The present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a panel, comprising the steps of supplying a substrate having an upper side, applying a layer onto the upper side and subsequently irradiating the upper side so as to cure at least a part of the layer by irradiation, hence forming the panel.
Such a method of manufacturing a panel is known.
An object of the invention is to provide an efficient method of manufacturing a panel for covering a floor, a wall, a ceiling or furniture.
This object is accomplished by the invention, wherein the layer comprises a liquid coating on substantially the entire upper side and a substance which is digitally printed locally on the upper side, wherein the substance and the liquid coating cooperate such that either the coating and the substance react with each other, whereas the substance is a liquid that is printed on the upper side before the coating is applied and wherein the substance and the coating have different surface tensions, or the coating is non-curable or only curable to a limited extent by the irradiation, whereas the substance makes the coating curable by the irradiation at locations where they meet each other.
An advantage of the present invention is that each of the defined options provides an efficient method to create a textured surface at the upper side of the resulting panel. Digital printing of the substance provides the opportunity to print the substance in numerous different possible patterns and to control the velocity of the printed substance. Digital printing may be performed by inkjet printing, for example.
The resulting panel may be suitable for a floor, wall or ceiling covering or alternative coverings. It may also be a panel that is suitable for furniture, or the like.
The option wherein the substance is printed as a liquid on the upper side before the coating is applied, whereas the substance and the coating have different surface tensions and react with each other, provides the opportunity to influence the surface structure of the upper surface of the coating. Due to the different surface tensions between the coating and the substance they repel each other, creating a finely textured upper surface at regions where the substance is printed, i.e. a microstructure. This results in a tactile and visual effect which distinguishes areas where the substance is printed from areas where the substance is not printed.
It is noted that variations in substance thickness and coating thickness may vary the final result of the tactile and visual effect.
The coating and the substance may cooperate with each other such that the substance penetrates or partly penetrates into the coating.
When the word ‘liquid’ is used herein, it may cover a wide range of viscosities. For example, a pasty material is also regarded as being a liquid.
The coating and the substance may already start to react with each other before the step of irradiating.
The substance may have a higher surface tension than the coating.
The surface tensions of the coating and the substance may be varied by selecting the chemical nature of their base raw materials and by adding specific additives. For example, resins containing polar groups as hydroxyl, amines and aromatic groups will have a surface tension higher than resins containing linear structures of hydrocarbon type. Additives reducing the surface tension may be: silicones, polyether silicones, acrylate silicones, polyether silicones acrylates, fluorinated surfactants, alkoxylated alcohols. Additives increasing the surface tension may be amines, polyethers macromers-modified polyacrylates, silicon and polyethers macromers-modified polyacrylates.
The substance may be a liquid that contains a photo crosslinking resin, for example (meth) acrylate and/or vinyl monomers and/or acrylate oligomers.
The substance may be a varnish. Varnishes serve many purposes, for example to be used as a protectant. The varnish may contain water and/or solvents to control its viscosity.
Preferably the coating is a glossy coating, such that the textured upper surface of the resulting panel at areas where the substance is applied, create a great contrast against a higher gloss. The surrounding areas of the glossy coating which do not contain the substance remain smooth and glossy, creating a tactile and visual contrast between the areas with and without the printed substance. The coating may have various chemical nature, for example a polyurethane, epoxy, photo-crosslinking, acrylated, acrylic resin or the like.
Photo-crosslinking resins have in common the fact of polymerizing and hardening thanks to the energy irradiated by ultraviolet ray devices and/or by irradiation with EB (Electron Beam) and are divided in different types based on the cross-linking mechanism: 1) radical resins, typically from vinyl monomers and acrylate resins that are divided in different subcategories: epoxy-acrylate, urethane-acrylate, polyester-acrylate, polyether-acrylate, amino-acrylate, silicon-acrylate, polyisoprene-acrylate, polybutadiene acrylate and acrylate monomers. Among the vinyl monomers can be cited N-vinyl caprolactame (NVC), acryloyl morpholine (ACMO), diethylene glycol divinyl ether (DVE-2), triethylene glycol divinyl ether (DVE-3) and mixtures thereof. 2) cationic resin such as epoxy resin, polyols and monomers such as oxetanes and vinyl ethers.
The coating may be applied by means of inkjet printing, screen printing, roller printing, spraying, curtain coating or the like. The coating and/or the substance may comprise a synthetic resin which is polymerized during the step of irradiating, more specifically via free radical polymerization. The radiation may be UV radiation, X-ray radiation, laser radiation, electron beam radiation, visible light, infrared, or the like. In case of UV radiation the coating may contain photo initiators for initiating free radical polymerization.
The option wherein the coating is non-curable or only curable to a limited extent by the irradiation, whereas the substance makes the coating curable by the irradiation at locations where they meet each other, provides the opportunity to create an upper surface at the upper side which has elevated areas at locations where the substance is printed.
The substance may comprise a photo-initiator.
The non-curable coating may be constituted by non-photo-crosslinking materials such as polyurethane, epoxy, PLASTISOL, hot-melt resins or the like.
