The present invention generally relates to textile printing systems.
In the fabric printing industry, fabrics are typically colored with coloring agents, such as dyes or pigments, using a screen printing technology. Most large-scale fabric printing operations employ rotary screen printing technologies that utilize patterns incorporated into fine metal screens that are shaped into cylindrical forms. The coloring agents, are often in a fluid paste form, are pumped through dedicated tubing into the interior of fine cylindrical metal screens and are subsequently transferred to the fabric through the patterned pathways in the fine metal screens by a squeegee that presses the paste through the screens and onto the fabric. After each screen print run, with each color way (i.e., a color variant of the same pattern that uses different color combination), the rotary screen printer must be shut down to clean the various color pastes from the tubing and screens. This cleanup process is time intensive and environmentally unfriendly because it produces a large amount of effluent stream during the cleanup process. In addition to cleaning the rotary screen printer, a different screen must be inserted, aligned and adjusted into the printer to print a different pattern on the fabric.
To ensure that the pattern printed on the fabric is not distorted, industrial fabric printing machines stretch the fabric, and subsequently glue the stretched fabric to a belt that is run through the printing machine. The moving belt is indexed through the printing machine and the various screen stages. By attaching the fabric to the belt, the fabric is prohibited from moving with respect to the belt, which ensures fabric motion control that helps guarantee adequate registration of the fabric through the various stages in such a way that the fabric moves in a path corresponding to the movement path of the belt. However, gluing the fabric to the belt is an extremely dirty process that creates a significant environmentally unfriendly waste stream resulting from the gluing process and the subsequent washing and stripping processes. These inherent problems make industrial fabric printing processes prohibitive for use by smaller-scale users in the short run or sample printing situations. Furthermore the need for short and sample quantity runs generally exists in an office or a store setting, which generally is not designed to handle, treat and dispose of industrial waste streams.
To remedy the need for printing processes available on a smaller than industrial scale, digital ink-jet printing processes on fabrics have been developed. As known to those of ordinary skill in the art, digital printers utilize minute droplets of ink colorant that are ejected from nozzles of the ink-jet printer onto a target surface, such as, paper or fabric. In order to produce an image or pattern with the desired print quality on the fabric, special pre and post-treatment processes are employed. Pre & Post printing processes are used to deposit an ink receptive layer, and then to condition the fabric and the ink receptive layer for optimal print quality condition. Finally, the colorants require a fixing process (post processing) that either physically or chemically fix the colorants to the fabric fibers. The pre-printing conditioning steps are used to initially control the humidity and temperature of the fabric to provide an optional ink reception state for the fabric, and the post-processing steps are used to “fix” the ink colorant to the fabric, after the ink colorant has been received by the fibers in the fabric. In addition, pre-treating the fabric with organic materials increases ink receptivity and reduces the amount of ink spread, which arises from bleeding of the printed ink along the fibers in the fabric. The ink colorant is generally prevented from “blowing through” in digital printing systems by laminating the fabric with a paper-backing layer. This produces a barrier to the ink “blow through.” The paper layer also stabilizes the fabric for feeding through a traditional ink-jet printer media path.
Backed fabrics may be passed through some modified ink-jet printers for the printing of a pattern on the backed fabric. However, the use of off-line paper backings may be costly, time consuming, and may limit the range of fabrics that may be fed through the ink-jet printer. Furthermore, the fabric may be damaged when the fabric is removed from the paper backing. Thus, printing on unbacked fabrics is often desirable.
As known to those of ordinary skill in the art, the problems of printing on unbacked fabrics using an ink-jet printer are not trivial. The fundamental nature of woven fabrics makes feeding the unbacked fabric and printing a pattern on the unbacked fabric more complex than traditional ink-jet printing on paper. For instance, fabrics have an almost infinite variation in fabric characteristics due to various factors including, but not limited to, the type of fiber used in the fabric, the fiber weight, the fabric weight, the different blends of materials used in the fiber, the weave pattern used to create the fabric, the environmental conditions existing at the time of printing, the pre-treatments used on the fabric, the surface finish of the fabric, the varying moisture contents of the fiber in the fabric, the non-linear behavior of woven materials, and the difference in fabric behavior between wet and dry fabrics. These factors prohibit the unbacked fabrics from moving accurately and uniformly through the printing processes using standard media-moving machines used in the traditional ink-jet printers.
