This invention relates to steam treating a sheet-shaped fibrous material, such as for fixing ink present on the sheet fibrous material after a previous printing step, and to methods and apparatus for such steam treatment.
As known, both conventional printing—using printing silk-screen cylinders or frames—and digital-type printing—using one or more printing nozzle heads—are technologies used for applying inks or paints defining motives, patterns, colorations on sheet materials of different kind, such as for example paper, fabrics, non-woven fabrics, felt, etc.
Fabrics or other fibrous materials having a laminar structure, such as of materials made of non-woven fabric, destined either to traditional and digital printing, may be subjected to a series of fabric preparing steps, before printing, and to one or more fabric finishing steps, after the printing step. In some applications, before the printing process the material to be printed must be accurately prepared so that the surface to be printed is reasonably devoid of impurities, is hydrophilic, is arranged in a plane, the warp and weft thereof have been rectified (in case of fabrics) and it has been suitably stabilized from a dimensional point of view.
After the preparing step, the fibrous material is printed by using, for example, (flat or rotating) silk-screen printing techniques and/or digital printing techniques. After the printing step, the printed material is dried and then is subjected to an ink fixing process typically performed by suitable devices (sometimes referred to as “steam treatment devices” or “steam agers”) in which the printed material is held in a steam environment under suitable pressure and temperature conditions in order to fix the ink to the material fibers. Then, the fabric is washed and dried again.
Fixing ink often requires particular conditions: the presence of water in a vapour state, a suitable thermal level, and minimizing as much as possible the oxygen quantity. These requirements have led to exclude: the use of hot air systems due to their high oxygen concentration, the use of water since is capable of dissolving the printing, and the use of chemical solvents since they are expensive and often toxic and therefore difficult to be disposed of. Therefore, many commercially available steam fixing devices are configured to determine the vapour and temperature conditions necessary for correctly fixing the ink on the fabric.
Two main types of steam treatment devices: discontinuous and continuous, are known. The discontinuous devices provide a treatment chamber adapted to receive a determined quantity of a material, for example a printed fabric, and therefore supplied by steam: all the fabric is kept still in the treatment chamber for a predetermined period of time necessary for fixing the ink. At the end of the treatment, the chamber is discharged and the fabric is withdrawn to be taken to a drying station. While the discontinuous steam treatment devices enable to fix the ink on the fabrics, these however are not devoid of limitations and inconveniences. Particularly, the discontinuous treatment (load batch) makes the process slow and therefore unsuitable for high industrial production rates. It is also noted that repeatedly opening the chamber between one treatment and the following—for discharging the treated fabric and loading a new fabric—makes the process highly expensive from an energy point of view; at each opening of the vaporizer, the vapour and temperature conditions necessary for fixing the ink on the fabric are lost: in order to quickly restore the vaporizer to the required treatment conditions, high power consumption is required. Such conditions, besides further slowing the process, heavily affect operating costs and therefore negatively affect the cost of the resulting treated products.
The continuous devices are provided with a treatment chamber. Inside the chamber the treated material, for example a fabric, is moved at a predetermined speed in order to maintain the printed material in the chamber for a time sufficient to enable the ink fixing process. Particularly, the fabric is introduced into the chamber and abutted on a plurality of elements called “sticks” enabling hanging the fabric in a series of apposed loops: the sticks slowly advance inside the treatment chamber so that the steam can fix the ink on the fabric. Then, the fabric is taken to an outlet station to withdraw the fabric from the sticks and guide it outside the vaporizer.
Illustratively, a type of continuous steam treatment device is, for example, described in German patent application No. DE2419611. The vaporizer exhibits a case in which first and second fixing chambers are defined. In the first chamber, a conveyor belt receives the fabric arriving from outside the case and guides it towards the fixing chamber: the conveyor belt is upwardly sloped so that the fabric can be taken to a top area of the case. Then, the fabrics is caused to fall from the belt onto a series of sticks that receives the fabric and places it according to a series of opposed loops. The sticks are caused to slowly advance inside the second chamber so that the steam can suitably fix the ink.
A different configuration of the continuous device is described in patent publication No. WO2008031763A1: in this case, the vaporizer exhibits, in the treatment chamber, a series of horizontal belts on which the fabric is laid in order to define a plurality of loops: the belts are slowly moved inside the chamber so that the steam can fix the ink on the fabric. Further, the vaporizer has an inlet station admitting to the chamber formed by a sloped conveyor belt which is partially placed outside the chamber (portion receiving the fabric) and partially inside this latter (portion supplying the fabric to the horizontal belts inside the treatment chamber). All the conveyor belts, in other words both the sloped belt operating adjacent the inlet station and the horizontal belt inside the treatment chamber, exhibit a fabric abutment surface having through holes.
