1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to woven and non-woven fiber materials, for example as coffee filters and tea bags, and more particularly a method to imprint upon these items an indelible, non-toxic marking suitable for direct contact with food and beverages by means of a unique printing method.
2. Background Art
Presently, there exists a need for a method of printing on certain substrates, particularly those in direct contact with food. Unfortunately, many regulatory agencies worldwide acknowledge that many inks may adulterate the food or beverage in which they come in contact as the ink may be absorbed or otherwise transferred to the food product. It is for this reason that most ink or food dye methods are prohibited for use if the packaging or imprinted substrate may be immersed, wetted or in become in direct contact with any material intended for human consumption. One such example is the automatic drip coffee filter. It has long been a desire of filter manufacturers to imprint these filters with various designs such as company logos, measuring marks or other graphics. However, since the filter material is indeed in direct contact with the ground coffee, filter makers have had to use alternatives to printing such as embossing to avoid possible ink contamination. In many countries even food based dyes are considered to be unacceptable. In those few countries where inks and dyes are allowed, consumers tend to react negatively if the marking colors bleed or become faded during use as this indicates that the pigment has now infiltrated the beverage and is generally viewed as contamination. The problem is further exacerbated by the fact that the filter is usually subjected to hot water up to 100 degrees Celsius during the brewing process thus causing further degradation of the markings.
The scope of the present invention consists of a method of marking and the associated equipment and materials necessary to reduce the method to practice. The indelible mark or graphic is achieved by first imprinting the substrate with a weak acid or other fluid that will degrade the surface of the treated fibers sufficiently to alter the flash point of the material. For example: Cellulose paper fibers have an average flash point (temperature at which auto-ignition can occur) of 450 degrees. If the surface of the fiber is treated with a weak solution of citric, acetic or other dilute acid, that fiber surface will degrade sufficiently to effectively lower the auto-ignition point of that surface. This allows the fiber to be superficially and quite visibly “scorched” at a temperature significantly below that of the surrounding (untreated) fibers or the internal core of the treated fiber itself. Therefore, when the fiber is subjected to sufficient heat energy, it is possible to cause a color change in the surface of the fiber without danger of destroying the fiber completely.
The principal practical application of this phenomenon is to “brand” or otherwise permanently etch an image onto paper or fabric without the application of pigments and having no danger of inadvertently igniting the material as is the case with other methods of hot-iron branding. One method of accomplishing this is as follows:
A sheet of bleached or non-bleached cellulose or other fiber paper is marked with a graphic (text, image or pattern) with acetic acid by means of screen-print, rubber stamp, offset press, inkjet or any other method of imprinting that lends itself to the purpose of this invention. The wetted area, in the form of the graphic is then allowed to dry and react with the paper surface sufficiently to degrade the surface of the underlying fibers. Note that the level of degradation is generally not visible to the unaided eye at this stage. Next the treated paper is irradiated with heat energy and the temperature of the paper is raised to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature is approximately 100 degrees below that of the temperature necessary to ignite the entire sheet of paper but is sufficient to cause a superficial scorching of the treated fibers. The color change can be best described as a “browning” or darkening of the top surface of the fiber and only as deep as the acid previously penetrated the paper surface. The result is similar in appearance to paper that has been branded with a hot branding iron but without the possibility of inadvertently igniting the entire sheet due to the temperatures needed above the paper flash point. It is foreseen that certain printing methods may require that the acidic liquid be modified to assume certain characteristics of printing inks. This may include thickening agents such as colloids or cellulose gelling agents and gums as well as other functional additives to facilitate the print process.
The primary embodiment addresses a need for indelibly marking certain paper goods without pigment or ink dyes that could possibly cause a contamination or adulteration of a food product in direct contact with the proposed marking. Such a condition exists with the marking of hot beverage filter papers such as those used in the preparation of coffee and teas. This embodiment is best described as a filter paper or die-cut and crimped filter basket or conic section for use in an automatic drip coffee machine having an image, text or combination thereof applied to the paper surface. In this particular example, the graphic applied is a measuring gradient for the purpose of determining the appropriate amount of ground coffee to be used to make a specific number of cups of the beverage. However, it is foreseen that the applied graphic may not have any particular utility beyond that of aesthetic enhancement or product identification.
Production of the final product may be reasonably accomplished in the following steps:
First, rolls of converted paper suitable for coffee filtration are dispensed into a manufacturing production line prior to die cutting, folding and seam-embossing or pleating to form the functional geometry of a coffee filter cone or basket. Prior to die-cutting or at some point convenient thereafter, it would be possible to place into an existing line of assembly, interstitial machinery to implement the aforementioned marking system. This may be comprised, but not limited to a “self-priming” rotary rubber stamp device similar to those commonly used to imprint images and text onto paper surfaces such as cartons and other shipping containers. This device consists of a hollow drum having a contact surface of a porous rubber-like polymer on its periphery. Embossed on the peripheral contact surface of the drum is a multiplicity of graphics or text, formed in raised positive relief. These relief images are analogous to the printing surface of a common rubber stamp except that it rotates under pressure as a surface is moved beneath it in a manner similar to a stationary wheel placed on a moving conveyor belt thus repeating the image or series of images each time the wheel makes a single revolution. The hollow of the drum acts a reservoir for acetic acid or other appropriate fluid designed for the task, that is exuded through the porous contact surface of the printing wheel each time an image becomes under pressure due to contact with the moving surface below. The drum's internal reservoir may be constantly supplied with additional etching fluid by means of an external reserve tank and feed tube integrated within the axel of the drum unit.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61321475 | Apr 2010 | US |