The challenge is to make a clean, versatile and user-friendly, unbacked printing system for non-mill applications for producing printed fabrics in the short run and sampling quantities. An inkjet textile printing system that addresses the issues of tension control, closed-loop displacement control, fabric conditioning, and fabric motion control using an unbacked fabric transfer system would be desirable. A digital ink-jet textile printing system that produces printed patterns consistently, with a low level of distortion, and yet is practical for use in the short-run and sampling industries, would likewise be desirable. Of course, improvements to a printing system that allow the ink-jet printer to print a pattern with a low level of distortion on the unbacked fabric would also have utility in industrial screen printing processes, especially for proofing, color matching, and precise pattern replication needs.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, an unbacked fabric transport and conditioning system for printing a pattern on a fabric is disclosed. A winding subsystem is included in the unbacked fabric transport and conditioning system that rotates a roll of the fabric. The unbacked fabric transport and conditioning system also includes a fabric characterization and tension control subsystem, for obtaining real time information on variations in the mechanical behavior of the fabric, throughout the whole length or the fabric roll. The unbacked fabric transport and conditioning system may further include an ink-jet printer configured for depositing ink in a pattern on the fabric.
A method for printing a pattern on a fabric is also disclosed. In a particular embodiment of the invention, the method includes unwinding a fabric from a fabric roll, and draping the fabric between rollers. The apex of the draped fabric can be then be sensed by a level sensor. The unwinding speed of the fabric is controlled by observing the apex of the draped fabric, with a set of sensors. Subsequently, the characteristics of the fabric are ascertained by observing the weave pattern variations as a function of the predetermined strain condition in the fabric. A pattern is then printed on the fabric, the printed image is dried and post processed. The printed fabric is then rewound on a roll.
A digital printing system that transports, conditions, and prints a pattern on an unbacked fabric is also described. In another embodiment of the invention, the printing system includes an unwind system for unrolling the fabric from a roll. The unwind system comprises a first advance motor configured to unroll the fabric from the roll and a first fabric level sensor for detecting an amount of the fabric draped from the roll of fabric. A fabric characterization subsystem gathers information on variations in the fabric, and is included in the printing system. The fabric characterization subsystem contains a pair of skewed & driven rollers for the specific purpose of inducing a variety of strain patterns in the fabric, and cameras for observing the mechanical response of the fabric. The printing system further includes an irregularity detection subsystem for discovering irregularities in the fabric. The irregularity detection subsystem comprises of a pair of rollers for stretching the fabric, and the aforementioned camera for observing the irregularities in the fabric. A fabric control subsystem including a plurality of motion synchronized belts for advancing the fabric through a print zone that is also included within the printing system. A printing subsystem configured to deposit ink on the fabric may also be included in the printing system. The printing system may also include a closed-loop color control subsystem for detecting color variations in the ink deposited on the fabric.
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming that which is regarded as the present invention, the present invention can be more readily ascertained from the following description of the invention when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The invention described herein is directed to an unbacked fabric transport and conditioning system for use with fabric printing processes that use digital ink-jet printers or other printing devices that deposit ink colorants on a fabric. More specifically, a system that characterizes the unbacked fabric before the fabric is presented to the print zone is disclosed. The present system enables a user to print a pattern on an unbacked fabric, or other textiles, with an ink-jet printer, and actively controls the distortion of the printed image on the fabric. As used herein, the term “pattern” will be used to refer to any type of design, mark, figure, identification code, graphic, work, image, or the like which may be printed. It will be apparent from the following description that the drawings described herein used to represent various features of the present invention are not drawn to scale, but are rather for illustrative and exemplary purposes only.
Referring now to drawing
Each of the three zones 100, 200 and 300 includes various subsystems, wherein each subsystem performs a function that will be described in the following detailed description. It will be apparent that the various subsystems and components of each zone 100, 200 and 300 of the UFTCS 10 described herein may have utility in other broader fields of textile printing and weaving systems, other than digital printing systems employing an ink-jet printer, such as industrial screen printing systems.