The described continuous devices enable quickly treating huge quantities of fabric or of other fibrous material to be treated: the fixing process is quicker than the discontinuous vaporizers and therefore generally less expensive. It is also noted that the housing of the steam chamber remains always substantially closed: in this way, it is possible to hold the chamber fully operative under the desired steam conditions, with substantial power savings with respect to the discontinuous vaporizers that, on the contrary, require continuous “thermal re-shootings” at the end of each treatment.
In the following description the listed terms have the following, specific meanings:
Ink: a mixture formed by a dispersion of pigments or by a solution of dyes in an aqueous or organic medium destined to be transferred on surfaces of different materials for obtaining one or more prints.
Fibrous material: a material consisting of fibers of a variety of types—for example a fabric, a non-woven fabric, a knitted fabric, or combinations of such fabrics.
Sheet fibrous material: a fibrous material formed in a structure having two dimensions (length and width) having both a markedly prevalent extension with respect to a third dimension (thickness). The term “sheet fibrous material” means both a fibrous material in discrete sheets having limited lengths (for example the formats A0, A1, A2, A3, A4, etc.), and continuous bands exhibiting a marked length which can be supplied by a roll on which the sheet material is reeled or can come from a direct printing step. In any case, the sheet fibrous material, herein described, exhibits two sides, or main surfaces, at least one of which may be printed or printable.
Hydrophilic material: a material capable of absorbing and/or retaining water.
Digital printing: a printing using one or more nozzles printing heads for applying inks defining motives, patterns, colorations, etc., on sheet materials. The printing heads can be movable transverse to the sheet material advancement direction, in order to cover the overall width to be printed, or can be transversally stationary, in case the effective head width is equal to the printing width.
Standard environment: an environment at a temperature of 288.15 K (15° C.), pressure of 101.325 kPa (1 atm), and humidity of 0.00.
According to one aspect of the invention, a printed fibrous sheet material steam treatment apparatus includes a casing defining at least one steam-treatment chamber and having at least one inlet port, configured for enabling introduction of a fibrous sheet material into the treatment chamber, and at least one outlet port configured for enabling the treated fibrous sheet material to exit from the treatment chamber. The apparatus also includes at least one conveyor configured to contactingly receive the fibrous sheet material and convey the material into the treatment chamber through the inlet port, the conveyor being positioned with respect to the inlet port so as to constantly present a first conveyor portion disposed outside the treatment chamber and a second conveyor portion extending inside the treatment chamber. The conveyor includes at least one absorbing surface arranged to contact the fibrous sheet material as placed on the conveyor, the absorbing surface being configured to capture condensate water.
In some examples, the conveyor has an active surface arranged to contactingly receive the fibrous sheet material and which extends along a closed path, and the absorbing surface has at least one continuous absorbing layer extending along all the closed path of the active surface of the conveyor. In some cases, the conveyor comprises a conveying belt or a conveying drum.
In some embodiments, at least the absorbing surface of the conveyor has, or is formed of, a fibrous material having a dry specific weight less than 1 kg/m2 per 1 mm of thickness, as measured in a standard environment at a temperature of 288.15 K (15° C.), pressure of 101.325 kPa (1 atm), and humidity of 0.00.
Preferably, the absorbing surface has a water absorption capacity greater than 25%, by weight, of a dry weight of the absorbing surface, per unit volume.
In some examples, each 0.5 cm3 of volume of the absorbing surface defines a plurality of recesses in the form of at least one of pores, channels extending through an entire thickness of the absorbing surface, and interstices extending only partially through a thickness of the absorbing surface, with a plurality of the recesses open on an exposed surface of said absorbing surface.
In some cases, the surface is of a hydrophilic material.
In some examples, the conveyor is a conveyor belt engaged as a closed loop about at least a first idler roll outside the treatment chamber and a second idler roll inside the treatment chamber, the conveyor belt including at least one upper belt section extending between the first and second idler rolls and arranged to contact and convey the fibrous sheet material into the treatment chamber, and at least one lower belt section.
In some embodiments, the first and second idler rolls are configured to rotate about respective horizontal axes parallel to each other and placed at different heights, with the rotation axis of first idler roll is lower than the rotation axis of the second idler roll, such that the upper belt section is inclined at an angle of more than five degrees with respect to a horizontal plane. A longitudinal extent of the second portion of the conveyor, measured parallel to an advancement direction of the conveyor, is preferably greater than a longitudinal extent of the first portion of the conveyor.
