Not applicable.
Not applicable.
This invention relates generally to printing or fabricating objects with pigment flakes, and more particularly to magnetically aligning pigment flakes in a plane to enhance the cumulative visual effect of the flakes.
Pigment flakes are used in a variety of applications, such as paint, inks, textiles, cosmetics, extruded films, plastic castings, and powder coatings. Different types of pigment flakes can provide various, and often striking, visual effects. Color shifting is an example of a visual effect that can be obtained using pigment flakes. The pigment flakes can have an optical interference structure, such as a Fabry-Perot structure or thin-film stack, that changes color as the flake is tilted with respect to the viewing angle. Examples of such color-shifting images are used as security features on bank notes, like the U.S. 20-dollar bill, and for decorative purposes on and in a wide variety of consumer items, including vehicles, helmets, eye glass frames, fingernail polish, and cell-phone cases, to name a few. Other examples of pigment flakes include reflective flake pigments and diffractive flake pigments.
In many applications, the pigment flakes tend to align in a plane of the object, such as the printed paper, to produce a visual optical effect from the aggregate effect of the individual flakes. It is not necessary for each flake to be perfectly aligned with each other, or with the plane of the substrate, but suitable optical effects can be obtained when a sufficient portion of the flakes are suitably aligned.
Unfortunately, some operations do not lend themselves to planar alignment of pigment flakes and others actually contribute to the degradation of alignment of flakes that are applied in a generally planar fashion. Therefore, it is desirable to produce objects incorporating pigment flakes with improved planar alignment of the flakes.
The present invention provides enhanced visual appearance of objects using flake pigments. In one embodiment, magnetic pigment flakes are applied to a surface of a substrate. A magnetic field is then applied to more closely align at least a portion of the magnetic pigment flakes to a plane of the surface of the substrate. The visual appearance is enhanced because of the aggregate optical effect of the planarized pigment flakes. In another embodiment of the invention, flakes are applied to a surface and then burnished to planarize the flakes.
In a particular embodiment, an image is printed on a document using a printing technique that aligns flakes to the plane of the substrate during application, but de-planarizes the flakes when completing the printing process. Magnetic color-shifting pigment particles in a fluid carrier to a surface of a substrate, and a magnetic field is applied to more closely align at least a portion of the magnetic color-shifting pigment particles to a plane of the surface of the substrate. Typically, the flakes are fixed after planarization by drying or curing the carrier. Such images can be used for decorative or security purposes, such as an anti-counterfeiting device on a bank note.
I. Introduction
The present invention provides enhanced visual effects using magnetic pigment flakes. The magnetic pigment flakes are dispersed in a fluid carrier that allows the magnetic pigment flakes to respond to torque arising from a magnetic field applied across the flake. In another embodiment, flakes are physically flattened by burnishing a printed image while the carrier is sufficiently plastic to allow orientation of the flakes into the plane of the substrate.
I. Exemplary Printing Applications
The pigment flakes are generally small, thin flakes that are flat or reasonably flat. Typical dimensions for a flake might be about twenty microns across and about one micron thick; however, these dimensions are merely exemplary and not limiting. Much larger or much smaller flakes could be used, as could flakes with different aspect ratios. Optically variable pigment (“OVP”™) pigment flakes include an optical interference structure, such as a Fabry-Perot structure, made from thin film layers. The OVP shifts color with viewing angle. Different optical designs can produce various hues and color travel. A thin film layer of magnetic material, such as a layer of nickel or P
The magnetic pigment flakes 16 on the face of the die are shown as being reasonably well aligned in a plane corresponding to the surface 20 of the substrate 22, which is supported by a plate or table 24. The substrate could be paper, film, laminate, card stock, fabric, leather, plastic, or metal, for example. For convenience of discussion, a paper substrate will be used as an example. The flakes can be aligned on the face of the die in a variety of fashions. Flakes tend to follow the flow of the carrier so as to present the least fluid resistance. Flakes in a carrier (e.g. ink) can be aligned to a surface by drawing the ink into a thin layer along the surface with a blade or squeegee. The die can then pick up the drawn flakes and print them onto the substrate.