As shown in
The unwind subsystem 110 is used to unwind a fabric roll 112, and relax and dissipate winding stresses that were induced in a fabric 114 when the fabric 114 is rolled and stored on the fabric roll 112. The unwind subsystem 110 includes an optical fabric level sensor 116 operably connected to a standard surface- or center-wound unwind station that receives control feed signals from the optical fabric level sensor 116. Advance signals from the optical fabric level sensor 116 are issued to rollers 118a and 118b in the case of a surface wound system, or the roller 118c in a center wound system in a synchronous manner to speed up, slow down, or stop the unwinding of the fabric roll 112. As illustrated, the fabric 114 drapes from roller 118a towards the optical fabric level sensor 116. The fabric 114 is subsequently taken up by skewed rollers 132. A relaxation zone 113 is also present in the unwind subsystem 110, wherein stresses introduced into the fabric 114 during winding, and storage of the fabric 114 in the roll 112 are relieved.
Referring now to
As illustrated in
As illustrated, the optical fabric level sensor 116 is an infrared sensor, but it is understood that any type of sensor that performs functions the same as the optical fabric level sensor 116 described herein is encompassed by the present invention. The unwind system 110 may also be configured to detect differential side-to-side imbalances of the fabric 114, such that if one side of the fabric 114 advances faster than the other side of the fabric 114, the unwind system 110 corrects for the effect by differentially advancing the fabric roll 112.
The illustrated unwind system 110 does not create a significant variation in a back tension force applied to the draped fabric 114. Rather, variable back tension force on the draped fabric 114 in the illustrated embodiment is due to the weight of a few inches of draped fabric 114 between the optical fabric level sensors 116a and 116b which can be considered as negligible. In contrast, when standard dancer bars are used to sense the unwinding of the fabric roll 112, changes in weight vector forces applied to the fabric 114 can cause substantial back tension variations in the fabric 114. These back tension variable forces create scaling artifacts in a finished printed fabric when the printed fabric reverts to a relaxed state. By using the optical fabric level sensors 116a and 116b to provide the control signals for the unwinding of the fabric 114 from the fabric roll 112, the resultant draping of the fabric 114 relaxes the fabric 114 and allows the draped fabric 114 to dissipate the winding and storage stresses induced in the fabric 114 as the fabric 114 is rolled on the fabric roll 112, as previously described herein with reference to the relaxation zone 113.
Referring now to
As previously discussed herein with reference to the relaxation zone 113 of the unwind subsystem 110, the fabric 114 relaxes and dissipates winding stresses induced in the fabric 114 during the rolling and storing of the fabric roll 112. Furthermore, the condition of the fabric 114, such as its moisture content and temperature, equilibrate to the ambient conditions surrounding the system in the relaxation zone such that the fabric 114 is in the same ambient environment as a printing subsystem 250 when a pattern is printed on the fabric 114. By allowing the fabric 114 to equilibrate to the ambient environment where the printing system is located, the characteristics of the fabric 114 will vary less during the printing process.
The UFTCS 10 of
Although not illustrated, the unwind subsystem 110 may also include a small diameter rod of various weights which may be used to add additional back tension to the draped fabric 114, if necessary. The small diameter rod may be placed in the cradle created by the apex 115 of the draped fabric 114. It will be further appreciated that the angle of the fabric drape in the material delivered to the conditioning zone 100 should be as acute as possible, such that variations in the back tension force applied to the fabric 114 due to rod weight would not vary by more than about 2 to 3 percent.
As known in the art, fabrics have an almost infinite variability in their characteristics due to factors including, but not limited to, the type of fiber used in the fabric, the weight of the fiber, the different blend of material used in the fiber, the weave pattern used to create the fabric, the environmental conditions existing at the time of printing, the pre-treatments used on the fabric, the surface finish of the fabric, the varying moisture contents of the fiber in the fabric, the non-linear behavior of woven materials, and the differences in fabric behavior when wet or dry. Therefore, since these fabric variations are usually present in the entire length of the fabric 114 of the fabric roll 112, the continually changing fabric variations can be a major cause of defects and pattern variation in all fabric printing systems. Accordingly, it is important in any fabric printing system, especially digital printing systems, to acquire as much information as possible about various multi-dimensional force displacement characteristics inherently present in the fabrics in order to accurately advance the fabric through the printing system. Once information about these characteristics is gathered, the information may then be used to adjust operating parameters of a fabric advance subsystem in order to accommodate for the aforementioned fabric variations.
One type of device that may be used in the characterization of the fabric 114 is a skewed driven roller. Skewed driven rollers are well known to those of ordinary skill in the art of textile printing and may be used to guide and stretch the fabric 114. As known in the art, skewed rollers are set at an angle with respect to a web of the fabric and are capable of inducing various degrees of stretch, and translation in a fabric in both X and Y directions.