In some cases, the apparatus includes at least one material guide disposed inside the treatment chamber and configured to receive the fibrous sheet material from the conveyor and to guide the fibrous sheet material along an operative path inside the treatment chamber, from proximate the conveyor to the outlet port.
In some examples, the guide includes a fibrous sheet material collector configured to arrange the fibrous sheet material entering treatment chamber into one or more bends, a fibrous sheet material mover downstream of the collector along a predetermined operative path of the fibrous sheet material, the mover configured to receive and advance the bends of sheet material along a predetermined direction, and a discharger configured to receive fibrous sheet material exiting the mover and to guide the fibrous sheet material out of the casing through the outlet port.
In some embodiments, the apparatus includes at least one steam generator configured to generate and supply steam to the treatment chamber. The steam generator is preferably configured to generate saturated steam and to maintain inside the treatment chamber a temperature between 100 and 130° C., and to maintain inside the treatment chamber an absolute pressure between 1 and 1.7 bar.
Another aspect of the invention features a method of fixing ink on a fibrous sheet material having at least one printed side. The method includes conveying printed fibrous sheet material into a steam-treatment chamber on a conveyor having an absorbing surface, the printed fibrous sheet material carrying an ink;
steam fixing the ink to the fibrous sheet material in the steam-treatment chamber, by guiding the fibrous sheet material along a predetermined operative path between an inlet port and an outlet port of the chamber, thereby treating the fibrous sheet material; and extracting the treated fibrous sheet material from the outlet port. The method also includes pre-humidifying the fibrous sheet material outside the steam-treatment chamber, by bringing the fibrous sheet material into contact with the absorbing surface of the conveyor, the absorbing surface containing condensate water, and transferring into the fibrous sheet material at least a portion of the condensate water from the absorbing surface.
In some examples, the conveyor contactingly receives and conveys the fibrous sheet material into the steam-treatment chamber through the inlet port, while constantly presenting a first conveyor portion disposed outside the treatment chamber and a second conveyor portion extending into the treatment chamber. During the pre-humidifying, the fibrous sheet material is brought into contact with the absorbing surface of the first conveyor portion, and the portion of condensate water is transferred into the fibrous sheet material while the fibrous sheet material is conveyed by the conveyor.
In some embodiments, consecutive parts of the absorbing surface are cyclically made to move into the treatment chamber, where an environment of saturated steam penetrates the surface portion; move out of the treatment chamber, where water condenses to form liquid water contained within the absorbing surface; and to contact the fibrous sheet material and transfer at least a portion of the condensed water from inside the absorbing surface to the fibrous sheet material.
In some cases, the fibrous sheet material has two main opposite sides and is printed on only one of said sides, such that the fibrous sheet material has an unprinted side placed in direct contact with the absorbing surface.
In some examples, steam fixing includes introducing steam into the treatment chamber, including controlling introduction of steam into the treatment chamber to maintain a temperature between 100 and 130° C., and an absolute pressure between 1 and 1.7 bar.
In some embodiments, steam fixing includes receiving pre-humidified fibrous sheet material into the treatment chamber; withdrawing the received fibrous sheet material by a material collector; delivering, by the collector, the withdrawn fibrous sheet material to a mover that guides the sheet material along the predetermined operative path; and withdrawing the fibrous sheet material from the mover by a discharger that guides the treated fibrous material from the treatment chamber through the outlet port.
Further aspects and advantages will be apparent from the following description, and from the claims.
Steam-treatment device 1 is useable for fixing inks applied after one or more printing processes, for example a digital or silk-screen printing. As visible, for example, in
As visible in
As will be better described below, for suitably fixing the ink on fibrous material T, the same must be retained inside an environment, in other words the steam-treatment chamber 3, in which a saturated steam condition prevails. Under these conditions, there is a determined risk that during the fixing step, water drops could form inside the chamber: to this end it is observed that if drop-shaped water should contact the printed sheet material T, the same water could damage the print made on the material. In one example, therefore, the device 1 includes—at the closure wall 19 of the casing 2—a heating system 21 that heats wall 19 at least during the fibrous material T treatment. Heating wall 19 prevents condensate drops from forming on an inner surface of wall 19, typically extending above the operative path along which the material T is guided during the treatment inside the chamber 3: in other words, by means of heating system 19 the formation of drops is prevented, which could fall on material T passing inside casing 2.
Further, steam-treatment device 1 includes at least one steam generator 20 that produces and delivers steam to the treatment chamber 3 of casing 2. In this example, generator 20 is at least partially placed inside the treatment chamber 3 at the first longitudinal lateral wall 2c (
The conveying element 8 is configured and positioned with respect to the inlet port 4 in order to constantly define at least one first portion 8a placed outside the treatment chamber 3 and a second portion 8b extending inside the treatment chamber 3: since the conveying element is arranged along a closed loop, the first and second portions comprise, at each instant, consecutive parts of the conveying element, which continuously enter and exit the treatment chamber 3. At each instant, the first and second portions 8a, 8b of the conveying element 8 define together a closed perimetral path: such portions can exhibit the same perimetral extension (measured along the movement direction of the conveying element) or, as illustrated in the attached figures, a different perimetral extension. For example, as shown in
Advantageously, the conveying element 8 has at least one absorbing surface portion 22 adapted to contact the sheet fibrous material T placed on the conveying element when the same material T is conveyed towards the steam-treatment chamber 3. The absorbing surface portion 22 has at least one absorbing continuous layer extending all along the closed path of the active surface of the conveying element itself.
Optionally, the absorbing surface portion 22 has at least one absorbing continuous layer having a constant thickness and a constant width, exhibiting an exposed surface defining the overall active surface of the conveying belt. Its structure and position enable the absorbing surface portion 22 to capture condensate water and transfer it to the fibrous material, which is thereby moisturized before entering the chamber 3; more particularly, since the element 8 is placed and moves along a closed path (and as said it constantly exhibits a first portion 8a outside the chamber and a second portion 8b inside the chamber 3), also the absorbing surface portion moves along the same closed operative path. This causes the absorbing surface portion, in one step, to come in contact with the saturated steam environment in the chamber 3 and, in a further step, to come in contact with the much cooler external environment, which causes the formation of condensate on and in the absorbing surface portion. De facto, the structure of the surface portion 22 enables absorption of water vapor at the surface portion part that, during element 8 movement, enters the chamber 3; along the part of the closed path outside the chamber 3, the absorbed water vapor and any water in the gas phase present adjacent the surface portion 22, condense at the same surface portion 22.
The absorbing surface portion of the conveying element comprises or substantially consists of a fibrous material (
The surface portion is made of materials having a relative low specific weight, because a substantial portion of the volume occupied by the absorbing surface portion (in dry conditions) is actually filled by air. Specifically, the dry specific weight (in standard conditions) of the material forming the absorbing surface portion 22 is less than 1 kg/m2 per 1 mm of thickness, optionally less than 0.5 kg/m2 per 1 mm of thickness; the dry specific weight is measured in a standard environment at a temperature of 288.15° K (15° C.), pressure of 101.325 kPa (1 atm), and humidity of 0.00.
As to its capacity for retaining water, the surface portion 22 is constructed such that a unit volume has the capacity of absorbing a water weight greater than 25% than the dry weight of the same unit volume; the dry weight of the unit volume (for example a patch of 1 dm2 having a thickness of 1 mm of a material composing the surface portion) is measured in a standard environment at a temperature of 288.15° K (15° C.), pressure of 101.325 kPa (1 atm), and humidity of 0.00; the water weight quantity absorbed by the unit volume is measured by considering the same unit volume of the material forming the surface portion and causing it to absorb water to a saturation level and placing such unit volume on a horizontal weighing plane. Weight is measured under an equilibrium condition, with the weight value read 10 minutes after placing it on the weighing plane. The weighing is also performed in a standard environment. The measured weight minus the dry weight is the water weight absorbed by the unit volume.
In a variant, the surface portion 22 is constructed such that a unit volume of the absorbing surface portion exhibits the capacity of absorbing a water weight at least 50%, preferably 70% to 300%, greater than a dry weight of the same unit volume.
From the structural point of view, each reference volume equal to 0.5 cm3 (half cubic centimeter) of the surface portion 22 exhibits plural (for example, 5 or more) recesses—as previously discussed—in order to maximize the interface surface between the absorbing surface portion and the external environment and therefore to increase the capacity of receiving condensate water. According to the physical structure of the surface portion, the recesses can be porosities, channels passing through the overall thickness of the absorbing surface portion, or interstices partially crossing the thickness of the absorbing surface portion. In any case, for each reference volume equal to 0.5 cm3 of the surface portion 22, some of such recesses can directly face each other at the exposed surface of the same absorbing surface portion.