Ink 40 is drawn across the screen with a blade or squeegee 42 in the direction shown by the arrow 44. Drawing the ink across the screen with the squeegee tends to align the pigment flakes 16 in the printed ink 40′ in the plane of the substrate 22 because flakes tend to align along the direction of fluid flow and the act of drawing the squeegee across the screen and substrate tends to align the flakes as shown.
The de-planarization that occurs degrades the optical effect(s) that might otherwise be obtained if the flakes retained their as-applied planarization. Other processes might not produce initially planarized flakes, such as spray or jet processes, and even if as-applied planarization is maintained, improvements in the visual quality of the printed image might be obtained with further planarization of the flakes. Thus, it is desirable to be able to planarize pigment flakes after application to a substrate.
II. Magnetic Planarization of Pigment Flakes
In some print operations, the substrate moves past the magnets at speeds in the range of about 2 meters/second, and the carrier rapidly dries after the ink is applied to the substrate. The planarization of the flakes occurs in only a few milliseconds. Permanent magnets commonly known as “supermagnets”, such as Nd—Fe—B magnets, can produce sufficiently high fields to planarize magnetic pigment flakes in a high-speed printing operation. Electro-magnets may be used in some embodiments, but tend to be bulkier than permanent magnets of comparable strength and the coils, which require electric current, generate heat. Such permanent supermagnets are capable of producing magnetic field strengths of up to 70,000 Amps/meter, although other processes may operate with different magnetic field strengths. Factors such as the time available for planarization, viscosity of the carrier, size of the flake, and magnetic characteristics of the flake may affect the desired alignment of the flakes. Similarly, it is understood that even after magnetic planarization not all flakes are perfectly aligned in the plane of the substrate, and that improvement in the visual characteristics of the image formed with the magnetic pigment flakes is a matter of degree, the suitability of which might depend on the initial state flakes and the desired effect, for example.
Another embodiment might have closely spaced opposing magnets (north-north or south-south) on opposite sides of the flakes, such as for planarizing flakes during extrusion of a plastic film. In that case, there might not be a separate “substrate”. The curing or setting plastic fixes the orientation of the flakes in the film.
The planarization of the flakes enhances the aggregate visual effect of the flakes. In the case of optically variable pigment, brighter, more intense colors are obtained. In a particular example, optically variable pigment was used to make ink that was applied to test cards using a silk-screen technique. One card was allowed to dry as normal, while a magnetic field was applied to a second card before the ink vehicle (carrier) dried to planarize the pigment flakes in the plane of the substrate. The chroma was measured for each sample. The planarization increased the chroma ten percent, which is a very significant increase. Such an increase in chroma over the existing printing technique would be very difficult to achieve by changing the optical design of the pigment flakes, for example, by changing the material of the thin film layers or number of thin film layers. It is believed that it may be possible to improve the chroma of images printed with an Intaglio process using magnetically optically variable pigments up to forty percent. Thus a significant improvement in the visual impression of an image printed with optically variable pigment flakes is obtainable without changing the optical design of the flake. The addition of a magnetic structure in the flake allows the flake to be planarized after application.
III. Exemplary Methods
While the invention has been described above in reference to particular embodiments and the best mode of practicing the invention, various modifications and substitutions may become apparent to those of skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Therefore, it is understood that the foregoing descriptions are merely exemplary, and that the invention is set forth in the following claims.
This patent application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/410,546 filed Sep. 13, 2002 by Vladimir P. Raksha, from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/410,547 filed Sep. 13, 2002 by Vladimir P. Raksha, Paul G. Coombs, Charles T. Markantes, Dishuan Chu, and Jay M. Holman, and from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/396,210 filed Jul. 15, 2002 by Vladimir P. Raksha, Paul G. Coombs, Charles T. Markantes, Dishuan Chu, and Jay M. Holman, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated in their entirety for all purposes.
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