The present application relates to direct thermal printing and labels.
Direct thermal printing involves the heating of selected areas or zones of a coating on a substrate in order to heat activate a dye by reaction with a matrix. According to
Direct thermal printing is known to be cost effective, notably by not requiring a toner, a printer-applied ink or an inked ribbon in a printer, and thus printed by the relatively inexpensive printers used in direct thermal printing. However, areas printed with direct thermal may tend to fade over time, and may lack the capacity of resisting to liquids such as solvents and chemicals. It is known to apply an ultraviolet (UV) varnish over labels, but conventional wide-spectrum UV curing will heat the direct-thermal material and cause blackening and renders the use of the UV varnish impractical in some instances.
It is an aim of the present disclosure to provide a label with UV coating that addresses issues related to the prior art.
It is a further aim of the present disclosure to provide a method for printing and protecting a direct thermal label with a LED UV coating.
Therefore, in accordance with the present disclosure, a label comprising: a facestock adapted to be adhered to an object; a direct thermal coating on the facestock, the direct thermal coating configured to selectively darken by heat activation when direct thermal printed; and a cured ultraviolet coating on the direct thermal coating, the cured ultraviolet coating having photoinitiators with substantial activation at an exposure limited to radiation at a 315 nm-450 nm wavelength range, and configured to allow direct thermal printing of the direct thermal coating therethrough, wherein the ultraviolet coating is cured without heat activating the direct thermal coating.
Further in accordance with the present disclosure, there is provided a label comprising: a facestock adapted to be adhered to an object; a direct thermal coating on the facestock, the direct thermal coating configured to selectively darken by heat activation when direct thermal printed; a cured ultraviolet coating on the direct thermal coating, the cured ultraviolet coating having photoinitiators activated to at least 75% with exposure limited to a 315 nm-450 nm wavelength range, and configured to allow direct thermal printing of the direct thermal coating therethrough, wherein the ultraviolet coating is cured without heat activating the direct thermal coating.
Further in accordance with the present disclosure, there is provided a method for fabricating a direct thermal label comprising: applying an ultraviolet coating on a direct thermal coating on a facestock; substantially curing the ultraviolet coating by exposure to ultraviolet light-emitting diodes producing light in a wavelength range of 315 nm-450 nm; and while substantially curing the ultraviolet coating, maintaining the direct thermal coating below a threshold temperature above which the direct thermal coating is activated.
Still further in accordance with the present disclosure, there is provided a method for using a direct thermal label comprising: obtaining a label with a direct thermal coating shielded by a cured ultraviolet coating; heat activating selected zones of the direct thermal coating through the ultraviolet coating to darken the selected zones; and adhering the label with the selected zones darkened to an object.
Referring to the drawings and more particularly to
Stated differently, other embodiments for the label 20 include a label and/or uncut label material without the adhesive release layer 23, a support liner 24 shared by numerous facestocks 21 and adhesive 22, or the label 20 without the support liner 24. The label 20 may have any appropriate shape, including round, square, rectangular, to name but a few of the possibilities. Moreover, a plurality of the labels 20 may be interconnected in a sheet, roll, etc., for example with tear-off perforations or cuts.
The label 20 has a direct thermal coating 25, with dye and matrix. For example, the direct thermal coating 25 includes a thermochromic ink and/or a thermochromic ink activation substance. The direct thermal coating 25 is heat sensitive as it reacts to heat to darken. Zones or surfaces are selectively heated to darken, these zones contrasting with the color of the facestock 21 and constituting the printing on the label 20. According to an embodiment, a thermochromic ink of the coating 25 is a leuco dye. These dyes have a colorless leuco form when crystalline in a pH neutral environment, and become colored when exposed to an acid. Examples of acids suitable for thermochromic materials are phenols, e.g., Bisphenol A (BPA) and Bisphenol S (BPS). Other suitable acidic substances can be used as developers for leuco dyes (sulfonyl ureas, zinc salts of substituted salicylic acids, etc.). To optimize the colorization temperature and to facilitate mixing, sensitizers can optionally be added to the direct thermal coating 25, such as 1,2-bis-(3-methylphenoxy)ethane or 2-benzyloxynapthalene. These ethers are solvents for leuco dyes and developers, and facilitate color formation at a specific temperature. To stabilize the color formed by the leuco dye, developer and sensitizer, a stabilizer might be added to the direct thermal coating 25 prior to application on the label 20. As a non-limitative example, stabilizers may be phenols that inhibit recrystallization of the dye and developer, thereby stabilizing the printed image. The above described technology is presented as an example, and not all constituents thereof are required to be present in the direct thermal coating 25 in order to achieve a thermal printing. For example, the direct thermal coating 25 might be activated without a sensitizer or stabilizer or both. Different types of thermochromic inks and developers can be used.