In a particular embodiment the substance is a first substance, wherein a second substance is digitally printed locally on the upper side adjacent to the first substance, which second substance inhibits curing of the coating at locations where they meet each other such that the coating remains liquid there. In this embodiment the non-curable coating is made curable at locations where the first substance is printed, but curing is inhibited where the second substance is printed, for example by stopping propagation of radicals if the first substance contains a photo-initiator. This prevents the coating from curing beyond borders of areas where the first substance is printed, hence creating well-defined borders of cured coating.
If the first substance contains a photo-initiator, the second substance may contain polymerization inhibitors such as UV absorbers for example 2-hydroxyphenyl-benzophenones (BP), 2-(2-hydroxyphenyl)-benzotriazoles (BTZ) and 2-hydroxyphenyl-s-triazines (HPT); stereo-hindered amines (HALS) for example 2, 2, 6, 6-tetramethyl piperidines (TMP); antioxidants (AO) for example sterically hindered phenols, secondary thioethers, phosphites, stabilizers (in-can stabilizer) for example quinone methide, radical scavengers.
The second substance may comprise a UV absorber, an electron scavenger and/or an anti-oxidant so as to inhibit propagation of radicals.
The first and second substances may be printed synchronously, which is time saving. Nevertheless, they may also be printed in successive steps.
Remaining liquid may be removed from the upper side after the step of irradiating the upper side, for example by means of a brushing device.
The substance may be printed after applying the coating on the upper side.
The substrate may be made of a wood-based material, preferably MDF or HDF, or thermoplastic, preferably vinyl, for example WPC, SPC or LVT, metal, glass, stone, ceramic, textile, non-woven fabric, polymeric composite, mineral-based material like MgO, or cement or the like. The substrate may be rigid or flexible such that the resulting panel is rigid or flexible, respectively.
The step of irradiating may comprise UV irradiating.
Before the step of applying the layer a decor may be applied on the upper side. The decor may comprise a pattern, for example imitating a wood, a stone or a cement material.
The decor may be printed directly onto the upper side, for example by means of inkjet printing. The expression ‘printed directly’ does not exclude that intermediate layers, like primers or ink receiver layers, are applied onto the upper side prior to printing the decor. The decor may be printed using water-based inks, solvent based inks, oil based inks or, preferably, UV curable inks. The decor and the substance may be printed in register. This results in a surface texture which is in register with the decor. It is possible to obtain an extremely precise synchronization of the decor and the surface texture by digital printing. Moreover, this high precision synchronization can be obtained for an increased variety of the decor, without the need of a huge stock of preformed structured sheets to be attached to the substrate.
The decor may at least be partly cured before applying the layer.
A primer, or any alternative basecoat, may be applied onto the upper side before applying the decor.
The primer may at least partly be cured before applying the decor.
The decor may be applied by means of a decorative layer which is attached to the substrate, for example a printed paper or plastic foil. It may be attached by gluing, thermal lamination or lamination, for example.
The coating may be transparent. The transparency of the coating is preferably in correspondence to the visible radiation so that a decor being present between the substrate and the coating is visible.
The invention will hereafter be elucidated with reference to very schematic drawings showing embodiments of the invention by way of example.
The varnish 11 and the coating 12 have different surface tensions such that they repel each other. Consequently, the varnish 11 does not fully spread across the upper side 3. Furthermore, the varnish 11 and the coating 12 cooperate such that they react with each other, resulting in a finely textured upper surface of the coating 12 at the areas where the varnish 11 has been printed. In a next step the upper side 3 is irradiated by means of a UV radiator 14 so as to cure the coating 12 and the varnish 11, hence forming the panel 1. The rightmost picture of
In this embodiment the coating 12 and the varnish 11 already start to react with each other before the step of irradiating. It is also possible that the reaction only occurs during the step of irradiating or that the reaction has ended before the step of irradiating. The coating 12 and the varnish 11 together form a layer which is applied on the upper side 3 of the substrate 2 before irradiating the upper side 3 so as to cure the layer. The UV radiator 14 may be provided with Hg lamps and/or LED lamps for creating photo-polymerization in the coating 12 and the varnish 11.
In a next step the upper side 3 is irradiated by means of the UV radiator 14 after which remaining non-curable coating 17 is removed by a mechanical device, such as a brushing machine 23. The resulting panel 1 has elevated surface areas at the printed decor 8.
The removal of non-curable or non-cured coating can also be carried out by an air jet with high pressure or by a water jet with high pressure or by using a suitable solvent, for example.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments shown in the drawings and described hereinbefore, which may be varied in different manners within the scope of the claims and their technical equivalents.
The invention is further disclosed by the following list of numbered items.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21217114.4 | Dec 2021 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 18/063,103 filed Dec. 8, 2022, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. This application claims priority under 35 USC 119(a)-(d) from EP patent application No. 21217114.4 filed on Dec. 22, 2021, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 18063103 | Dec 2022 | US |
Child | 18527315 | US |