Preferably, the fibrous material of the surface portion comprises, or is formed by, a hydrophilic material. For example, preferably at least 30% by weight, more optionally at least 50% by weight, of the absorbing surface portion are formed by a hydrophilic fibrous material. In one example, the absorbing surface portion is a continuous layer of a textile material or of a non-woven fabric or a felt completely formed by hydrophilic material fibers.
De facto, the surface portion 22 of the element 8 is configured to trap water vapor, receiving condensate water and consequently pre-humidifying the fibrous material T when the material contacts the portion 22 and is moved for entering the chamber 3. The surface portion 22 contacting the relatively dried fibrous material T releases the liquid to the material T, which absorbs a portion due to the contact of the same on the element 8, for example by capillarity: the material T is then introduced in the chamber 3 under a pre-humidified condition.
In the illustrated examples, the conveying element 8 is configured to move the sheet fibrous material T along a predetermined advancement direction A entering the casing 2 treatment chamber 3. The absorbing surface portion 22 extends along all the closed path of the element 8, and, preferably, for the full width of the conveying element 8, defined normal to the advancement direction A of the sheet fibrous material T. The surface portion 22 is thus capable of evenly pre-humidifying the material T resting on the element 8. However, it is not excluded the possibility of defining the absorbing surface portion 22 by a plurality of distinct absorbing islands spaced from each other, optionally evenly distributed on the conveying element 8.
In one example, the conveying element 8 also has a base portion 23 (
The attached figures illustrate an example of the conveying element 8 in the form of a conveying belt. The conveying belt is engaged as a closed loop between at least one first idler roll 11 placed outside the treatment chamber 3 and a second idler roll 12 placed inside the treatment chamber 3, defining at least one upper section 13 of the conveying belt, extending between the first and second idler rolls 11, 12 and at least partially adapted to contact the sheet fibrous material T and convey it inside the treatment chamber 3, and at least one lower return section of the belt, which substantially forms the return branch of the conveying belt itself. As shown in the attached figures, the conveying belt further defines an arc-shaped joining segment 14, having generally a circular outline, placed at the second idler roll. The joining section 14 extends as a continuation of the upper section and is at least partially contacts the sheet fibrous material T by guiding it to make it fall towards the interior of the treatment chamber, in which additional material T conveying systems can operate.
As is visible in
The conveying belt can be engaged only with first and second rolls 11 and 12, or one or more intermediate idler or tensioning rolls (
If the conveying element 8, as in
In the illustrated condition in which the element 8 is a conveying belt 8, the inlet port 4 of the casing 2 can define a single through opening enabling the upper section and lower section of the belt to pass through. However, in another embodiment, the inlet port 4 defines a first through slit for passage of only the upper section 13 of the belt (the belt return section moves along a direction entering the chamber 3) and a second slit spaced and distinct from the first slit, for passage of the belt lower section 14 (the belt return section moves along a direction exiting from the chamber 3). In this latter configuration, illustrated for example in
While the majority of the attached figures show a belt as conveying element, it is possible to use a conveying element 8 of another type, for example, shaped as a drum engaged at the inlet port 4 (
A further example of conveying element 8 is illustrated in
When the conveying element is of the type shown in
For example, the guiding device 6 can include a collecting device 15 (
Further, the guiding device 6 includes a discharge device 17 (
An apparatus for fixing ink on sheet fibrous materials T includes a station 101 receiving the printed fibrous material T by a printing process, for example a digital and/or silk-screen printing process. The station 101 can directly receive the material from one or more printing stations or, as illustrated for example in
Further, the apparatus includes a steam-treatment device 1 as described above. The printed sheet material T is introduced into the casing 2 through the inlet system 7 and is guided into the treatment chamber 3 along the operative path. The printed material T passing into the chamber 3 is subjected to an ink-fixing process by the presence of steam (saturated steam) under pressure and temperature conditions to cause the ink to be fixed to the material fibres.
