The present invention relates to adhesive labels and in particular, a repositionable adhesive label having a pressure sensitive adhesive on one side of the label.
Adhesive labels are known and commercially available in a variety of forms depending upon the end use for the label. In one such configuration, a sheet material in the form of a continuous roll or fan-fold stack is provided with a pressure sensitive adhesive on its rear surface and a release coating is provided on the opposite surface of the sheet. The release coating is typically a silicone material that promotes a weak bond to the adhesive so that the sheet may be readily unrolled or otherwise separated from an adjacent sheet as desired. The separated label is adapted to be repositioned or otherwise adhered onto a surface as desired. Such labels are often referred to as linerless or repositionable labels and are adapted to be secured to a first surface and then removed from that surface and selectively applied to a second surface with little to no loss of adhesive properties.
In the fast food industry, it is known to generate a customer receipt for a transaction using a conventional thermal printer that contains a roll of thermosensitive paper.
Thermal printers typically contain a print head or bar having small heated elements that are individually controlled via digital input from a computer. When a thermosensitive or thermoreactive recording material is passed under the print head or print bar of the printer and selected heated elements activated, the thermosensitive or thermoreactive color forming layers on the recording material are activated and a desired print or indicia is generated on the recording material. Thermal printers are widely used to create business forms or records.
Attempts have been made in the prior art to provide a thermally printed customer receipt having adhesive on the reverse side so that the receipt may be repositioned or secured to a surface. Such efforts attempt to reduce or eliminate adhesive buildup within the printer which can adversely affect the performance of the printer.
One prior art linerless label roll includes a series of index marks uniformly spaced longitudinally apart. A series of adhesive patches runs along the web, with differently sized adhesive-free zones therebetween in register with the index marks. This type of prior art linerless label roll is incapable of providing a repositionable label of varying length and is limited to the distance between the index marks. Further, this prior art roll requires use of an optical sensor be provided in the printer to detect the location of the index marks.
Prior art linerless label rolls which provide a continuous strip of adhesive on the reverse side of the sheet have the disadvantage in that the adhesive tends to accumulate on the moving parts of the printer and otherwise cause a feed jam.
The invention is a repositionable label roll for use in a thermal printer comprising a web of thermal paper having a top surface and a bottom surface wound into a roll, a barrier coat provided on the bottom surface, at least one adhesive strip provided on the barrier coat, the adhesive strip extending in a substantially uninterrupted manner along a running axis of the web and a release coat provided on the top surface, the release coat extending along the running axis of the web and behind the adhesive strip so that when a selected length of the thermal paper is caused to be thermally printed, the adhesive will extend in a continuous manner along the length of the thermally printed paper. The invention includes a fan fold version of the above described label roll.
A thermal printer will typically include a print head or bar having small heated elements that are individually controlled via digital input to a computer. When a thermosensitive sheet is passed under the print head and selected heated elements activated, the thermoreactive color forming layers within the sheet are activated and a desired print is generated on the sheet of recording material.
As best shown in
At the outlet of the printer P is a cutter or tear bar 12 for allowing the user to tear or otherwise separate a printed label 2 from the continuous web of thermosensitive recording material. Various other cutting or tearing apparatus are within the scope of the present invention.
Turning to
A first or upper surface of substrate 16 is provided with a thermosensitive or thermoreactive coating 44 comprising initially colorless color formers and color developers. Suitable thermally imagable coatings include, for example, the thermosensitive and thermoreactive coatings described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,258,746 the relevant portions of which are incorporated herein by reference. It is within the scope of the present invention to provide a stock thermal paper for use as substrate 16. Stock thermal papers are pre-coated with a thermosensitive or thermoreactive coating and may further include various other ingredients designed to protect the thermal imaging properties of the thermosensitive coating prior to and following thermal printing. Stock thermal papers are commercially available from a variety of manufacturers including, for example, Appleton Papers, Kanzaki Specialty Papers and Ricoh. Stock thermal papers which are available from other sources are within the scope of the present invention so long as they are adapted to receive the additional coatings and layers as further described below.
A second or underside surface of the substrate 16 is provided with a base coat preparation 48 that is coated onto the substrate 16 and then cured by heat or some other curing means. The base coat preparation 48 functions as a barrier to prevent migration of a subsequently applied adhesive into the substrate 16. The base coat preparation will also prevent the adhesive from contacting the substrate 16 and in particular, the thermal imaging coating 44. This ensures there is no premature activation or damage to the pigments within the thermal imaging coating 44. The base coat preparation 48 additionally functions to secure the adhesive to the label 2 so that it cannot be dislodged from the surface of the label during unrolling of the web. Suitable base coat preparations within the scope of the present invention are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,157,012, U.S. Pat. No. 5,071,821 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,870,047, the relevant portions of which are incorporated herein by reference.
