This application is a national stage application under 35 U.S.C. §371 of PCT/EP2011/062170, filed Jul. 15, 2011.
Some printers and printing presses (hereinafter printers) use a condenser to remove heat and/or vapor(s) generated during operation. A condenser uses one or more temperature-controlled surfaces to affect the temperature of a fluid passing by the condenser. The fluid may then be re-circulated back into the printer to maintain an acceptable operating temperature of the printer.
The example systems and apparatus described herein may be used to increase collection and/or reduce emission of vapor in, for example, a printer such as a printing press. Some example apparatus described herein include a duct to direct a mixture of air and ink carrier vapor from a printer to a condenser. The duct may couple to only a portion of the condenser. Other portions of the condenser may be used to cool air flowing through the printer, but not flowing through the duct. The duct substantially reduces or prevents air from outside the duct from diluting the ink carrier vapor in the mixture. Thus, the mixture has substantially the same concentration of ink carrier vapor as when the mixture entered the duct from the printer. The example condenser then cools the mixture, causing at least a portion of the ink carrier vapor within the mixture to condense into a liquid, which may then be collected. Collected ink carrier may be recycled. Further, collecting the ink carrier reduces the amount of ink carrier vapor that may escape from the printer. Cooled air from the condenser is then re-circulated into the printer.
The mixture of air and ink carrier vapor entering the duct may have varying concentrations of ink carrier vapor due to variations in the amount of ink used to print different pages. Reductions in the concentrations of ink carrier vapor in the flow in the duct will reduce the efficiency of the condenser. The flow of the mixture of air and ink carrier vapor in the duct is controlled by a variable speed fan. The speed of the fan is adjusted based on the amount of ink to be used for a page and the known oil to ink ratio, thereby maintaining the concentrations of ink carrier vapor in the mixture.
As the first airflow 422 passes through the condenser the air is cooled and at least part of the ink carrier vapor is condensed into a liquid. The liquid ink carrier is collected and may be recycled. The liquid ink carrier may contain water that was also condensed from water vapor in the first airflow. The amount of ink carrier condensed from the first airflow is dependent on a number of variables including: the ink carrier vapor concentration in the first airflow, the temperature of the first airflow, the temperature of the condenser, the flow rate of the first airflow, and the geometry of the condenser. In general, the higher the concentration of ink carrier vapor in the first airflow, the more efficient the condenser becomes.
The concentration of ink carrier vapor in the air near the transfer member 202 is dependent on a number of factors including: the amount of ink coverage in an image to be printed on the page, the ratio of ink/carrier to be placed on the page and the process speed. A page that contains a full-page continuous tone image will generally require more ink than a page that only contains text. The more ink required for a page corresponds to a larger amount of carrier. When printing a large number of pages with the same image, the ink carrier vapor concentration in the air near the transfer member 202 may remain fairly constant for a given airflow through duct 302. When the image printed on a page varies from page to page, the ink carrier vapor concentration in the air near the transfer member 202 may change rapidly for a given airflow through duct 302.
The controller in the printer can determine the amount of ink that each page will require, the process speed and the ratio of ink/carrier to be placed on the page. Using this information, the controller determines the amount of liquid carrier that will be used during the print operation for each page to be printed. The controller can adjust the fan speed of a variable speed fan coupled to duct 302 such that the concentration of ink carrier vapor near the duct entrance (i.e. the hood 206) remains above a threshold value or within a certain value range.
In one example embodiment of the invention, there may be only one fan used to move air past the condenser. For example, a single fan may be located to the left of the condenser (in
During operations the controller 502 directs the print head 508 to print pages onto media. The controller 502 can determine an amount of liquid carrier that will be used to print the page. The controller 502 will change the speed of the fan in the recirculation system 504 dependent on the amount of liquid carrier to be used to print the page. Controller 502 adjusts the speed of the fan to maintain the ink carrier vapor concentration above a first threshold value. If the ink carrier vapor concentration falls below the first threshold value, the efficiency of the condenser system is reduced. Controller 502 also monitors the concentration of ink carrier vapor near print head 508 using sensor 506. If the concentration of ink carrier vapor exceeds a second threshold, the controller increases the fan speed to a maximum speed to reduce the ink carrier concentration to below the second threshold. The second threshold is used to prevent the ink carrier concentration from reaching a lower explosive limit. The second threshold value is typically set at ¼ the lower explosive limit.
Because the controller has determined the amount of liquid carrier that will be used to print a page before the page will be printed, the controller may adjust the speed of the variable speed fan before the start of the printing operation for a page, just at the start of the printing operation for a page, or sometime after the start of the printing operation for a page. An averaging (or maximal) value per numerous pages can be conducted upon the rate of changing the fan speed.
Controller may comprise one or more processors, memory, logic, for example an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and the like. The processors may execute code that causes printer 500 to complete the steps of a method for operating a recirculation system inside the printer.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/062170 | 7/15/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/16/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/010570 | 1/24/2013 | WO | A |
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