Inkjet printing apparatuses can be used for single-color or multicolor printing of a printing substrate, for example a belt-shaped recording material made of the most varied materials (paper, for example). The design of such inkjet printing apparatuses is known; see for example EP 0 788 882 B1. Inkjet printing apparatuses that operate according to the Drop on Demand (DoD) principle have a print head or multiple print heads with nozzles comprising ink channels, the activators of which nozzles—controlled by a print controller—excite ink droplets in the direction of the printing substrate web, which droplets are directed towards the printing substrate in order to apply print dots there for a print image. The activators can generate ink droplets thermally (bubble jet) or piezoelectrically.
Given printing of a printing substrate web, it is sometimes necessary to stop the printing substrate web in a pause function during the printing operation, for example in order to monitor the register quality after printing a print job, or in order to correct problems in the post-processing of the printing substrate web. After the resumption of the printing substrate web, print image disruptions can then occur at those web segments that were located directly under the print heads after activation of the pause function. Due to the relatively large transfer printing zone in inkjet printing apparatuses (inkjet printing systems, for example), in particular in color printing, the print image disruptions created due to the pause correspondingly cause a great deal of maculature. The occurring print image defects contain print image distortions, color register errors and trapezoidal print image distortions. The causes for these are the swelling or shrinking of the printing substrate web during the pause, and the position shifts of the printing substrate web below the print heads that are linked with this.
These problems are explained using prior art
In
It is an object to specify a method in which the unwanted influences of the temperature and the environmental air on the print substrate web—and therefore on the print image—after triggering a pause function are minimized, in particular after ending a print pause.
In a method to execute a pause function in an inkjet printing system with at least one printing apparatus, the pause function is triggered to reduce a feed speed of the printing substrate web from a speed during printing operation to a predetermined speed for a predetermined duration. The duration is selected so that the printing substrate has suitable properties with regard to at least one of the elements selected from the group consisting of moisture and temperature under the printing unit of the printing apparatus at an end of the pause function. After ending the pause function, the printing substrate web is accelerated again to the speed during the printing operation.
a-3c are diagrams that show the dependency of the feed speed v of the printing substrate web on the time t in the various exemplary embodiments of the pause function.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference will now be made to the preferred exemplary 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 exemplary embodiments 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.
According to one exemplary embodiment, with triggering of the pause function the feed speed of the printing substrate web is reduced from the operating speed used in the print operation to a predetermined value for a predetermined time period. The time period can be selected so that, upon ending the pause, a printing substrate web with properties suitable for printing (with regard to the moisture and/or temperature) is presented under the printing unit of the printing apparatus; for example, the printing substrate web has adapted to the environmental air with regard to the moisture and the temperature.
After triggering the pause function, in a first exemplary embodiment the feed speed of the printing substrate web can be reduced from the operating speed to a predetermined speed for a predetermined time period in a lead time upon printing, and after expiration of the lead time period the printing substrate web can be stopped for a pause time of 1 min (for example) in order to be able to subsequently accelerate it to the operating speed again.
In a second exemplary embodiment, after triggering the pause function the feed speed of the printing substrate web can be reduced from the operating speed upon printing to a predetermined speed for the entire pause time (of 1 min, for example) in order to be accelerated to the operating speed again at the end of the pause.
The advantage of the method according to the exemplary embodiment is that a web segment of the printing substrate web is situated under the printing unit during the pause and after ending the pause, which printing unit has values suitable for printing with regard to temperature and/or moisture. These are values that the printing substrate web has when this has adapted to the environmental air with regard to moisture and temperature.
An exemplary embodiment is presented in
Depending on the requirements of the print operation of an inkjet printing apparatus, two different embodiments of the pause function according to the exemplary embodiment are realized in the print jobs to be processed or at the apparatuses for post-processing the printing substrate web:
1: Downtime pause with lead time
2: Creep pause
Both pause variants lead to an improvement of the print quality by reducing the aforementioned print image disruptions.
