The present application relates to photosensitive plates used for lithographic printing, and particularly to negative working, photopolymerizable plates. Messrs.
Plates of this type commonly consist of a grained and anodized aluminum substrate, a solvent soluble, imageable photosensitive layer (PS layer) carried on the substrate, and a water soluble, oxygen barrier topcoat. The top coat prevents oxygen in the air from interacting with the PS layer in a way that reduces the cross linking potential of the PS material.
The manufacturer of such plates (sometimes referred to precursor plates) typically ships the plates to printing plants in sealed packages of 25-50 plates each. Both prior and during shipping, and typically after receipt of shipment, these packages or boxes are further stacked, with up to ten packages in each stack. Thus, the lower-most plates in the bottom stack of packages can be subjected to the weight of nearly 500 plates. Furthermore, as packages are moved they can induce sheer forces within a given package and between packages, thereby subjecting the plates to scratching or other scarring.
The prevailing technique for minimizing potential damage between plates is to provide a paper or similar interleaf between the top of one plate and the bottom of the next higher plate. The interleaf can serve another function when applied to sections of fully coated and dried web coming off the coating line, by facilitating the simultaneous cutting of individual plates from a stack of such sections of webs that have emerged from the coating line, to minimize friction between the cutting tool and the plates.
Several techniques are known for avoiding the use of interleafs, as described, for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,496,677. These range from applying a peelable protective layer on the PS layer or on the back face of the substrate during manufacture of the web, which avoids the step of adding interleafing between cut plates, but still requires the removal of the protective layer at the print mill. Other, both peelable and non-peelable protective layers are described for the PS layer or the back face of the substrate. However, these are concerned with one or both of providing lubrication for cutting plates from the original web, and avoiding scratches as plates move relative to each other during handling or stacking.
None of these techniques, however, is derived from recognition of the potential picking reaction between the confronting surfaces in a stack of plates.
Accordingly, the present inventor realized that if interleafing were to be eliminated for stacking plates whereby a water soluble topcoat confronts an anodized aluminum substrate under the pressure of the stack, the entire hydrophilic substrate surface would be in blanket contact with the entire hydrophilic topcoat. The contact between two hydrophilic surfaces results in a picking reaction at the topcoat, with random, localized removal of topcoat material. Such localized removal of the topcoat permits random penetration of oxygen into the PS layer in areas where image will be desired. The picked areas experience less polymerization and exhibit wear earlier than the rest of the plate. On press, ink will not adhere to the exposed hydrophilic areas beneath the picked PS material. The resulting printed media will show random holes in the image areas.
According to the solution, in a stack of lithographic printing plate precursors, each plate has an aluminum substrate, a photopolymerizable PS layer carried on the upper surface of the substrate, a water soluble topcoat oxidation inhibitor carried on the PS layer, and a water insoluble bottom coat on the lower surface of the substrate, wherein the bottom coat of each intermediate plate is in direct covering contact with the topcoat of an immediately adjacent plate.
The stack can have 25-50 plates contained in a package such as a box or bag. Ten or more packages can be stacked during handling or storage by the manufacturer, shipper, and end user.
Preferably, an oliophilic material is applied to one face of a raw aluminum web before the PS layer and topcoat are applied to the other face of the web. This pretreatment can be performed by the supplier of coiled aluminum sheet (web) before delivery to the plate manufacturer or ay a pretreatment station in the plate manufacturer's plant.
As used herein, “coat” includes all techniques for producing a filmic layer of one material on another, including lamination. Preferably, the bottom coat is laminated on the web before the PS layer and top coat are applied. Most preferably, the bottom coat is an electrically non-conductive oliophilic laminate.
When the aluminum web is pretreated with a nonconductive bottom coat, the graining and anodizing steps can be limited to only the upper surface for receiving the PS layer. None of the electrical fields or electrochemical reactions take place on the bottom surface of the aluminum. This not only saves a tremendous amount of energy, but also assures that no graining or anodizing occurs at the bottom margins of the web, which would otherwise require trimming.
A process embodiment for manufacturing lithographic printing plate precursors, comprises the steps of (a) selecting a coil consisting essentially of an aluminum sheet with an electrically nonconductive, oliophilic polymer material coated on one side of the sheet; (b) graining and anodizing only the other side of the sheet to form a substrate web with a grained and anodized top surface and a polymeric, oliophilic bottom surface; (c) in a coating line, applying a photopolymerizable resin layer to the top surface of the web; (d) in a coating line, applying a water soluble oxygen inhibition layer to the resin layer to produce a finished web; (e) without interleafing, cutting through multiple sections of the finished web to produce stacks of finally sized precursor plates; and (f) without interleafing, packaging together at least 25 stacked and confronting precursor plates.
Aspects of the invention are disclosed in greater detail below with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
As represented In
Preferably, the aluminum sheet 22 is pretreated with bottom coat 28 and the composite thereafter subjected to a process for graining and anodizing only the upper surface 24 of the aluminum sheet 22. As a result, the upper surface 24 is hydrophilic and the bottom surface 20 is oliophilic.
As represented by item 16 in
The discharged web 120 can be coiled for delivery to a PS coating line or conveyed directly to the PS coating line 122 represented in
It should be appreciated that the finally sized precursor plates are rectangular, with consistent length and width dimensions. As the final web 128 is continuously discharged, it is cut 130 into a multiplicity of that have the same width as the web but of a convenient length corresponding to a multiple of one of length or width dimensions of the precursor plates. Without interleafing, the multiplicity of sections are placed 132 one on top the other whereby the top coat of one section directly confronts the polymer laminate of a next higher section (as represented in