This application is a National Phase of PCT Patent Application No. PCT/EP2018/065737 having International filing date of Jun. 13, 2018, which claims the benefit of priority of German Patent Application Nos. 10 2017 113 035.7 and 10 2017 113 036.5, both filed on Jun. 13, 2017, and European Patent Application Nos. 18157511.9 filed on Feb. 19, 2018, 18161725.9 filed on Mar. 14, 2018, 18162382.8 filed on Mar. 16, 2018 and 18168263.4 filed on Apr. 19, 2018. The contents of the above applications are all incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein in their entirety.
The present invention concerns a method and an apparatus for producing a decorative surface and a workpiece.
A decorative surface for furniture, floor panels or wall panels is state of the art. Surfaces of workpieces, such as chipboards or MDF boards, are coated with a decoratively printed paper or printed directly after application of a white primer and provided with a protective lacquer. The surfaces are often replicas of real wood surfaces, stones or tiles. Both the image (decoration) of the wood surface and the tactile “haptic” structure (tactile wood pores and knotholes) are reproduced. The surfaces that are coated can however also include (also for the purposes of the present invention) rolled goods such as printed paper or printed plastic foils.
The optical reproduction of decorative images is produced according to the state of the art using both analogue printing processes and digital printing processes based on a digital image template. To create the haptic, tactile structure with a structure depth of usually 5-500 μm, preferably 10-100 μm, an analogue process, such as embossing with structured embossed plates (“matrices”), is used according to the state of the art. It is also known to produces such structures with digital methods as shown in DE 10 2015 110 236 A1 and DE 10 2009 044 802 A1.
DE 10 2007 055 053 A1 discloses a method for processing a structured surface of an embossing tool (“matrice”), whereby the gloss level of a first coating differs from that of a second coating, for example to better simulate wood pores. When such an embossing tool is subsequently used to produce a finished product, e.g. a floor panel, consisting of an HDF backing board and a printed, melamine-impregnated paper as decorative layer, after pressing with the embossing tool the wood pores printed decoratively in the paper become visible against light at an optical viewing angle of less than 45 degrees, also by differences in the gloss level of the cured melamine surface, moulded from the differently processed surface of the matrice. The production of such an embossing tool is a complex process. Furthermore, the embossing tools are usually used in short-cycle presses, in which the change from one embossing tool to another one takes longer time, at least approx. 15-30 min.
It is therefore an objective of this invention to create an optically and haptically appealing surface having an optimized structuring. Furthermore, it should be possible to arrange optical and haptic properties on a surface spatially in a suitable way, e.g. to be able to arrange a shiny pore spatially exactly above the optically printed wood pore.
This problem is solved by the features of the independent claims. Advantageous embodiments are subject of the subclaims.
In the method according to the invention, a workpiece, for example a board made of a wood-based material, is first fed to a coating station in order to then apply a first liquid lacquer with a coarse structuring to the entire surface, in which a difference in thickness between thicker regions and thinner regions is at least 50 μm, in particular at least 100 μm, for example between 150 μm and 400 μm.
Preferably, the first lacquer layer with coarse structuring is then at least partially cured.
Preferably, a decorative image can then be printed onto this first lacquer layer by multi-colour printing. Optionally, the decorative image can also be printed before the first lacquer layer, whereby the first lacquer is then at least partially transparent so that the decorative image remains visible. Alternatively, the workpiece can also be provided with a decorative image at the beginning.
In accordance with the invention, a second liquid, at least partially transparent lacquer is now applied to the lacquer layer with the coarse structuring and, for example, visible decor image to produce a fine structuring in some regions.
Preferably this second lacquer is then cured, whereby the difference in thickness in the region of fine structuring on the second lacquer layer is less than 50 μm, in particular less than 30 μm, for example between 5 μm and 25 μm.
As a result, a visible decorative image is coated with at least two lacquer layers which produce a different structuring on the surface, a coarse structuring with larger differences in thickness and a fine structuring with smaller differences in thickness. This makes the surface optically and haptically less uniform.
Preferably, the gloss level in the region of fine structuring differs by at least 10 gloss units from that in the region of coarse structuring. The gloss level of the first lacquer layer can preferably deviate at least 20 gloss units from the gloss level of the second lacquer layer, whereby the gloss units are measured according to DIN EN ISO 2813:2015-02 at an angle of 60°. In this way, an optically clearly perceptible gloss effect can be perceived. The adjustment of the gloss level during printing can be varied by the droplet size and/or the number of droplets per area or by the use of matting agents.