I. Application of the exemplary embodiment in a printing apparatus DR (
1. Downtime Pause with Lead Time
In the downtime pause with lead time, after operating a pause button to interrupt the print operation the feed speed of the printing substrate web 3 is reduced for a predetermined time period tv (
2. Creep Pause
In the creep pause (
II. Application of the Exemplary Embodiment in a Duplex Printing System
1. Explanation of the Special Problems in a Duplex Printing System
Special problems occur in the operation of a duplex printing system. These problems and their solution are described using
If the pause function in such a duplex printer without application of the exemplary embodiment is examined, the different causes for the swelling or shrinking of the printing substrate web 3 in the printing apparatuses DR1 and DR2 are to be considered:
Relationships in the first printing apparatus DR1:
For example, the print heads 5 of the printing unit 1.1 have an operating temperature of approximately 32° C. The resulting temperature difference from the temperature of the printing substrate web 3 leads to a shrinking of the printing substrate web 3 that is located directly below the print heads. This shrinking of the printing substrate web 3 and the movements of the printing substrate web 3 in the longitudinal direction and in the transversal direction that are connected with this cannot be registered by a rotary encoder wheel arranged at the input of the printing unit 1.1. After ending the pause, print quality defects therefore result at the first printing apparatus DR1.
Relationships in the second printing apparatus DR2:
The printing substrate web 3 that has already been dried in the drying unit 10.1 in the first printing apparatus DR1 after the printing process takes up moisture from the environmental air during the pause, which moisture leads to swelling of the printing substrate web 3. The swelling of the printing substrate web 3 causes a length change of the printing substrate web 3 in the longitudinal direction and transversal direction both before and after the rotary encoder wheel 6. The swelling of the printing substrate web 3 before the rotary encoder wheel 6, and the web movement in the longitudinal direction that is connected with this, are registered by the rotary encoder wheel 6 and communicated to the printer controller 2, which accordingly corrects the point in time of the activation of the print heads 5 of the printing unit 1.2. The swelling of the printing substrate web 3 after the rotary encoder wheel 6, and the web movement connected with this (also that of the printing substrate web 3 below the print heads of the printing unit 1.2), cannot be registered by the rotary encoder wheel 6, which is why print pulses corresponding to the movement of the printing substrate web 3 also cannot be supplied to the print heads. This has an effect in the form of a print image distortion. A shrinking of the printing substrate web 3 also occurs below the print heads 5 of the second printing unit 1.2. However, here the shrinking of the printing substrate web 3 counteracts the swelling of the printing substrate web 3 due to the moisture of the environmental air and thus reduces the print image errors resulting from this.
2. Solution to the Problems in the Duplex Printing System that are Illustrated Above
The measures of the preferred embodiment to avoid the effect of these influences on the printing substrate web 3 (and therefore on the print image) now have different effects in the two printing apparatuses DR1, DR2 in a duplex printing system DS.
2.1 Pause with Lead Time
a) Relationships in the Second Printing Apparatus DR2
During operation with reduced speed of the printing substrate web 3 during the pause lead time tv, the printing substrate web 3 is provided with more time in order to acquire moisture via the environmental air, such that the largest portion of the swelling of the printing substrate web 3 has occurred with the standstill of the printing substrate web 3 at the beginning of the pause. In order to bolster this effect, additional measures can be taken that affect the take-up of the moisture by the printing substrate web 3, insofar as the corresponding means are provided at the printing apparatus DR:
b) Relationships in the first printing apparatus DR1
Here measures can be taken via which the heating of the printing substrate web 3 in the printing apparatus DR1 is reduced. If the pause button is operated, the temperature of the print heads of the printing unit 1.1 can be reduced (by 2-3° C.) during the pause lead time tv, with the result that the printing substrate web 3 shrinks less below the print heads.
Additional measures can be taken for both printing apparatuses DR1, DR2: for example, in the printing operation the print heads can be moved by up to 1 to 2 mm from the current print head position at the beginning of the pause. A reduction of the heat transfer from the print heads 5 to the printing substrate web 3 is thereby achieved.
2.2 Creep Pause
During the creep pause, upon operation of the pause button the speed of the printing substrate web 3 is only reduced, for example to vs=0.001 m/s to 0.015 m/s. In this variant of the pause function, a standstill of the printing substrate web 3 does not occur. A slack of the printing substrate web 3 that possibly arises after the printing apparatus DR2 must be taken up by the post-processing 13 of the printing substrate web 3.
The printing unit 1 of a printing apparatus DR is shown in principle in
Diagrams of the speed v of the printing substrate web 3 plotted over time t for the pause function of a printing apparatus DR result from
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 2011 000 174.3 | Jan 2011 | DE | national |