This disclosure relates generally to inkjet printers, and more particularly, to inkjet printers that use ultraviolet (UV) curable inks to produce text and images on substrates.
Producing high quality images on substrates in printers with aqueous inks that are liquid at room temperature can be very challenging. Compounding these challenges are non-porous substrates, such as many plastics, metals, glass, ceramics, and the like. These substrates do not easily enable the ejected aqueous ink to anchor onto the substrate. The unanchored ink can flow about the surface and combine in ways that can adversely impact the quality of the ink images. One problem arises because different images require different amounts of ink flow to look their best. For example, very fine features and details benefit from the ejected aqueous ink being at least partially dried as soon as possible, while large solid areas containing multiple colors of aqueous ink forming secondary and tertiary colors can appear more uniform and attractive when the inks are allowed a certain amount of time to flow and mix before any drying takes place.
To address this problem, UV inks have been developed that have the unique advantage of including photo-sensitive materials so the inks can be cured with UV radiation and stabilized on the substrates. Consequently, these UV inks do not require drying. Unlike the aqueous inks that require the relatively time-consuming evaporation of water and co-solvents from the inks, UV inks can solidify almost instantaneously. While UV inks address the problem of run-away ink, especially on non-porous substrates, the solidification of ink drops on some substrates can occur too quickly. In these circumstances, a certain amount of ink spread is needed to reduce defects in the ink images since the ink has not flowed enough to cover an image area adequately. For example, a certain amount of ink spreading is needed to help hide missing ink not ejected by inoperative inkjets to help maintain the uniformity of solid areas and achieve accurate color production in these solid uniform areas. Being able to flexibly alter the degree of UV curing for different portions of ink images would be beneficial.
A new printer is configured to provide varying degrees of UV radiation exposure at different times during image printing to improve the sharpness of fine image features and to establish uniform solid areas with accurate formation of colors in those areas. The printer includes a first printhead operatively connected to a source of ultraviolet (UV) curable ink having a first color, the printhead being configured to eject the UV curable ink having the first color onto a substrate as the substrate passes the printhead in a process direction, a first source of UV radiation following the first printhead in the process direction by a first predetermined distance so the UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead is fixed by the UV radiation from the first source of UV radiation before the substrate moves past the first source of UV radiation, a second printhead operatively connected to the source of UV curable ink having the first color, the second printhead being positioned to eject the UV curable ink having the first color onto the substrate after the first printhead has ejected the UV curable ink having the first color onto the substrate and the first source of UV radiation exposes the UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead to UV radiation, and a second source of UV radiation following the second printhead in the process direction and being separated from the second printhead in the process direction by a second predetermined distance that is greater than the first predetermined distance so the UV curable ink ejected by the second printhead spreads over a portion of the substrate before the second source of UV radiation fixes the UV curable ink ejected by the second printhead to the substrate.
A method of printer operation provides varying degrees of UV radiation exposure at different times during image printing to improve the sharpness of fine image features and to establish uniform solid areas with accurate formation of colors in those areas. The method includes operating with a controller a first source of UV radiation that follows a first printhead in a process direction by a first predetermined distance to fix UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead onto a substrate before the substrate moves past the first source of UV radiation and operating with a controller a second source of UV radiation following a second printhead in the process direction that is separated from the second printhead in the process direction by a second predetermined distance that is greater than the first predetermined distance to fix the UV curable ink ejected by the second printhead after the UV curable ink spreads over a portion of the substrate.
Another embodiment of the new printer is configured to provide varying degrees of UV radiation exposure at different times during image printing to improve the sharpness of fine image features and to establish uniform solid areas with accurate formation of colors in those areas. The alternative embodiment of the printer includes a first printhead operatively connected to a source of ultraviolet (UV) curable ink having a first color, the first printhead being configured to eject the UV curable ink having the first color onto a substrate as the substrate passes the first printhead in a process direction, a first source of UV radiation following the first printhead in the process direction by a first predetermined distance, the first source of UV radiation being configured with a plurality of UV emitters that are independently operable so at least one UV emitter is operated to expose at least one area of the substrate printed with the UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead to fix the UV curable ink in the at least one area before the substrate moves past the first source of UV radiation and the UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead on at least one other area of the substrate spreads as the substrate passes the first source of UV radiation, and a second source of UV radiation following the first source of UV radiation in the process direction and being separated from the first source of UV radiation in the process direction by a second predetermined distance that is greater than the first predetermined distance, the second source of UV radiation being configured to expose an entire width of the substrate in a cross-process direction so the UV curable ink ejected by the first printhead in the at least one other area is fixed as the substrate passes the second source of UV radiation.
