The present invention generally relates to preventing flutes in digital printing and, more particularly, to depositing a plurality of clear liquid patterns on the substrate for preventing flutes.
In a digitally controlled inkjet printing system, a receiver media (also referred to as a print medium) is conveyed past a series of components. The receiver media can be a cut sheet of receiver media or a continuous web of receiver media. A web or cut sheet transport system physically moves the receiver media through the printing system. As the receiver media moves through the printing system, liquid (e.g., ink) is applied to the receiver media by one or more printheads through a process commonly referred to as jetting of the liquid. The jetting of liquid onto the receiver media introduces significant moisture content to the receiver media, particularly when the system is used to print multiple colors on a receiver media. Due to the added moisture content, an absorbent receiver media expands and contracts in a non-isotropic manner, often with significant hysteresis. The continual change of dimensional characteristics of the receiver media can adversely affect image quality. Although drying is used to remove moisture from the receiver media, drying can also cause changes in the dimensional characteristics of the receiver media that can also adversely affect image quality.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,079,694 to Daly et al., entitled “Clear Fluid Patterning on Paper Media,” discloses depositing clear toner surrounding the entirety of the image or images, and the clear toner covers all or, in one case, most of the page on which the image is printed. “The pattern of clear fluid is defined by a maximum width that is generally equal to the maximum width of the image to be formed,” (Abstract) and the clear fluid must “contact” the image it surrounds.
While U.S. Pat. No. 8,079,694 is satisfactory, it includes drawbacks.
First, the present invention overcomes the limited teachings of U.S. Pat. No. 8,079,694, in which the maximum width of a pattern must be equal to the image to be formed. Second, this method is costly since clear fluid is deposited in large quantities on the page of interest. Costly is obviously a driver in deciding whether a method is suitable for commercial use. Therefore, a need exists for a means to prevent the formation of receiver media wrinkles as a receiver media contacts web-guiding structures in a digital printing system which is cost effective in the use of clear fluid and overcomes technical limitations of the prior art.
As will be described below, the present invention solves the shortcomings of U.S. Pat. No. 8,079,694.
A method for printing an image on a substrate, the method comprising the steps of providing a plurality of rollers for moving a substrate on which the image is printed; depositing a plurality of different colored inks on a print side of the substrate which form the image; depositing clear liquid on the non-print side of the substrate in a predetermined pattern for permitting the substrate to have uniform substrate growth.
These and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon a reading of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the drawings wherein there is shown and described an illustrative embodiment of the invention.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent when taken in conjunction with the following description and drawings wherein identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical features that are common to the figures, and wherein:
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter of the present invention, it is believed that the invention will be better understood from the following description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
As described herein, the exemplary embodiments of the present invention provide receiver media guiding components useful for guiding the receiver media in inkjet printing systems. However, many other applications are emerging which use inkjet printheads to emit liquids (other than inks) that need to be finely metered and deposited with high spatial precision. Such liquids include inks, both water based and solvent based, that include one or more dyes or pigments. These liquids also include various substrate coatings and treatments, various medicinal materials, and functional materials useful for forming, for example, various circuitry components or structural components. As such, as described herein, the terms “liquid” and “ink” refer to any material that is ejected by the printhead or printhead components described below. Inkjet printing is commonly used for printing on paper, however, there are numerous other substrates in which inkjet is appropriate. For example, vinyl sheets, plastic sheets, textiles, paperboard and corrugated cardboard in addition to paper can comprise the substrate. Additionally, although the term inkjet is often used to describe the printing process, the term jetting is also appropriate wherever ink or other liquids is applied in a consistent, metered fashion, particularly if the desired result is a thin layer or coating.
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Below each printhead 20a, 20b, 20c, 20d is a media guide assembly including print line rollers 31 and 32 that guide the continuous web of substrate 10 past a first print line 21 and a second print line 22 as the substrate 10 is advanced along a media path in the in-track direction 4. Below each dryer 40 is at least one dryer roller 41 for controlling the position of the web of substrate 10 near the dryers 40.
Substrate 10 originates from a source roll 11 of unprinted substrate 10, and printed substrate 10 is wound onto a take-up roll 12. Other details of the printing module 50 and the digital printing system 100 are not shown in
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A web-guiding system 30 guides the web of substrate 10 from upstream to downstream along a transport path in an in-track direction 4 past through the first printing module 55 and the second printing module 65. The web-guiding system 30 includes rollers aligned with the print lines of the printheads 20a, 20b, 25a, and 25b. These rollers 2 maintain the substrate 10 at a fixed spacing from the printing modules to ensure a consistent time of flight for the print drops emitted by the printheads 20a, 20b, 25, 25b. The web-guiding system 30 also includes a web-guiding structure 70, which can be a roller for example, positioned near the exit of first printing module 55 for redirecting a direction of travel of the web of substrate 10 along exit direction 9 in order to guide the web of substrate 10 toward the turnover mechanism 60. The movement of the receiver media 3 of the guiding rollers 2 of the web guiding system 30 also maintains the cross-track position of the continuous web provided there is sufficient traction between the continuous web and the guiding rollers 2.
It is not uncommon for a web-guiding system 30 to include a web-guiding structure 70 that provides a large angular change in the direction of travel of the web of the substrate 10. Such large angular changes may be required by geometric constraints on the overall dimensions of the web-guiding system 30 or the need to align the web of substrate 10 with a downstream portion of the web-guiding system 30. For example, web-guiding structure 70, which is positioned near the exit of first printing module 55, redirects the direction of travel of the web of substrate 10 by about 90° into exit direction 9 in order to guide web of substrate 10 toward the turnover mechanism 60.
When the substrate 10 is a hygroexpansive material such as cellulose based paper, and at least portions of the substrate 10 are moistened such as by inkjet printing, the receiver media 3 can be prone to wrinkling when wrapped at high wrap angles around a roller 2. A similar tendency to wrinkle exists at high wrap angle rollers when a very thin receiver media 3, such as plastic films of polyethylene and poly (ethylene terephthalate), is being transported along the transport path by the web-guiding system 30, as such substrate 10 lacks the compressive strength to flatten the ripples produced in the substrate 10 by the variations in the in-track and cross-track tension.
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The present invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
2 rollers
3 receiver media
4 in-track direction
5 flutes
7 cross track direction
8 contact surface
9 exit direction
10 substrate
11 source roll
12 take up roll
15 first side
16 second side
20
a-20d printheads
18 second side
21 first print line
22 second print line
25
a,
25
b printhead
30 web guiding system
31 print line rollers
32 print line rollers
40 dryers
41 dryer roller
45 control sensor
50 printing module
51 first zone
52 second print zone
55 first printing module
60 turnover mechanism
65 second printing module
70 web-guiding structure
75
a printhead
75
b printhead
75
c printhead
75
d printhead
80
a gravure roller
80
b gravure roller
80
c gravure roller
80
d gravure roller
100 digital printing system
110 printing system
120 images
130 clear ribs
130
a dashed pattern
130
b dotted pattern
131 space
135 hexagonal shape
Reference is made to commonly-assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ (Kodak Docket K001708US01) filed concurrently herewith, entitled “METHOD FOR PREVENTING FLUTES ON A PRINT SIDE” by David J. Cornell, et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.