Reference is made to commonly-assigned copending U.S. patent application Ser. No.______ (Attorney Docket No. K000187US01/NAB), filed herewith, entitled REUSABLE PRINTING DEVICE, by Solomon, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.
This invention relates in general to printing, and in particular to a re-usable printing surface having a plurality of cells.
In current printing technology the final image is conveyed to a substrate by transferring ink from an image bearing printing surface to the substrate. The image bearing surface generally picks up ink only on the ‘image’ areas, the areas that correspond on the substrate to be inked. The print on the substrate is produced by transferring ink directly or indirectly from an inked-up image bearing surface to the substrate. An example of this technology is a printing plate wherein certain areas of the plate are hydrophobic or hydrophilic.
In conventional printing systems, the image bearing surface picks up liquid or paste ink, typically from an ink reservoir. The means by which the surface transfers ink to the ‘image’ areas depends upon the particular technology. Printing plates will be used in flexography and offset lithography, whereas specially made cylinders are used in gravure printing. The ink is then transferred to another surface, be it the final product substrate, such as printed paper, or an intermediate medium such as a rubber blanket.
In digital printing systems, ink is transferred to the substrate in various ways for example, inkjet printing. Digital printing has an advantage over conventional print in its ability to handle variable information. This allows the printer to tailor each print differently. The main drawbacks of digital printing are that it is, in general, significantly more expensive and time consuming than conventional printing processes.
Briefly, according to one aspect of the present invention a method for preparing a printing cylinder includes providing an image bearing printing surface comprising a plurality of cells; applying a filling material into the cells; fixing the filling material in a first group of cells in a first pattern; and removing the filling material from a second group of cells.
The invention and its objects and advantages will become more apparent in the detailed description of the preferred embodiment presented below.
a is a schematic illustration of blocked and empty printing cells;
b is a cross-section of several empty printing cells on the printing block surface;
c is a cross-section of several printing cells on the printing block surface wherein some of them are empty, fully filled, or partially filled;
The present invention describes a direct printing device containing a surface of printing cells. The printing cells can be filled by selective control thus allowing forming an image to be printed on a substrate. A previously formed image can be erased from printing cells surface and modified forming another image by suitable imaging means.
a, depicts an illustration of printing cells 200 representing a segment of printing cells out of image bearing surface 108. The printing cells 200 are divided into two groups of cells, fully filled cells 204 and non-blocked or empty cells 208. The division of cells into two groups forms an image and transforms printing cells surface into an image bearing surface. The image bearing surface 108 when applied with ink and pressed on a substrate (not shown) will cause the image represented by printing cells 204 and 208 to be printed on the substrate.
In another arrangement, more than two groups (204, 208) can be formed, where each of the additional groups of cells represent filling of printing cells 200 in levels that may range from non empty to not fully filled printing cells.
b shows a cross-section of several empty printing cells on the printing block surface 212.
In order to form an image on the image bearing surface 108, a filling material is applied one the entire surface 108. The filling material can be a photopolymer that will be cured by ultra violet (UV) light, or the filling material can be a liquid polymer to be solidified by cooling means. Another filling material can a polymer solution that solidifies by vaporization of the solvent, when laser means or other thermal sources area applied. All the printing cells (204 and 208) are filled with the printing material. The filling material can be applied for example by immersing the entire surface 108 in a filling material reservoir (not shown). The next step is to fix the filling material residing in a selected group of printing cells for example printing cells 204 and removing the filling material (which is not fixed) from printing cells 208, the removal of the filling material can be performed by an printing block imaging device 300 (shown in
Fixing of the filling material can be achieved by applying UV (ultra violet) light in printing cells 204. Another alternative for fixing the filling material in cells 204 is by applying heat on the filling material in the first group in printing cells 204. The fixing method depends on the characteristics of the chosen filling material.
At this stage the image bearing surface 108 represent an image which is ready to be mounted on a printing device (not shown) for printing. The imaging device 300 can integrated into a printing device as a pre-printing step or alternatively can be a standalone system detached from a printing device. The image is formed according to a previously prepared halftone image. The halftone image is typically prepared by a digital front end (DFE) (not shown) server such as Kodak Prinergy, the DFE is capable to process a printing job received in a page description language (PDL) format and rasterizing it into a halftone image or a plurality of halftone images that represent the entire print job, ready for imaging.
In order to perform printing, the printing block 104 is mounted on a printing device. Printing of the halftone image is initiated, the printing can be performed directly from the printing block 104 to a substrate, or alternatively via an intermediate blanket to the substrate. After printing is completed the printing block 104 is unloaded from the printing device. The printing block 104 is loaded on an imaging device 300 shown in
The imaging device 300 includes a laser imaging head 304 mounted on carriage 308 in direction 312, parallel to printing cylinder 100. The carriage movement is coordinated by screw 316. The laser imaging head 304 emits laser energy pointed on the cells 204 (filled with filling material). The information which cells are filled with a filling material is provided to imaging head 304 by micro-controller 320. Micro-controller 320 receives the information on cells 204 from the previously prepared halftone image that had been used to form an image on printing block 104. The applied laser energy from imaging head 304 is adapted to dissolve the filling material from cells 204.
Another embodiment that is used to fill cells 204 with filling material is described in
In certain embodiments cells 204 will serve as printing cells and cells 208 as non printing cells, in other embodiments cells 208 will be printing cells whereas cells 204 will not print.
The 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 scope of the invention.
100 printing cylinder
104 printing block
108 image bearing surface
200 printing cells
204 fully filled cells
208 empty cells
212 printing block surface
216 fully filled printing cell
220 partially filled printing cell
224 empty printing cell
300 imaging device
304 imaging head
308 carriage
312 carriage direction
316 screw
320 micro-controller
404 inkjet head
408 injected filling material