A LED UV coating 30 covers the direct thermal coating 25. As an example, the LED UV coating 30 may be a benzophenone-free transparent coating that forms a protective shield to protect the printing on the label 20 from solvents and chemicals. The LED UV coating 30 has photoinitiators. The photoinitiators are molecules that create reactive species when exposed to radiation. In the present disclosure, the LED UV coating 30 is selected to have photoinitiators with substantial activation in the wavelength range of around 365 nm to 450 nm. In another embodiment, or in the same embodiment, some other photoinitiators of the LED UV coating 30 can be activated in a wavelength range of 315-405 nm as well, within the ambit of the present disclosure. Accordingly, the LED UV coating 30 has the property of being curable with light-emitting diode (LED) generated waves due to the relatively short wavelength range. As a consequence, the LED UV coating 30 is curable while limiting the temperature of the surface of the substrate supporting the LED UV coating 30, for example to around 55° C. The substantial activation may be of at least 75%, and up to 90-95% of photoinitiators. Therefore, the curing is done without heat activating the direct thermal coating 25. As shown in
As a non-limitative example, the UV LED coating 30 described above was tested and its curing was attempted with ordinary mercury based UV curing system, in comparison to LED curing. In particular testing conditions, the mercury based curing showed a lower level of resistance to alcohol, around 1-2 minutes, compared to 60 minutes of resistance when a similar coating 30 was cured with a LED UV diode source. The mercury based UV light source creates a wider range of UV light and the specific wavelength necessary for activating the photoinitiators within the spectrum can only partially cure the LED UV coating 30. As a result, a significant portion of the LED UV coating 30 may not be properly cured with a mercury based UV curing system, resulting in less resistance to chemicals. Therefore, tests may indicate that the chemical resistance of the LED UV coating 30 may be dependent on the percentage of photoinitiator (PI) activations and as a result to the percentage of curing taking place during the UV radiation of the LED UV coating 30. The activation of the photoinitiators depends on a few factors, such as the moving speed of the label 20 or the material of the label 20 prior to die-cutting through the press, the distance of the light from the label 20, and how much exposure the UV LED coating 30 gets during the curing process. Under optimal conditions approximately 95% of the photoinitiators get activated in LED diode generated radiation resulting a strong protection of the ink underneath the UV LED coating 30.
Referring to
Therefore, in accordance with an embodiment, the label 20 has a facestock 21 adapted to be adhered to an object. The object may be any type of object, such as objects used in laboratories, including vials, tubes, blood collection tubes such as Vacutainers, sample collection tubes, microscope slides, tissue processing cassettes, plates, cell culture plates, microtiter plates, microarray plates, other types of plates, petri dishes, bottles, flasks, freezer boxes, cryogenic boxes, cryogenic straws, goblets other type of laboratory plastic containers, laboratory glassware and metal objects such as freezer racks, liquid nitrogen racks, canisters, etc. Furthermore, other objects, containers and surfaces in other industries are covered by the present disclosure. A direct thermal coating 25 is on the facestock 21. The direct thermal coating 25 is configured to locally darken by heat activation when direct thermal printed. A cured ultraviolet coating 30 is on the direct thermal coating 25. The cured ultraviolet coating 30 has photoinitiators activated to at least 75% with exposure to a 365 nm-450 nm wavelength range, such as light produced by UV LEDs. The cured ultraviolet coating is configured to allow direct thermal printing of the direct thermal coating therethrough. The ultraviolet coating 30 is cured without creating heat sufficient to heat activating the direct thermal coating 25.
In accordance with another embodiment, a method is defined fabricating a direct thermal label 20. The ultraviolet coating 30 is applied on the direct thermal coating 25 on the facestock 21. The ultraviolet coating 30 is substantially cured by exposure to ultraviolet light-emitting diodes producing light in a wavelength range of 365 nm-450 nm. While substantially curing the ultraviolet coating, the direct thermal coating 25 is maintained below a threshold temperature above which the direct thermal coating 25 is activated.
In accordance with another embodiment, a method for using a direct thermal label is provided. The label 20 is obtained with the direct thermal coating 25 shielded by the cured ultraviolet coating 30. Selected zones of the direct thermal coating 25 are heat activated through the ultraviolet coating 30 to darken the selected zones. The label 20 is adhered with the selected zones darkened to an object.
The present application claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/597,665, filed on Dec. 12, 2017, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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High Purity 1-Hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl ketone via http://www.sellchems.com/products/uv-photoinitiators/cas-947-19-3/. |
1-Hydroxycyclohexyl Phenyl Ketone Boldchem Tech via https://www.boldchem.com/1-hydroxycyclohexyl-phenyl-ketone/#:˜:text=1%2DHydroxycyclohexyl%20Phenyl%20Ketone%20is,is%20947%2D19%2D3.&text=Melting%20Point%3A%2047%2D50%20%C2%B0C(lit.)&text=Boiling%20Point%3A%20175%20%C2%B0C15%20mm%20Hg(lit.). |
Ingracure 184 CAs 947-19-3 via http://www.boldchem.com/chemicals/irgacure-184-cas-947-19-3/#:˜:text=1%2DHydroxycyclohexyl%20phenyl%20ketone%20is,absorption%20wavelength%20is%20333%20nm. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62597665 | Dec 2017 | US |