is an unexpected result of the invention. Further, using the heated roll 100 in an inkjet printer is a novel approach to drying inkjet printed images because heated rolls 100 are normally used as fuser rolls in laser printers. In one embodiment, incorporating a laser printer fuser roll into an inkjet printer as a dryer roll uses an existing component in a novel manner.
The optimum parameters for the wait time between printing and fusing, the amount of nip pressure, transport speed through the system, and the heated roll temperatures for drying and fusing may all be varied to ensure that the system dries and coats printed media without compromising print quality. Experimental results have shown that a heated roll temperature between 90° C. and 160° C. dries the printed media without damaging image quality. The delay between the printing and the overcoating steps also affects the final print image quality; during testing, a 10 second delay tended to smear most images, while a 20 second delay resulted in varying print quality. A wait time of 40-60 seconds virtually eliminated smearing, although there was dye migration in some cases. The optimum parameters may be different in different printing systems, for differing amounts of ink laid on the sheet 106 and for different media, and these specific parameters can be deduced by those of skill in the art without undue experimentation.
As a result, the invention leverages a fuser assembly, which is normally used in laser printers, into a drying system for drying an inkjet-printed document. The invention also may use the fuser assembly to apply the TTO overcoat, providing an efficient way to apply the overcoat to slow-drying print media without adding a separate heating and drying element to the printer. Even though the heated roll 100 contacts the printed image while it is still wet, the invention unexpectedly decreases the image drying time without damaging the image. The inventive system may be incorporated into existing print engine mechanisms to lower the cost and complexity of the TTO engine and the drying engine. Further, by using the same nip to both dry the printed image and to fuse the TTO material 118, as shown in
Note that any of the embodiments described may be used solely as a dryer or as a fuser without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, the invention may be used to apply TTO material to a document printed by a different printer, or even printed using a system other than an inkjet system. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that the method and apparatus within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.
This Continuation-In-Part application claims the benefit of the utility application titled “HEATED ROLL SYSTEM FOR DRYING PRINTED MEDIA” (Ser. No. 10/066,064) filed on Jan. 31, 2002 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,679,599.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040066442 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10066064 | Jan 2002 | US |
Child | 10679607 | US |