The present invention relates to a method of printing on an image receiving medium, such as a tape, and to a thermal printer and tape to be used in such a method. In particular, the present invention relates to printing “laminated” labels, that is those where the printed image is protected in the finished product.
Thermal printers of the type with which the present invention is concerned are known, that is those that can produce labels in which the image is protected. They operate by printing an image onto an image receiving substrate, and performing a subsequent “laminating” step. In one type of known printer, this is achieved by printing an image onto a tape comprising an upper image receiving layer secured to a backing layer by an adhesive. Subsequently, a transparent layer is then affixed over the upper image receiving layer to protect the printed image.
In another type of known printer, for example described in EP-A-322919 a mirror image of the image to be displayed is transferred onto a transparent image receiving tape allowing the image to be viewed through the other side of the tape. A double sided adhesive tape is then secured at one of its adhesive coated sides to the image receiving side of the transparent image receiving tape after the image has been printed. The other adhesive side of the double sided adhesive tape is covered by a removable backing layer.
In both of these devices the image is printed on the image receiving substrate before the layers of the finished composite label are joined. That is, it is necessary to apply a “laminating” or protective layer to the image receiving tape on which the image is printed. As a result it is necessary to supply the printing device with separate tapes providing the laminating and the image receiving layer. A disadvantage of such an arrangement is the need to align the layers to form the composite label once the image has been printed, using guide rollers or the like. A second disadvantage is that the printing device must house the tapes forming each of the layers separately, or the “laminating” tape is dispensed outside the printing device.
The print head for such printing apparatus generally comprises a plurality of printing elements which are selectively activated, that is heated. An image is generated in one of two ways. An intermediate ink ribbon can be provided so that when the activated printing elements of the print head heat up the ink from the parts of the ink ribbon in contact with the heated printing elements is transferred to the image receiving tape. Alteratively, the heated printing elements may directly contact a thermally sensitive image receiving tape which causes an image to be formed thereon by thermal activation.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of printing an image on a composite medium which comprises a thermally sensitive image receiving layer and a protective layer, the method comprising activating the thermally sensitive image receiving layer through the protective layer, whereby the image is protected.
In the described embodiment the composite medium further comprises a removable backing layer, the image receiving layer being interposed between the removable backing layer and the protective layer.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a tape supply comprising a thermally sensitive image receiving layer which has not yet been thermally activated to generate an image and a protective layer on the upper surface of the image receiving layer in which the image is to be generated.
In the described embodiment the thermally sensitive image receiving layer comprises a thermochromic layer and a carrier layer.
In the described embodiment the protective layer of the composite tape is in the range of 3 μm to 15 μm thick
According to a third aspect of the present invention there is provided a cassette holding a supply of composite tape, said tape comprising a thermally sensitive image receiving layer which has not yet been thermally activated to generate an image and a protective layer on the upper surface of the image receiving layer in which the image is to be generated.
In the described embodiment the composite tape may be supplied from a single supply spool housed in the cassette.
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention there is provided a printing device in conjunction with a composite tape, where said printing device comprises a thermal print head, drive means operable to cause relative motion between the print head and the composite tape, a cassette bay for housing a supply of the composite tape, control means operable to control the thermal energy generated at the print head and cutting means operable to cut off a portion of the composite tape, and where said tape comprises a thermally sensitive image receiving layer having a removable backing layer on its lower surface and a protective layer on its upper surface, and where the activation of the print head activates the thermally sensitive image receiving layer of the composite tape through the protective layer, whereby the printed image is protected.
According to a fifth aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of producing a printed label on a composite tape which comprises a thermally sensitive image receiving layer, a removable backing layer and a protective layer, the image receiving layer being interposed between the removable backing layer and the protective layer, the method comprising activating the thermally sensitive layer through the protective layer to generate an image and without any intermediate coating or laminating steps, cutting off a portion of the composite tape to produce the printed label in which the image is protected by the protective layer.
For a better understanding of the present invention, and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made by way of example to the accompanying drawings.
The platen 8 is driven by a DC motor 7 (see
The image is printed by the print head 4 on the composite image receiving tape 10 on a column by column basis with the columns being adjacent one another in the direction of movement of the tape 10. Pixels are selectively activated in each column to construct an image in a manner well known in the art. The DC motor 7 is provided with a shaft encoder for monitoring the speed of rotation of the motor. Sequential printing of the columns of pixels by the print head 4 is controlled in dependence on the monitored speed of rotation of the motor 7. The control of the speed of the motor 7 is achieved by the microprocessor chip 100 (see
The tape printing device 1 may include at cutting location 20 a cutting mechanism 28 which carries a blade 18. The blade 18 cuts the composite image receiving tape 10 then enters a slot 30 located in the cassette 6.
As illustrated in
There are many different types of thermally sensitive substrates which are well known in the art and which may be used in preference to the examples given.
Therefore embodiments of this invention are not limited to the materials listed above.
The microprocessor 100 controls the energy supplied to the printing elements of the print head 4 such that the heat gradient produced across the wax coating 32, the transparent layer 34 and the glue layer 36 is sufficiently high to cause an image to be formed on the thermal sensitive substrate 42. The temperature to which the print head 4 must be heated during the printing of an image is dependent on the thickness and thermal conductivity of the layers 32, 34 and 36 which are between the print head 44 and the thermal sensitive substrate.
The energy generated in each printing element is given by the equation:
E=(v2×t)/R Equation 1
where E is the energy generated at each printing element, v is the voltage applied across the printing element, R is the resistance of the printing element and t represents the length of time that the printing element is activated.
In one embodiment of the present invention the energy generated at each printing element may be controlled by regulating the voltage across the print head 4 such that the voltage supplied across each printing element is constant irrespective of the number of print elements that are activated. (Voltage regulators are well known in the art and will not be described herein). Assuming that the resistance of each printing element is constant, the predetermined energy may then be generated at the printing element by activating the print elements for a predetermined strobe time, controlled by the microprocessor chip 100.
Alternatively the energy generated at each printing element may be controlled by measuring the voltage across the print head and adjusting the strobe time accordingly. Hence, in a further embodiment of the present invention the voltage is read by the microprocessor and the correct strobe time calculated using an algorithm derived from Equation 1, or identified on a look up table, such that the predetermined energy is generated at each printing element.
If the temperature of the print head 4 is too high, this will cause the layers of the composite image receiving tape 10 between the thermal sensitive substrate 42 and the print head 4 to melt thereby deforming the structure of the composite image receiving tape 10 and affecting the appearance of the labels produced. However if the temperature of the print head is too low, a small temperature gradient through the layers between the print head 4 and the thermal sensitive substrate 42 will cause the heat to dissipate along the length of the composite image receiving tape 10 thereby producing an unclear image on the thermal sensitive substrate 42.
The basic circuitry for controlling the present invention of the printing device 1 of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0106971 | Mar 2001 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB02/01256 | 3/19/2002 | WO | 00 | 4/9/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/074551 | 9/26/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040159252 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |