1. Field
Pad printing, inkjet printing, and a combination of these are used to print labels and for various other printing applications.
2. Prior Art
The concept of applying ink to a flexible pad for subsequent transfer is taught in our above patent. The pad comprises a flat sheet of flexible pad material, such as silicone rubber. It is typically square, 10 cm on a side, and 1.5 cm thick, although other sizes and shapes are useful. The pad can be smaller or larger. The size and shape of the pad are determined by the area and shape of the ink image and final receiving surface.
In this system, the pad is initially flat. Its edges are restrained by a holding bracket. An inkjet head or other marking applicator deposits an image on the flat front pad surface. The image is then transferred to a receiving object.
In a first application, the pad remains flat. The image-bearing, flat pad is brought into contact with a convex, curved surface, such as a golf ball. When the pad is forced against the ball, the pad conforms to the surface of the ball with a rolling motion, transferring the image from the pad to the ball.
In a second application, the initially flat, image-bearing pad is caused to bulge. The pad is forcibly deformed by a ram, or equivalent method, applied to the opposite side of the pad. The bulged pad is then brought into contact with the final receiving surface. The receiving surface in this case can be flat, undulating, or both, such as a cellular telephone case. The previously-applied inkjet image transfers from the pad to the receiving surface. A decorated part results. The principal advantage of this system is the ability to transfer multi-color images in a single step.
One aspect of an improved pad printing system employs a flexible pad, first and second applicator stations, an image source, and a controller. It adds the ability to simultaneously apply one or more layers of a variety of substances including inks, adhesives, paints, waxes, coatings, and the like, to a receiving surface. These substances can be applied in layers beneath, within, or on top of one-another. Each layer can be optionally treated with external influences such as radiant energy including heat, cold, ultra-violet light, radioactive emission, chemicals, and the like.
One or more aspects of the present system may have one or more of the following advantages. In one aspect, a number of substances can be applied to the pad prior to transfer, then transferred to a receiving object all-at-once. In another aspect, one or more substances can be applied to a pad and these substances transferred to a receiving surface, then one or more additional substances can be applied to the pad for subsequent transfer to the same receiving surface. In still another aspect, a first substance can be applied to the pad followed by a second substance which is a catalyst that affects the properties of the first substance.
Other advantages and features of various aspects will become apparent by a review of the specification, claims, and appended figures.
In one aspect of a first embodiment, a flexible pad 100 is secured within a rigid frame 105. When energized, an actuator 109 urges a ram 110 against pad 100, deforming it (
An optional illumination source 140 is arranged to illuminate droplets 120 and 135 with radiation of a predetermined wavelength from microwaves through ultraviolet light, and other radiation including x-rays, alpha particles, electrons, ions, and gamma rays. Optional heat, cold, gas, and humidity treatment source 145 supplies heat, cold, gas, and humidity to droplets 215 and pad 300. Source 145 can optionally be arranged to apply abrasives. Sources 140 and 145 and their uses are described in our above-mentioned U.S. patent. Emissions from these sources can be applied while droplets 120 and 135 are in transit from heads 115 and 130, or after they are at rest on surface 125 of pad 100.
Heads 115 and 130, actuator 109, and sources 140 and 145 all operate under the control of a controller 150. Controller 150 can be a microcomputer or other logical component that accepts images from a source 155 and provides control signals to the above-mentioned components of the printing system. Controller 150, source 155, and their software are well-known to those skilled in the art of digital printing. Source 155 can comprise a computer memory device, such as a hard disk, a scanner, camera, or the like. Heads 115 and 130 can be the model OmniDot 760 supplied by Xaar PLC of Cambridge, England, or their equivalent.
In
In all cases, one or more layers of substances are applied to the flattened pad using an inkjet head or other modality, such as a spray nozzle, xerographic transfer, decalcomania, and the like, as discussed in our above patent. In the case of inkjets, heads 115 and 130 typically apply a single line of droplets at a time. In this case, heads 115 and 130 apply lines sequentially to surface 125 by moving parallel to surface 125 in a direction perpendicular to the applied lines.
Heads 115 and 130 can still function acceptably if surface 125 is not absolutely flat. In the case of inkjet heads, a “throw” distance of 2 mm is well-tolerated. I.e. an image will be well-formed if the surface receiving the inkjet image lies within 2 mm of the inkjet head. Other printing methods, such as sprayers, have throw distances that are typically larger.
The various layers applied may comprise ink, adhesives, varnish, decals, water, solvents, and all others, either singly or in combination, that are used in pad printing. They can be applied to the pad in any order and are then transferred to the receiving object in reverse order. If desired, the layers can be treated singly or in one or more groups by various kinds of radiation, ultraviolet light, radioactive isotope exposure, heat, gases, etc. In this way, multiple layers are first applied to the flattened pad, then the pad is bulged or not bulged, and then the pad is pressed against the receiving surface, transferring the image. The final image can be treated by any of the above modalities of radiant energy, gases, and the like.
Summary, Ramifications, and Scope
The embodiments shown of our improved pad printing apparatus and method incorporate the ability to apply a plurality of materials to a receiving surface in a single operation. The materials can be applied in any order. This permits the combination of image materials, undercoats, and overcoats. Each material can be treated with gases, radiative processes, and the like as it is being applied or after deposition onto the pad, or after transfer to a receiving surface.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be considered limiting but merely exemplary. Many variations and ramifications are possible. For example, more than two layers of ink and other substances can be applied to the pad for subsequent transfer. More than two sources can be used to apply substances to the pad or other substances. Repeated applications of ink and other substances to the pad can be transferred to the receiving object for a multi-layer effect. Overlying and underlying substances can be inks, coatings, adhesives, and the like. They can be cured to a dry form, or left liquid or semi-liquid after transfer.
While the present system employs elements which are well known to those skilled in the art of pad printing, it combines these elements in a novel way which produces one or more new results not heretofore discovered. Accordingly the scope of should be determined, not by the embodiments illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
This application claims priority of our provisional patent application, U.S. Ser. No. 60/742,506, filed Dec. 5, 2005. This application is related to and incorporates all of our pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/464,203, filed Aug. 13, 2006, and our U.S. Pat. No. 6,840,167 (2005) by reference.
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60742506 | Dec 2005 | US |