The tag material of this invention relates to the use of laminate components which when adhesively adhered together form a tag type material that can be imprinted with various indicia and product information for use in the marketing of products to the trade.
This present invention provides a laminate tag material for use for any number of tag applications. The tag material is reinforced and printable on two sides, with one side being printable by a direct thermal printer.
Styles of tag material have been readily available in the art and for use for providing information relative to various marketed products. For example, paper tags have long been used in the art. Polymer type tags have become more prominent, because of their durability, and have now been designed for accepting print material. A combination of these types of components formulated into tag, has not apparently been to any extent, and therefore, providing a tags that is readily acceptable of print indicia, or other information, and yet is very durable during usage, and can withstand rough handling, is a welcome addition in the art.
The tag material consists of three layers bonded by an adhesive. The first, or top, layer of the tag material is formed of paper or related material. The first layer is laminated or bonded by adhesive to the top face of the second, or middle layer. The second layer will typically be formed of a foamed polypropylene film for reinforcement, but it may also be formed of another polymer material depending on desired form and function. The third, or bottom, layer is formed of paper or related material that has been coated with a direct thermal emulsion, with the thermal emulsion facing outward. The third layer is laminated or bonded by adhesive to the bottom face of the second layer.
The resulting tag laminate is compatible with being printed on a direct thermal printer. The caliper of the finished material construction may vary, according to the desired use of the tag, by using differing calipers of constituent base materials.
With reference to the drawings:
By way of explanation, CSD is an acronym formed from the first letter of the description of each layer making up the tag material. C—Coated 1 Side Paper/S-Sheen (another name for the foamed polypropylene)/D—Direct Thermal Paper.
Thickness ranges of the three layers:
Top Layer—2-4 mil
Inner (Poly) Layer—1-6 mil
Bottom (thermal) Layer—2-5 mil
Thermal Emulsion—The direct thermal paper used on the CSD tags is commercially available direct thermal paper. We currently use Kanzaki brand 3.2 mil KIP-370 thermal paper though we have used other direct thermal papers in the past. There are a variety of foreign and domestic suppliers that catalog a number of direct thermal papers and films that could potentially be used for this application. Thermal emulsions and formulas are proprietary to the manufacturer.
Laminating Adhesive—We are currently using Airflex 426 water based laminating adhesive manufactured by Air Products. There are a variety of adhesive suppliers with various adhesive formulas that could be used for this type of lamination.
In a modification to this invention, and as shown in
This tag material of the current invention is designed for usage for a number of tag applications. The top layer of the tag will be formed of a clear laminate which inturn is laminated or bonded with adhesive to emulsion side of a micro-encapsulated paper, which comprises the second on inner layer of the tag material. The second or inner layer is then laminated or bonded with adhesive to the uncoated side of the third or bottom layer, which is formed, as a foresaid, of the coated one side (C1S) paper. The laminated, micro-encapsulated surface of the tag creates the unique the feature of the resulting tag material that is capable of be printed without the use of inks or dyes by either metal stamping or embossing the surface of the tag.
Variations or modifications to the subject matter of this invention may occur to those skilled in the art upon reviewing the disclosure as provided herein. Such variations, within the spirit of this development, are intended to be encompassed within the scope of any invention as provided herein. The description of the preferred embodiment as set forth herein is done so for illustrative purposes only.
This non provisional patent application claims priority to the provisional patent application having Ser. No. 61/278,379, having filing date Oct. 6, 2010.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110086188 A1 | Apr 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61278379 | Oct 2009 | US |