Gloss is measured according to DIN EN ISO 2813:2015-02. For the gloss measurement, the amount of light reflected by a surface in relation to a reference standard from polished glass is measured. The unit of measurement used here is GU (Gloss Units). The amount of light reflected from the surface depends on the angle of incidence and the properties of the surface. For gloss measurement, different angles of incidence (20°, 60° and 85°) can be used to measure the reflectance, preferably at an angle of incidence of 60°. Alternatively, the mean value of measurements for the three angles of incidence can also be used. The reflectance compares the light energy emitted from and received by a gloss meter in percent at a certain angle of incidence.
All surfaces or sections of surfaces which, according to the standard, achieve less than 20 gloss units when measured with a gloss meter are defined as “matte”, and all surfaces or sections of surfaces which achieve more than 60 gloss units are referred to as “glossy”. One of both lacquer layers can be matte and the other one glossy.
For a fine adjustment of the gloss level, the droplets of the second lacquer layer are preferably sprayed with a droplet size smaller than 100 pL, in particular smaller than 10 pL. Optionally, different gloss levels can also be applied to the second lacquer layer, so that differences in gloss can also be present within the second lacquer layer.
The first lacquer is preferably applied with at least one printing roller which unrolls on one surface of the workpiece. The printing roller can, for example, be engraved and have an elastic material on an outer surface or an inner ring. Then the engraved roll can unroll directly on the surface of the workpiece. Alternatively, the first lacquer can be applied via at least two rollers, whereby the first lacquer is transferred from a first roller to a second roller, which then transfers the first lacquer to the surface of the workpiece.
The application of the second lacquer to create the fine structuring is preferably carried out by at least one digital print head. As a result, the haptic properties of an optical region of a decorative image can be matched particularly precisely to its spatial location. For example, the fine structuring can be used to imitate a light wood grain that is congruent with the wood grain of the decorative image.
Alternatively or additionally, the second lacquer can also be applied after an initially liquid lacquer has been applied, whereby lacquer droplets of the second lacquer layer are then sprayed into the still liquid material to create a fine structuring. The lacquer droplets can consist of the same material as the liquid layer. The application of a large number of lacquer droplets into the still liquid lacquer layer with digital print heads is done, for example, with lacquer droplets having a volume of less than 10 pL, which are sprayed onto the still liquid lacquer at a speed greater than 1 m/sec.
In an alternative embodiment, the lacquer droplets consist of a different material than the liquid lacquer, which droplets undergo a chemical reaction with the liquid lacquer after impact, which changes the surface optically and/or haptically in the respective regions. Instead of a chemical reaction, the liquid lacquer can also cause a physical reaction by impacting on the liquid lacquer, whereby the sprayed droplets volatilize within less than 5 minutes by evaporation.
The method according to the invention is preferably used for panel-shaped workpieces, especially those made of a wood-based material. However, in an alternative embodiment it is also possible to coat rolled goods instead of a panel-shaped workpiece. For example, these can be decoratively printed paper or a plastic film made of ABS, PP, PE or similar materials. The paper can have a grammage between 20 g/m2 and 300 g/m2. The plastic films can have a thickness of between 0.05 mm and 5 mm. The rolled goods can, for example, be edgebandings that are fixed to the end faces of panel-shaped workpieces in the manufacture of furniture panels.
In the following the invention is explained in detail by way of the accompanying drawings. These show:
The lacquer layers 1.4 and 1.5 are cured one after the other or together, for example by UV radiation. After curing, the second lacquer layer 1.5 has a different gloss level than the first lacquer layer.
Instead of structuring the second base layer 1.2 with digitally sprayed droplets, it is also possible to structure a base layer using other methods, for example by applying it only to certain regions or using embossing matrices. It is also possible to apply the decorative image to a structured surface instead of a flat surface.
In a further embodiment, a carrier plate made of a wood material, or a plate made of another material with a thickness of at least 4 mm, preferably 8 to 16 mm and external dimensions of at least 200 mm width and at least 400 mm length is first coated with a UV-curing, white base lacquer, for example with an amount of about 20 g/qm. This white base lacquer is then cured under UV irradiation.
The carrier plate is then fed to a digital printing device in which a printed image, for example a reproduction of small tiles as mosaics, a wood decor or another pattern, is applied with a four-color CMYK print.
As an example of a printed image
Then a thin base lacquer layer of 5-15 g/sqm of a UV-curing lacquer is applied to the carrier plate printed in this way and (partially) cured with UV light. In an alternative embodiment, this base lacquer layer can be completely omitted or replaced by a solvent lacquer or an aqueous acrylate lacquer, which is then physically dried.