A top surface coat 46 is provided over thermoreactive layer 44. The top surface coat 46 is preferably a starch or cellulose coating or a combination of starch and cellulose. The top surface coat functions as a type of release liner when the continuous web is in a roll form. That is, it enables the roll to be easily unwound despite the presence of an adhesive layer while at the same time it will not damage or otherwise deteriorate the adhesion characteristics of the pressure sensitive adhesive coating as the roll is unwound. In other words, the top surface coat 46 counteracts the pressure sensitive nature of the adhesive. The top surface coat is not damaged by the adhesive or otherwise separated from the recording material as the roll is unwound. A suitable composition for use as a top surface coat of the present invention is an aqueous modified maltodextrin dispersion marketed under the name SECOAT R 51 and manufactured by Omnova Solutions, Inc. of Chester, S.C. Other compositions for the top surface coat are within the scope of the present invention so long as it functions as a release liner in the manner described above and enables the roll to be easily unwound despite the presence of an adhesive layer and does not deteriorate the adhesion characteristics of the pressure sensitive adhesive coating as the roll is unwound.
An adhesive coating 22 is applied by printing or other means onto the base coat 48 and is best shown in
The adhesive according to the present invention comprises clusters of tacky, elastomeric, solvent-insoluble, polymeric microparticles or microspheres or a combination of microparticles and microspheres that have been prepared by aqueous emulsion polymerization. Polymerization is initiated by reacting an aqueous suspension comprising monomers having at least one substantially water insoluble ester of alkyl acrylate or methacrylate, a stabilizer and an emulsifier together with a water-soluble redox polymerization initiator to produce clusters of elastomeric microparticles. During the polymerization, the monomers will form microparticles and/or microspheres that gradually coagulate to form clusters. Preferably, the polymerized microparticles form clusters having an average size about 300 microns, preferable between about 300 and 2,000 microns. The microparticles are spherical and have diameters in the range of from about 5 to about 200 microns.
A water-soluble redox system initiator comprises a pair of oxidizing and reducing agents is employed during polymerization. The oxidizing agent is preferably a persulfate such as ammonium persulfate, although a sodium persulfate or others may be used. The concentration of the persulfate is from about 0.25% to about 1.0% by weight of the monomers and preferably 0.75% by weight of the monomers. The reducing agent is ethylenedinitrilotetraacetic acid sodium ion (+3) salt (EDTA-Fe(3+)) that must be reduced by a second reducing agent, such as sodium formaldehyde sulfoxylate. The concentration of EDTA-Fe(3+) and sodium formaldehyde sulfoxylate is about 0.05 percent and about 0.5 percent by weight of the monomers, respectively.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the adhesive coating 22 of the present invention is prepared in the presence of a protective colloid casein. The microspheres or microparticles forming the adhesive are prepared via aqueous suspension polymerization of: (1) from 70 to 99.9 percent by weight of one or more monomers selected from the group consisting of alkyl acrylate esters and alkyl(meth)acrylate esters, (2) from 0.1 to 10 percent by weight of one or more alpha-mono-olefin carboxylic acids (crotonic acid) and (3) from 0 to about 29.9 percent by weight of one or more vinyl monomers other than those identified above as (1) and (2).
The above described acrylate copolymer adhesive displays an aggressive initial tack but with low adhesion peel properties and eliminates the prior art need for a release liner or other silicone layer to protect the adhesive. The acrylate copolymer adhesive of the present invention permits a printed label 2 of the present invention to be repeatedly removed and re-adhered i.e. repositioned onto any suitable surface, for example a customer bag B as shown in
Turning to
A parent roll 56 of a stock thermosensitive sheet material is first provided with the cellulosic top or release coat at station 58 and then is passed by a first dryer 60 and second dryer 62 before entering coating station 64 where the base coat preparation discussed earlier is applied to the underside of the sheet material. The underside coated material is then passed by a dryer before entering four independently adjustable drying regions 68, 70, 72 and 74 which are enclosed drying ovens. The thus coated and dried web is passed though a series of idler rollers 76 and/or non-nipping web drive rollers 78 before being reloaded onto a new parent roll 80.
The new parent roll 80 is then allowed to sit and cure under ambient room temperature for not less than about twenty four hours.
Turning to
While this invention has been described as having a preferred design, it is understood that it is capable of further modifications, and uses and adaptations of the invention following in general the principle of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure as come within the known or customary practice in the art to which the invention pertains, and as may be applied to the central features described above and falling within the scope of the invention or limits of the attached claims.
This application is a continuation of pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/798,975, filed May 18, 2007, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/801,056 filed on May 18, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130230672 A1 | Sep 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11798975 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 13858527 | US |