Referring again to
The skewed rollers 132 are used to stretch the fabric 114 in a controlled manner and induce a wide range of multi-directional distortion conditions in the fabric 114. Although skewed driven rollers 132 are used in the illustrated embodiment, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that other devices that perform functions the same as, or equivalent to, the skewed driven rollers 132 described herein are meant to be encompassed by the present invention. For instance, a segmented individually driven belt system (not shown) may also be used.
Referring now to
Using the fabric weave information gathered by the CCD array 134, and low angle lighting, a fundamental frequency content of the fabric weave may be derived as a function of the deformations induced in the fabric 114. The signals from the CCD array 134 may then be assigned appropriate numerical values that would be proportional to the frequency content of the fabric weave. Using these numerical values, a Fast Fourier Transform algorithm may be used to derive the fundamental frequency content of the fabric weave as a function of the X and Y deformations introduced in the fabric 114. Since the frequency content of threads in the fabric 114 is inversely proportional to the tension in the fabric 114, the characteristic tension may be derived for any given fabric 114 present in the UFTCS system 10 during the set-up steps of the print job. Also, since a fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130 may be introduced at various locations within the UFTCS system 10, the characteristics of the fabrics 114 may be determined and compensated for in real time throughout the print job. In this manner, since another fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130b is implemented in the UFTCS system 10 before a fabric control subsystem 210, the predetermined and preset displacement range and amplitude functions that were previously characterized for the fabric 114 may be accurately induced into the fabric 114 before the fabric 114 is introduced into the fabric control subsystem 210.
The use of the characterization and tension control subsystems 130a and 130b allows the machine operator of the UFTCS 10 to set optimal tension derived in the setup of a print job, and to further allow the machine operator to continuously monitor and control the parameters for the given print job, with respect to changing environmental conditions and fabric types. The machine operator is also able to control tension induced artifacts i.e., image scaling and distortion, that may be introduced into the printed fabric 114 during the set-up steps.
It will be appreciated that the characterization and tension control subsystems 130a and 130b described herein may be useful in traditional textile printing systems because the traditional printing systems, and also address other fabric non-linearity issues. In traditional printing systems, a significant savings in an amount of fabric that is wasted due to these variations is minimized by reducing the amount of “scrap yardage” produced by distorted images printed due to the aforementioned non-linear behaviors of fabrics.
As previously described herein, the mechanical behavior of any given fabric is directly coupled to and is a fundamental function of the weave, thread type, moisture content, temperature, tension strain in both the X and Y directions, pretreatments used, and coating weight used on the fabric. Therefore, it is desirable to have a characterization and tension control subsystem 130b before the fabric 114 enters a fabric motion control zone 210 and the printing subsystem 250 because these subsystems are highly sensitive to the real time mechanical variations of the fabric.
In addition to ascertaining characteristics of the fabric 114 after the fabric 114 is unwound from the fabric roll 112, the fabric 114 may also need to have creases removed, the location of tread knots and irregularities ascertained in order to avoid printing on those areas, the pen-to-media distance adjusted in order to miss the knots. Accordingly, the UFTCS 10 of
As previously discussed herein, traditional processes used to manufacture fabric in the textile industry results in the fabric 114 on the fabric roll 112 to include many creases and surface irregularities. These irregularities may cause head crashes of the ink-jet printer used in the print and printer control zone 200 or may cause other technical/practical problems in the UFTCS 10. Additionally, fabric characteristics for the same type of fabric may vary from fabric roll to fabric roll. Accordingly, these creases and irregularities need to be constantly monitored and removed along the flow of the fabric 114 by steaming and ironing the fabric 114 before the fabric 114 passes to subsystems downstream in the UFTCS 10. Furthermore, since fabric that is wound close to the core of the fabric roll 112 is not exposed to the same environmental conditions as the outer layers of fabric 114 of the fabric roll 112, variations in fabric 114 will change as the fabric 114 in a single fabric roll 112 passes through the UFTCS 10.
Referring now to
Referring to
Additionally, the skewed rollers 132 may provide web guidance of the fabric 114 when used in conjunction with the CCD array 134, as illustrated in
Referring again to
When the surface of the fabric 114 is illuminated with the low angle lighting system, one or more shadow(s) are cast by any given crease or surface irregularity on the surface of the fabric 114. By observing a contrast in light and dark areas on the surface of the fabric 114, the crease condition of the fabric 114 may be ascertained. For instance, a minimum crease condition of the fabric 114 is observed as a low amount of contrast on the surface of the fabric 114 because a shallow crease will not cast a large shadow area. Alternatively, if many creases are present on the surface of the fabric 114, then a plurality of shadows are cast which can be observed as having a higher contrast ratio. The contrast may be measured using the CCD camera 156. As known in the art, CCD cameras 156 observe pixels of information in a field of view. An average contrast on the surface of the fabric 114 may be determined by averaging the output value of each of the CCD pixels over the field of view of the fabric surface. A determination of the lowest crease condition of the fabric 114 in the UFTCS 10 is achieved by averaging the output value of each CCD pixel in each of the camera frames, while the fabric is stretched in a predetermined stretch pattern. A highest average pixel value for the vectors of force introduced into the fabric 114 may be ascertained such that an optimal stretch condition is determined for each fabric 114. The highest average pixel output condition corresponds to the lowest contrast condition and represents a smooth state of the fabric 114 with the minimum crease condition. Larger shadows are created when the light source is oriented in a low angle in relation to the fabric 114, thus amplifying the shadow of a crease.
Referring now to
If a crease is present on the surface of the fabric 114, the low angle light source 158 casts a shadow on one side of the crease, while the other side of the crease is illuminated. Thus, a pixel of the CCD camera 156 in the field of view of the shadow is sensed as a dark output, while another pixel of the CCD camera 156 in the field of view on the other side of the crease is sensed as a light output. Using the light and dark output information gathered by the CCD camera 156, the CPU of the UFTCS 10 may be used to ascertain the position of the crease on the surface of the fabric 114. In order to obtain the average contrast, the CCD camera 156 is periodically calibrated for both full white and full dark output values for each pixel of a CCD chip within the CCD camera 156. The calibration enhances a dynamic range of the CCD camera, accounts for the degradation of the light source, and enhances the fidelity of the pixels of information. Analysis of the shadow pattern created by the light and dark outputs observed by the CCD camera 156 may be accomplished in any manner known in the art.
Referring again to
Referring now to
Referring now to
To accommodate for the widest range of surface irregularities and creases that may be present in the fabric 114, an operator of the UFTCS 10 may adjust various set up parameters for each fabric 114 including, but not limited to, the steam temperature used to remove creases, the amount of steam transferred to the fabric 114, an amount of pressure applied to the fabric 114 by the ironing roller 154, and the amount of tension introduced in the fabric 114 by the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130. For ease of use, the set up parameters may be stored in a UTFCS 10 controller module (not shown) such that the various set up parameters are available for easy reload for repeating particular print jobs using similar fabrics and fabric conditions.
In addition to detecting creases in the fabric 114, components of the irregularity detection and removal subsystem 150 may be used to detect other types of defects, such as knots. As known in the art, during the process of weaving fabric, loom operators tie knots at the end of one of the thread bobbins to start a new bobbin of thread. As the fabric 114 is woven, the knots go through a loom and are woven into the finished fabric. Some of the knots and other irregularities present in the fabric may protrude higher than a distance between the fabric 114 and a pen used to print a pattern in the print subsystem 250. When a knot or irregularity is too large to pass between the fabric 114 and the pen, the pen of a print head in the print subsystem 250 may be damaged. To protect the print heads, the knots or irregularities may be detected before the print zone and indexed over, such that the print heads will be protected from impact with them and damage to the print head can be avoided.
In the illustrated UFTCS 10 of the present invention, knots and other irregularities may be detected in the irregularity detection and removal subsystem 150 in a manner similar to the detection of creases as previously described herein. The CCD camera 156 and low angle lighting system may be used to scan for knots and other irregularities that are larger than, for example, 1 mm in height, width and length. Generally, the CCD pixel values are compared as previously described herein with reference to the detection of creases. When a knot or other irregularity is detected, the localized CCD pixel value corresponding to the reflection of the low angle light off of the fabric 114 will decrease. When the irregularity detection and removal subsystem 150 detects the knot or other irregularity, the data corresponding to the irregularity may be fed to the printer subsystem 250 such that the printer subsystem 250 may be directed to skip printing a swath of fabric 114 before and after the knot, thus avoiding costly replacement of the print heads.
