To print a printing substrate (made of paper, for example) it is known to generate image-dependent charge images on a charge image carrier (for example a photoconductor drum) that correspond to the images to be printed, and comprised of regions that are to be inked and regions that are not to be inked. The regions of the charge images that are to be inked can be developed with a liquid developer containing at least toner and carrier fluid. The developed images—the toner images—are subsequently transfer-printed onto the printing substrate and fixed there.
A method for such an electrophoretic liquid development in digital printing systems is known from WO2007/57387 (US 2008/279597 A1), for example. A carrier fluid containing silicon oil, hydrocarbons or vegetable oils, which carrier fluid has ink particles (toner) dispersed in it, is thereby used as a liquid developer. Among other things, a charging station, an element for graphical exposure (character generator), a developer station to develop the charge images with toner, a transfer station to transfer-print the developed charge images (the toner images) onto a printing substrate and an element to clean the photoconductor drum after the transfer-printing are arranged along a charge image carrier (for example the photoconductor drum) in the printing apparatus according to WO2007/57387.
The developer station according to WO2007/57387 has a reservoir container for the liquid developer, a chamber blade or scraper with a rotating anilox or screen roller; and a rotating developer roller. The anilox roller takes up the liquid developer of the chamber blade and transfers this to the developer roller, which directs the liquid developer past the photoconductor drum to develop the charge images into toner images. The toner images are supplied from the charge image carrier via the transfer station to the printing substrate and transfer-printed onto this. For this a rotating transfer roller can be used that accepts the toner images (embedded in carrier fluid) from the charge image carrier and supplies them to the printing substrate. In the transfer printing station the toner images are transfer-printed onto the printing substrate using an electrical field and are subsequently fixed there.
In the generation of toner images using carrier fluid and liquid developer with toner, a film made up of liquid developer is supplied to the charge image carrier. After the inking of the charge images with the liquid developer, the toner images (embedded in a film made of carrier fluid) are transfer-printed onto the printing substrate in the transfer station. In the following explanation this film made of liquid developer or carrier fluid with toner images is uniformly called liquid film.
Roller pairs with rotating rollers as transport units can be used to transfer the liquid film. The layer thickness of the transported liquid film thereby depends on, among other things, the surface velocities of the rollers of the respective roller pair and the contact pressure force of the rollers on one another. Problems arise when the surface velocities of the rollers of the roller pairs change, as this is the case when a printing device approaches its final speed. If in this case the printing of the printing substrate should already take place before reaching the final speed—thus in the start phase of the printing operation—the print images are of reduced print quality.
It is an object to specify a printing apparatus operating according to the electrophoretic principle, which printing apparatus generates print images of identical print quality on the printing substrate even at different printing speeds. For example, in the start phase of the printing operation it is thereby possible to already generate print images on the printing substrate whose print quality corresponds to that of the operation at final speed. Spoilage in the start phase can be avoided in this way.
In a method and printing apparatus to print a continuous printing substrate, a liquid film with toner and carrier fluid is transported to a charge image carrier to develop charge images into toner images. Transport pairs are used comprising rotating transport members in the transport of the liquid film to the charge image carrier and from the charge image carrier to the printing substrate. Given a changing print speed of the printing apparatus at least one of the respective transport pairs is adjusted to provide a respective separation of the transport members from one another so that a substantially same quantity of the liquid film is always conveyed by the respective transport pair.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference will now be made to preferred embodiments/best mode illustrated in the drawings and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the invention is thereby intended, and such alterations and further modifications in the illustrated method and such further applications of the principles of the invention as illustrated as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which the invention relates are included.
With the preferred embodiment, at different print speeds the same layer thickness of liquid film can always be moved by the respective roller pair participating in the transport process. The viscosity of the liquid film or the hardness of the rollers do not have to be altered for this. Only the contact pressure force in the roller gap (nip) between the rollers of the respective roller pair is controlled depending on the print speed so that the same quantity of liquid film arrives at the printing substrate at all printing speeds. A print quality of the print images on the printing substrate that corresponds to the print quality at the final speed of the print device can therefore already be achieved upon starting the printing apparatus, for example as of a print speed of 0.3 m/sec. Spoilage upon starting the printing apparatus is then largely avoided.
A rotating photoconductor drum 10 as a charge image carrier from an electrophoretic printing apparatus is shown in
A liquid film thus is comprised of carrier fluid and toner from the anilox roller 7 via the developer roller 8 to the photoconductor 10. This liquid film is moved through nips between the roller pairs, wherein a contact pressure force that can affect the layer thickness of the liquid film is respectively exerted on the liquid film. For example, the following nips exist on the way to the photoconductor drum 10:
The liquid film with the developed toner images is subsequently supplied via a transfer station to the continuous printing substrate 14 and transfer-printed onto this. The transfer station in turn has rollers that interact as roller pairs in order to convey the liquid film for transfer-printing. For example, the following roller pairs can form a nip:
In all of these nips 1 through 6 contact pressure forces are exerted on the liquid film that affect the quantity of transported liquid. In particular in the start phase of the printing process, when the rollers 6 through 13 and the printing substrate 14 have been accelerated this has previously led to the situation that the quantity of transported liquid film—and therefore the print quality of the print images on the printing substrate 14—changed significantly. If the print speed is selected to be low and the contact pressure too high, this moreover leads to print quality disruptions due to developer film backpressure before the roller pair.
In order to always ensure a uniform print quality at different print speeds (and therefore different velocities of the rollers 7 through 13 and the printing substrate 14, the size of the nips 1 through 6 of the roller pairs conveying the liquid film is now controlled depending on the print speed so that the quantity of liquid film that is also required at the final speed of the printing operation is always transported through the nips 1 through 6. The print images are therefore always inked the same on the print data stream 14, even if the print speed has not yet reached the final speed.
Examples of arrangements with which the roller intervals in the nips 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,6 can be adjusted result from
A first embodiment in which the distance between two rollers 20, 21 that are borne on axles 22, 23 should be adjusted arises from
A second embodiment of a displacement arrangement VA2 for the roller 20, 21 results from
In
A third embodiment of a displacement arrangement for the rollers can provide a step motor (not shown in the drawing Figures). The axles, and therefore the rollers, are driven from a pivoted-away state into operating position at the final speed of the printing apparatus. The number of steps and the step size establishes the separation of the rollers of the roller pairs. Given a change of the print speed, the controller of the printing apparatus can adjust the roller separation with an adapted number of steps of the step motor so that the quantity of liquid film that is conveyed by the roller pairs remains constant.
The displacement units VA according to the exemplary embodiments can be used for all roller pairs involved in the transport of the liquid film. It is therefore ensured that the conveyed quantity of liquid film to the printing substrate is kept constant, independent of the print speed.
Rollers have been used to transport the liquid film in
Although preferred exemplary embodiments are shown and described in detail in the drawings and in the preceding specification, they should be viewed as purely exemplary and not as limiting the invention. It is noted that only preferred exemplary embodiments are shown and described, and all variations and modifications that presently or in the future lie within the protective scope of the invention should be protected.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 056 427 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20020114650 | May et al. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20040197116 | Yoshino et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20080279597 | Berg et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090052948 | Ozerov | Feb 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1091004 | Apr 1998 | JP |
2004138755 | May 2004 | JP |
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Entry |
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German Office Action dated Jun. 16, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110129264 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |