The present invention is directed to a method for applying images on printing plates.
Various methods are known for placing images on planographic or offset printing plates. In one method, photosensitive plates are exposed to lasers and thereafter are developed in accordance with a wet-chemical process. The prior art also shows so-called thermo-plates, wherein a linkage of the uppermost layer is achieved by the use of laser energy, and the process that is triggered in this way, is brought to a close in a further step. Another arrangement was selected in connection with so-called thermally ablative plates. There, an absorbent intermediate layer is caused to evaporate by a laser, whereupon the ink-repellent layer above it is dissolved and can be removed in a subsequent step. In this context, see U.S. Pat. No. 5,487,338.
It is also known to place an image on a printing plate by applying a suitable fluid. In accordance with U.S. Pat. No. 4,003,312, a silicon solution, corresponding to the image to be printed, is sprayed on a printing plate substrate and is cured. By this process, the required surface structure of the printing plate is created. However, processing of the silicon layer to be sprayed on is difficult. Added to this is the difficulty in the curing of the sprayed-on silicon layer.
JP 10-119 230 A discloses a method for producing a printing plate. The ink-absorbent layer, i.e. the layer of this printed plate to be imprinted, is located on the water-absorbent layer. To produce the plate, the ink-absorbent layer is sprayed with an image-forming material by use of an inkjet. The areas not to be imprinted become water-soluble.
The object of the present invention is directed to providing a method for applying images to printing plates.
In accordance with the present invention, this object is attained by providing a printing plate having an ink-absorbent layer and an ink-repellent layer placed on it. An inkjet printing unit is used to apply a developing fluid to the ink-repellent layer to define the image to be printed. The ink-repellent layer in this area is changed and the changed areas of the ink-repellent areas are removed.
The advantages which can be attained by the present invention reside, in particular, in that a developing fluid, corresponding to an image to be printed, is applied to the ink-repellent layer with an inkjet printing unit. The ink-repellent layer is loosened or dissolved in the sprayed area, and the loosened or dissolved areas of the ink-repellent layer are removed.
Thus, by spraying or imprinting the uppermost layer by use of the inkjet printing unit, the uppermost layer is directly stripped off, or is loosened or dissolved to such an extent that it can be stripped off. The properties of the ink-repellent layer are changed by the developing fluid in such a way that this layer can be easily removed in the areas imprinted with the developing fluid. The areas not imprinted with the developing fluid remain on the printing plate, so that the desired surface structure is achieved. The ink-absorbent layer is exposed in the areas from which the ink-repellent layer has been removed, so that the printing plate is provided with ink-absorbent areas corresponding to the image to be printed and with the remaining areas being ink-repellent. The developing fluid can be precisely applied, droplet by droplet, with the aid of the inkjet printing unit.
Substantial advantages are achieved by the direct loosening or dissolving of the surface of the printing plate in accordance with the present invention. A higher degree of dependability of the inkjet method is achieved. In particular, the drying of the ink known with the conventional methods is prevented. The print head often became gummed up when spraying the silicon solution, or when applying light-repellent printing inks for the photographic development of the printing plates in accordance with the prior processes. This made extensive cleaning necessary, or even made the print head completely unusable. In contrast to these prior methods, the developing fluid used with the present invention cannot gum up the print head of the inkjet printing unit.
Moreover, further steps for then processing the printing plate such as, for example, the curing of the sprayed-on silicon or synthetic resin solution, or the customary photographic development of photosensitive layers following fixation of the areas not to be removed, are omitted in the use of the method for applying images in accordance with the present invention.
In a particularly advantageous manner, it is now possible, in connection with the application of images on a printing plate in accordance with the present invention, to do without the clean room conditions in the printing press, which had to be adhered to in connection with the known prior art methods. No material is applied in the present method. Material is only removed.
It is possible, in principle, to employ various printing plates in the present invention. However, a waterless printing plate, with an ink-repellent layer of silicon, is preferably used. Various layers are considered as ink-absorbent layer, which withstand the action of the developing fluid used to remove the ink-repellent layer. It is possible, in particular, to provide a polyethylene foil, which is placed under the silicon layer, as the ink-absorbent layer.
The developing fluid to be used is matched to the ink-repellent layer to be loosened or dissolved. A solvent is used in particular, by the use of which, the respective areas of the ink-repellent layer are liquefied. It is then possible to remove the silicon layer, in a particularly simple manner, from the loosened areas in a subsequent step.
Several methods can be considered for removing the loosened or removed areas of the ink-repellent, top layer of the printing plate. For example, the loosened or dissolved areas of the ink-repellent layer can be removed with the first printing ink, or mechanically by use of a suitable cleaning unit. The loosened or dissolved area of the top layer of the printing plate are preferably removed by mechanical stresses on the printing plate, in particular by a printing process. Because of this, the required process steps for the image application are minimized, and an efficient, as well as a simple, image application on the printing plate is achieved, in accordance with the present method.
In place of the above-described loosening or dissolution and removal of the ink-repellent layer, it is also possible, in principle, to print an ink-absorbing top layer with developing fluid in the manner described above by use of an inkjet printing unit and in this way to loosen and to dissolve and remove the ink-absorbing top layer. In this case, areas of the ink-repellent layer located underneath the top, ink-absorbing layer are exposed. However, preferably a printing plate with a top, ink-repellent layer, in particular made of silicon, is used in the above-described manner, which top, ink-repellent layer of the printing plate is removed in areas corresponding to the image to be printed.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is represented in the drawings and will be described in greater detail in what follows.
Shown are in:
Referring initially to
A waterless printing plate, which is a product of the firm Presstek (PearlDry), is preferably used in connection with the present invention. This plate is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,487,338, to which specific reference is made in connection with the structure of the printing plate.
In order to loosen, or to remove, the silicon, ink-repellent layer 04 area-wise in accordance with the image to be printed, a solvent is applied, droplet by droplet, as the developing fluid to the surface of the silicon layer 04 by use of a print head 05, as schematically represented in
The finished printing plate, with the images applied and with the areas of the silicon layer 04 removed, is depicted in FIG. 2. The printing plate 01 is brought into contact with printing ink, which only adheres to the ink-absorbent polyethylene layer 03, i.e. to the areas from which the silicon layer 04 was removed. The ink images applied to the ink absorbing portions of the printing plate are transferred to the carrier, such as to the paper web, to be imprinted.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 18 547 | Apr 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE01/00697 | 2/22/2001 | WO | 00 | 10/10/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/78984 | 10/25/2001 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030085972 A1 | May 2003 | US |