Referring now to
In addition to protecting print heads from damage by locating and subsequently avoiding knots and irregularities in the fabric, the print subsystem 250 of the present invention may also be configured with a pen head construction that helps minimize potential damage to the pen heads. Referring now to
Although the irregularity detection and removal subsystem 150 and specific configuration of the pens 254 in the print subsystem 250 may help prevent damage to the print heads 252, the described subsystems do not solve print defect issues due to imperfections in the fabric 114. As known to those of ordinary skill in the art, print defects of one kind or another occur when a pattern is printed onto the fabric defect area in the fabric 114. Therefore, components within the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130, the irregularity detection and removal subsystem 150, the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170, the fabric control subsystem 210, and the color consistency densitometry subsystem 270 may individually, or collectively, be used to ensure that the number and types of print defects are minimized.
For instance and referring to
The fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170 includes an air flow means 172, such as a blower in combination with a heater. In the illustrated embodiment, the blower and the heater are on different controls, such that the blower and heater can be adjusted independent from each other, thus providing operators of the UFTCS 10 a large degree of freedom to accommodate various moisture and environmental conditions in the fabric 114. In an alternative embodiment, the CPU operatively connected with the UFTCS 10 may be used to monitor and adjust the moisture and environmental conditions in the fabric 114.
As previously discussed herein, placement of the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170 before the print subsystem 250 allows the fabric 114 to be at an optimal moisture content and temperature range for printing of the pattern on the fabric 114. However, since the fabric 114 is de-creased before being ironed, the fabric 114 is deformed in many directions in an effort to ascertain the minimum crease condition. This deformation of the fabric 114 induces strain conditions in the fabric 114 which may need to be removed before the pattern is printed on the fabric 114.
Deformations are induced into the fabric 114 in various subsystems of the UFTCS 10 For instance, the deformations are induced by a feed mechanism used to deliver the fabric 114 to the print subsystem 250, the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170, the fabric control subsystem 210, and some of the other subsystems. To continually account for the various deformations, the fabric 114 is characterized just before the fabric 114 enters the fabric control subsystem 210. Accordingly, the fabric 114 may be characterized before the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170, after the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170, or in both locations as illustrated in
To ensure maximum print quality, the pattern should ideally be printed on the fabric 114 in a flat, relaxed, and crease-free state. However, since the fabric 114 is unwound from the fabric roll 112 and subjected to various deformation stresses throughout the machine, presenting the fabric 114 to the print zone in a zero stress condition is not practical. Therefore, a key parameter becomes the minimization of the local distortion and recovery characteristics of the fabrics under the multi-directional strain induced by the various unwinding, de-creasing, ironing, conditioning and feeding stresses. Other stresses induced into the fabric 114 stem from conditioning of the fabric 114 which may include treating the fabric 114 in such a way that various coloring agents adhere more efficiently to the fabric 114. Accordingly, the fabric characterization and tension control subsystems 130a and 130b are utilized to solve the problems of variable fabric distortions resulting from the various tension forces introduced in the fabric 114. These fabric characterization and tension control subsystems 130 result in decreased variable directional scaling distortions introduced into the fabric 114 throughout the print job.
As further known in the art, stress induced displacements in a fabric 114 greatly affect image distortion, banding, and variations in color plain from color plain alignment in digital and conventional fabric printing systems. Therefore, it is useful to control post-printing distortion of the fabric 114, in addition to the deformations induced from pre-printing load characteristics in the fabric 114. In both post-printing and pre-printing conditioning steps performed on the fabric 114, a stress-free state of the fabric 114 before and after a pattern has been printed thereon should be maintained to minimize the objectionable distortions in the fabric 114.
An additional consideration in post processing is maintaining the same pre-printing fabric characteristics after the pattern is printed on the fabric 114. Therefore, running the fabric 114 through the post-printing process and ascertaining the post-printing characteristics before a pattern is printed thereon helps minimize final variations. Accordingly, measuring the X and Y directional distortions in the post-printing processing and adjusting the pre-printing conditions to accommodate for the post-processing variations helps decrease the specific distortion/scaling within the fabric 114.
As previously discussed herein, since fabric behavior is variable throughout the roll of fabric 114, it is desirable to ascertain the stress/strain behavior in the fabric 114 and set the tensions in the fabric 114 to an optimal and uniform state to better control distortions in the fabric before printing begins. Accordingly, the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130 described herein is one possible way to achieve close-loop control needed. Once characterization information is obtained by the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130, the information is used to control the pre-printing forces in the fabric and stretch the fabric before it is introduced into the fabric control subsystem 210, thus effectively closing the feedback loop in the UFTCS 10.