A further base lacquer layer 1.2 is then applied to the first base lacquer layer or alternatively directly to the printed image as a radiation-curing lacquer layer, preferably on an acrylate basis, in a layer thickness of 100-500 μm. The base lacquer layer can be applied by digital print heads or by printing rollers or other processes. Directly after the application of this second base lacquer layer 1.2, a further, transparent lacquer layer 1.3 is printed to the still liquid layer before curing, optionally by means of a digital printing template with digital print heads. When applying this lacquer layer 1.3 the droplet size can vary between 1 pL and 100 pL. The digital printing template used is the one that was also used to print the tile mosaic described above. This printing template is electronically modified beforehand so that only the interspaces 3.3 of the mosaic tiles 3.1 and 3.2 are printed. Then the radiation-curing base lacquer layer 1.2 is cured together with the lacquer layer 1.3 using a UV lamp. In an alternative embodiment, curing can also be performed using electron radiation.
The result is a carrier plate printed with a tile mosaic in which the interspaces 3.3 are recessed by 10-60 μm as joints between the mosaic tiles 3.1 and 3.2.
Subsequently, the gloss level of at least parts of the entire surface is adjusted to the desired value by at least partial application of a second lacquer layer 1.4 with subsequent drying, whereby the gloss level of the first lacquer layer 1.3 deviates from the gloss level of the second lacquer layer.
In an alternative embodiment, the additional application of a third lacquer layer 1.5 can also be carried out before or after the second lacquer layer 1.4 has been cured, wherein the third lacquer layer 1.5 also consists of a large number of droplets with a size of 3-100 pL dispensed onto the surface. With this third lacquer layer, both the gloss level can be changed again in some regions and the surface structure depth of the uncured lacquer layer 1.4 can be influenced.
The lacquer layers 1.4 and 1.5 can also be completely omitted if the gloss level is changed by applying the first lacquer layer 1.3 concomitantly with application of the second base lacquer layer 1.2 for structuring.
The surface of the mosaic tiles 3.1 and 3.2 now has a value of 60 to 90 gloss units, for example, while the gloss level at the interspaces 3.3 is only 20 to 40 gloss units, for example.
Optionally, the gloss level at the interspaces 3.3 can also be reduced by a further lacquer layer, which is subsequently printed into the recessed interspaces by a further digital printing device with a transparent, UV-curing lacquer. Then more than just two lacquer layers are applied to adjust the gloss level.
For printing a rather matte lacquer layer, droplet sizes of 3-6 pL are used, which are cured within 0.5-2 sec after impact on the surface by means of UV LED radiation to such an extent that they can no longer flow. This creates a surface structure in these regions that no longer reflects the incident light in a straight line. The gloss level is thereby reduced to values of 30 gloss units and less.
In the method of the invention, the second lacquer layer can have either a higher or lower gloss level than the first lacquer layer. The gloss level can be adjusted using the following methods, for example:
Option 1:
Matte regions through the first lacquer layer consist of previously (analog or digital) applied matte lacquer, for example with matting agents or by an excimer matting. Glossy regions of the second lacquer layer consist of lacquer applied by digital print heads, which lacquer is formed from a plurality of individual droplets, which results in a very smooth surface in certain regions and thus a high gloss level. The droplets have a size of at least 6 pL, and curing only takes place after a progression phase of at least 1 sec, preferably after more than 5 sec.
Option 2:
The glossy regions of the first lacquer layer consist of previously (analog or digital) applied glossy lacquer, matte regions of the second lacquer layer consist of digitally applied lacquer consisting of a plurality of smallest droplets having a droplet size of less than 8 pL, preferably less than 3 pL, which are at least partially cured within less than 3 seconds after application, preferably less than 1 sec after application.
Both options preferably employ curing by a UV-LED lamp, which is arranged in the direction of throughput within less than 100 mm after the digital print heads, which apply the plurality of droplets to the surface.
Matting agents, such as PE waxes or silicas, can be added to the lacquer to produce a matte lacquer layer. The proportion of matting agents in the lacquer can be between 2% to 6%, in particular 3% to 5% (weight percent).
The different Examples of
In alternative embodiments of the method according to the invention, acrylate-containing, UV-curing lacquers used as the lacquers can be replaced by aqueous or solvent-based lacquers. In this case, the steps for UV drying by means of UV LED or UV arc lamp are replaced by physical drying by means of hot air or IR lamps or a combination of both.
A workpiece 4.1, for example a board made of a wood-based material with a width of 200 to 2000 mm and a length between 500 and 3000 mm as well as a thickness between 8 mm and 18 mm is fed to a coating station. The workpiece 4.1 is already printed with a decor image, such as a wood reproduction, e.g. an oak decor.
In the coating station, a plain intermediate lacquer layer 4.2, such as an adhesion base or primer, is optionally applied. A laser-engraved rubber roller is then used to apply a radiation-curing, transparent first lacquer layer 4.3 ranging from 100 to 200 g/m2 to the workpiece 4.1 whereby the engraving in the rubber roller creates the structure of a coarse wood pore on the surface. The height differences between the “pore valleys” and the elevations, i.e. the differences in thickness of the first lacquer layer 4.3, are between 150 μm and 300 μm (micrometers) and form a coarse structure. Subsequently, the applied lacquer is cured with a UV lamp. In an alternative embodiment, a decorative image 4.4 can be printed on the structured surface using a digital printer with 4-color printing after curing, if there was no image on the workpiece before the coating. In this case, the lacquer layer 4.3 can also be coloured, for example white.