As is visible in
As further visible in
A process of fixing ink on sheet fibrous materials, for example on fabrics and/or non-woven fabrics, which have been previously subjected to one or more printing processes, can be performed by means of the above described steam-treatment device 1. The process includes a step of transporting the sheet fibrous material T inside the chamber 3. Such step preferably includes laying the sheet material T on the first portion 8a of the element 8. Moving the element 8 conveys the material T on portion 8a into the casing 2, where the printing ink is steam-fixed. The process includes a step of pre-humidifying the sheet fibrous material T outside the treatment chamber 3 by causing the material T to contact the absorbing surface portion 22 of the inlet station 7 and consequently the sheet fibrous material T absorbs a portion of the water contained in the absorbing surface portion. Actually, the sheet fibrous material T is placed on the conveying belt surface portion 22 and, while it travels to the inlet opening 4, receives part of the water contained in the surface portion 22. More particularly, it is noted that the surface portion extends along the active surface of the conveying element, and thus the absorbing surface portion 22 exhibits at least one section constantly operating inside and a section operating outside the treatment chamber 3. While the conveying element 8 moves, consecutive parts of the absorbing surface portion 22 are cyclically caused to (1) move inside the treatment chamber 3, where a saturated steam environment penetrating in the part of the surface portion 22, inside the treatment chamber 3, prevails; (2) move outside the treatment chamber 3, where water condenses at the part of the absorbing surface portion 22 outside the chamber 3 itself; and (3) contact the fibrous material to transfer at least a fraction of the condensate water trapped by the part of the absorbing surface portion 22 outside the chamber 3 itself, to the fibrous material.
It is specified that the sheet fibrous material exhibits two main opposed sides: in many cases, the sheet material is printed only on one of said sides and exhibits an unprinted side, opposite the printed side; in such cases, only the unprinted side directly contacts the absorbing surface portion, so that the water is uniformly absorbed without moving to the printed side.
After pre-humidifying the sheet fibrous material T, the inlet system 7 guides the material T inside the treatment chamber 3 (inside the casing 2). The fibrous material T is guided into the chamber 3 along a predetermined operative path during which it is steam-treated. More specifically, the fibrous material is caused to fall on the collecting system 15, which arranges the material T according to a configuration with one or more loops. Particularly, the pre-humidified material T is caused to fall over sticks B moving along a first track 25 towards the outlet port 5: moving the sticks and simultaneously causing the material to fall on the second portion 8a of the element arranges the material according to one or more loops, as schematically sequentially represented in
Then, the collecting device 15 provides the sticks (with the respective loops) to the movement device 16, which collects and aligns the sticks B along the second track; the movement device causes the sticks B to slide along a predetermined path, for example a rectilinear horizontal path.
Afterward, the material exiting from the movement device 16 is withdrawn by the discharge device 17, which opens up the loops and guides the sheet fibrous material exiting from the chamber 3, through port 5.
Steam is present in the chamber 3, preferably saturated steam, which acts on the passing fibrous material for fixing the ink. The steam is directly introduced into the chamber by one or more generators 20. Advantageously, the saturated steam is introduced to the treatment chamber 3 at a temperature comprised between 100 and 130° C., preferably between 100 and 120° C., still more preferably between 100 and 110° C. More specifically, supplying steam by the generator 20 is performed at a pressure comprised between 1 and 1.7 bar, preferably between 1 and 1.5 bar. Once the standard conditions are met inside chamber 3, saturated steam is present, with temperature and pressure approximately as supplied by the generator 20. The fibrous material inside the treatment chamber 3 is steamed by maintaining a ratio between 0.5 and 1 of the saturated steam.
The process can be performed by a first procedure by which the material, previously printed in one or more printing stations remote from the device 1, is stored in one receiving station 101 placed at the inlet station 7. Under such condition, the printed material is collected by the receiving station, laid down for example by a series of idler rolls, and then provided to the inlet station 7. Alternatively, the fixing process can be directly performed immediately after a printing process or a drying process following a printing process. In the direct process, the printed fibrous material T can directly arrive from one or more printing apparatuses or directly from a drying apparatus: the printed fibrous material is therefore immediately provided to the inlet station 7 without storing in an intermediate station.
At the end of the ink-fixing steps (or of the material steaming step), the process can include a step of delivering the fixed material to a drying station that causes the material T to dry. Alternatively, the process can include a step of pre-drying the material in which the material, exiting from casing 2 port 5, is guided above closure wall 19, sliding near the heating system 21 of the same wall 19. The passage of the material T at the heating system 21 enables at least partial drying of the material T. After the step of pre-heating the printed fibrous material T having the fixed ink, the process can include a step of continuously delivering it to a drying station, or can include collecting the pre-dried material in a storing station 104 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2015A000260 | Feb 2015 | IT | national |
This application is a continuation of and claims priority to PCT Application Serial No. PCT/IB2016/050900, filed on Feb. 19, 2016, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/IB2016/050900 | Feb 2016 | US |
Child | 15684572 | US |