The foregoing aspects and other features of a printer that provides varying degrees of UV radiation exposure at different times during image printing to improve the sharpness of fine image features and to establish uniform solid areas with accurate formation of colors in those areas are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
For a general understanding of the present embodiments, reference is made to the drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals have been used throughout to designate like elements.
A printing system 10 configured to provide varying degrees of UV radiation exposure at different times during image printing to improve the sharpness of fine image features and to establish uniform solid areas with accurate formation of colors in those areas is shown in
Each printhead 50A, 50B, 50C, and 50D in the first print zone 26 is operatively connected to a corresponding printhead driver 54A, 54B, 54C, and 54D and the controller 14 is operatively connected to these printhead drivers. Each printhead 58A, 58B, 58C, and 58D in the second print zone 30 is also operatively connected to a corresponding printhead driver 62A, 62B, 62C, and 62D and the controller 14 is operatively connected to these printhead drivers. Following each of the printheads 50A, 50B, 50C, and 50D in the first print zone 26 is a UV radiation source 66A, 66B, 66C, and 66D and the controller 14 is operatively connected to each one of the radiation sources. These radiation sources emit UV radiation at a wavelength of 395 nm. Each UV radiation source 66A, 66B, 66C, and 66D follows the printhead preceding the UV radiation source in the process direction by a predetermined distance in which the UV curable ink ejected by the immediately preceding printhead is fixed by the UV radiation source before the UV curable ink ejected by the immediately preceding printhead passes the UV radiation source. As used in this document, the term “fixed” means that the UV curable ink does not expand beyond the landing area of a UV curable ink drop by more than a predetermined toleration parameter. In one embodiment, this toleration parameter is about twice a diameter of a nominal UV curable ink drop. The number of printheads in the first print zone and the number of printheads in the second print zone are the same and the inkjets in the printheads in the second print zone are aligned in the process direction with the inkjets in the corresponding printheads in the first print zone. That is, an ink drop ejected by an inkjet in a printhead ejecting a particular color of ink in the first print zone passes directly underneath the corresponding inkjet of the printhead ejecting the same color of ink in the second print zone. This configuration enables the two printheads of the same color in the different print zones to provide a backup for each inkjet in the two printheads. If an inkjet in one of these two print zones becomes inoperative, then the corresponding inkjet in the corresponding color printhead in the other print zone can eject a drop to replace the missing ink drop. Thus, the printheads in the second print zone are not positioned to increase the resolution of the number of drops in a line that can be formed by the printheads in the cross-process direction.
The controller 14 can be implemented with general or specialized programmable processors that execute programmed instructions. The instructions and data required to perform the programmed functions can be stored in memory associated with the processors or controllers. The processors, their memories, and interface circuitry configure the controllers to perform the operations described below. These components can be provided on a printed circuit card or provided as a circuit in an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC). Each of the circuits can be implemented with a separate processor or multiple circuits can be implemented on the same processor. Alternatively, the circuits can be implemented with discrete components or circuits provided in very large scale integrated (VLSI) circuits. Also, the circuits described herein can be implemented with a combination of processors, ASICs, discrete components, or VLSI circuits.
The controller 14 is operatively connected to an image source 70. Image source 70 can be a scanner, database, or other image generation or data source. An image that the controller 14 obtains from the image source 70 is used to operate the printer 10 to form an ink image on the web W corresponding to the obtained image. The controller 14 processes the image obtained from the image source in the following manner for control of the printhead drivers 54A to 54D and 62A to 62D. As shown in
A process for operating the printer shown in
By operating the printheads in the first print zone using the color separations derived from the fine features image data file while the UV radiation sources are operating, each color separation corresponding to the fine features file is separately cured so the ink is quickly fixed in place. This combination of printing and exposing the image to UV radiation is effective for preserving fine feature detail since the ink is not permitted to flow over the surface of the substrate W or to combine with neighboring deposited drops in a way that forms uncontrolled shapes that make the image grainy. The printheads operated in the second print zone using the color separations derived from the fine features image data file while the UV radiation sources separated from the second print zone by the predetermined distance D are operating, enables the inks to flow and more uniformly cover the solid printed areas corresponding to the solid areas file. This combination of printing and waiting to expose the solid areas image to UV radiation is effective for forming more uniform solid areas since the ink is permitted to flow over the surface of the substrate W before UV radiation exposure.
An alternative embodiment of printer 10 is shown in
It will be appreciated that variations of the above-disclosed apparatus and other features, and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art, which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
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20130113868 | Veis | May 2013 | A1 |