A further liquid lacquer layer 4.5 is applied to the now cured lacquer layer 4.3 with or without the coloured decorative printing layer 4.4 in a further coating station by means of a smooth rubber roller. The workpiece is then fed to a digital printing station 4.6, where a large number of droplets 4.7 is applied to the still liquid lacquer layer 4.5 based on a digital image template, which provide the still liquid lacquer layer 4.5 with a fine structuring. The digital image template is matched to the previously printed decorative image, e.g. rustic oak, in such a way that the visually recognisable image components, such as a knot hole or a black printed crack in the wood, correspond exactly spatially with the structure printed into the liquid pore. Thus the end user can also feel the optically printed knothole. At the same time the very deep and coarse structure from lacquer layer 4.3 lies above all, emphasising the rustic character of the oak reproduction.
Finally, several aspects of the present invention are described.
A first aspect of the invention is a method of manufacturing a decorative workpiece with a textured surface comprising the following steps:
A second aspect of the method according to the first aspect is that the gloss level in the region of fine structuring differs by at least 10 gloss units as compared to the region of coarse structuring.
A third aspect of the method according to the first or second aspect is that the application of the first lacquer is carried out with at least one printing roller that unrolls on a surface of the workpiece.
A fourth aspect of the method according to one of the previous aspects is that the second lacquer is applied by at least one digital print head.
A fifth aspect of the method according to one of the previous aspects is that the material for the first and second lacquer is identical.
A sixth aspect of the method according to one of the previous aspects is that in order to produce the second lacquer layer, a liquid lacquer is first applied and then lacquer droplets of the second lacquer layer are sprayed into the still liquid material to produce a fine structuring.
A seventh aspect of the method according to the sixth aspect is that the lacquer droplets consist of the same material as the liquid layer.
An eighth aspect of the method according to the sixth or seventh aspect is that the application of a plurality of lacquer droplets into the still liquid lacquer layer is carried out by means of digital print heads, wherein each lacquer droplet has a volume of less than 10 pL, and the speed of each lacquer droplet when impacting the still liquid lacquer layer is greater than 1 m/sec.
A ninth aspect of the method according to the sixth aspect is that the lacquer droplets consist of a different material than the liquid lacquer and after impact they undergo a chemical reaction with the liquid lacquer, which changes the surface optically and/or haptically at the respective locations.
A tenth aspect of the method according to the sixth aspect is that the lacquer droplets consist of a different material than the liquid lacquer and after a physical reaction due to impact onto the liquid lacquer they volatilize within less than 5 minutes by evaporation.
An eleventh aspect of the method according to one of the previous aspects is that at least one intermediate layer is applied between the workpiece and the first lacquer layer.
Another aspect of the invention is an apparatus for performing the method according to one of the preceding aspects with:
A further aspect of the invention is a workpiece, in particular a plate-shaped workpiece, comprising a wooden workpiece, a carrier material on which at least one decorative image is printed, and at least one lacquer layer having a coarse structuring, in which a difference in thickness between thicker regions and thinner regions is at least 50 μm, in particular at least 100 μm, and at least one second lacquer layer comprising an at least partially transparent material having a fine structuring, in which the difference in thickness is less than 50 μm, in particular less than 30 μm.
A further aspect of the workpiece according to the preceding aspect is that the first lacquer layer has a layer thickness between 100 and 500 μm.
A third aspect of the workpiece according to one of the two previous aspects is that the second lacquer layer has a layer thickness between 10 and 100 μm.
1.0 Workpiece
1.1 First base layer
1.2 Second base layer
1.3 Digitally sprayed droplets
1.4 First lacquer layer
1.5 Second lacquer layer
2.4 Grained wood areas
2.5 Wood pore
3.0 Workpiece
3.1 Light-coloured mosaic tiles
3.2 Darker mosaic tiles
3.3 Interspaces
4.1 Workpiece
4.2 Intermediate lacquer layer, e.g. adhesion base/primer
4.3 Analogously applied textured lacquer
4.4 Digital decor printing
4.5 Liquid lacquer layer
4.6 Digital printing station
4.7 Droplets
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 113 035.7 | Jun 2017 | DE | national |
10 2017 113 036.5 | Jun 2017 | DE | national |
18157511 | Feb 2018 | EP | regional |
18161725 | Mar 2018 | EP | regional |
18162382 | Mar 2018 | EP | regional |
18168263 | Apr 2018 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2018/065737 | 6/13/2018 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/229169 | 12/20/2018 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200016627 A1 | Jan 2020 | US |