In an alternative embodiment, the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130 is used as a standalone subsystem in conventional large-scale fabric printing systems. However, the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130 works effectively when it is operatively linked to a printing system, such that the fabric characterization and tension control subsystem 130 may be used to dynamically monitor the fabric characteristics throughout the entire printing process.
Referring again to
Referring now to
The amount of web tension in the fabric 114 could be preset as a constant value that is maintained and controlled by the UFTCS 10 or the web tension may be monitored and controlled in real time. If the web tension is maintained and controlled in real time, a control system of the UFTCS 10 may continually adjust the optimal tension for a given fabric type and variation using a flowchart algorithm illustrated in
Once the web tension in the fabric 114 is characterized, the fabric 114 enters the fabric control subsystem 210 in as flat and controlled manner as possible. As illustrated in the embodiment of
The fabric transfer belts 212a and 212b are individually driven by fabric transfer belt rollers 218a and 218b and are configured to move synchronously with respect to each other. Referring to
A surface 213 of the fabric transfer belts 212 may be roughened by plasma treatment of the surface of the fabric transfer belts 212, if the belts are metallic, or by gluing a layer of abrasive particles to a surface of the fabric transfer belts 212, if the belts are polymeric. The roughened surface 213 provides randomly positioned high points that dig into the weave of the fabric 114, and functions in concert with the normal force 226 to prevent the fabric 114 from moving with respect to the fabric transfer belt 212, thus negating the need for adhesives. Various types, grades and levels of roughness on the surface of the fabric transfer belts 212 may be provided to accommodate the different weaves or types of fabric 114 of the UFTCS 10. Accordingly, the fabric control subsystem 210 is configured to allow for easy removal and replacement of the fabric transfer belts 212.
The fabric transfer belts 212 also have encoders (not illustrated) on an underside or edge thereof that allow control feedback signals to be accurately monitored by a fabric advance subsystem of the UFTCS 10. The encoders may comprise carriage axis encoder strips known to those of ordinary skill in the art and conform to the actual shape of the fabric transfer belts 212. The driven rollers 218 are powered with matched encoded servo drives such that each driven roller 218a and 218b moves synchronously in relation to each other. The separate drive systems that power the fabric transfer belts 212 may be controlled and synchronized using a closed-loop control scheme. The closed-loop control scheme may include high precision encoders on the matched servo drives powering each driven roller 218 that function in concert with the encoders of the fabric transfer belts 212, thus functioning to control the displacement of the fabric transfer belts 212a and 212b and minimizing changes in characteristics in the fabric 114 during printing. Further, it will be apparent that a width of the fabric transfer belts 212 is wider than the widest width of the fabric 114 that will be used in the UFTCS 10, such that the entire width of the fabric 114 is supported by the fabric transfer belts 212. To provide for better accommodation and tension control of various fabrics, the fabric control subsystem 210 is configured such that the fabric transfer belts 212 may travel in a direction indicated by arrow 215.
As further illustrated in
Referring to
In addition to preventing ink contamination on the fabric control belts 212, the two fabric control belts 212a and 212b are configured to provide back resistance to tensioning rollers of the UFTCS 10. The fabric control belts 212 are configured to move in a direction indicated by arrow 215 such that tension applied to the fabric by the UFTCS 10 may be accurately controlled. The design of the illustrated fabric control subsystem 210 also dictates that the unsupported distance 232 between fabric control belts 212a and 212b is minimized, such that the distance 232 of the unsupported fabric 114 floating freely is minimized. Accordingly, the distance 232 between fabric control belts 212 should be slightly larger than a swath height of an ink jet head used in order to avoid ink droplets contaminating the same.
Referring now to
Since the actual printed colors on the fabric 114 do not develop their final color appearance until the fabric 114 is post-processed, the real color value of the printed fabric 114 cannot be ascertained until the post-processing of the fabric 114 is complete. An actual ink flux and lay down pattern of the ink printed on the fabric 114 varies throughout the print job due to thermal head assembly (THA) variations, thermal drift, the varying fabric white point and the lack of weave uniformity in the fabric 114. Accordingly, these variations affect the final color of the fabric, and hence the outcome of the print job after post-processing. These variations may be sensed and adjusted in real time throughout the print job to accommodate these dynamic variations and minimize varying color appearances on the printed fabric.
In the illustrated embodiment, these variations are sensed in the color consistency densitometry subsystem 330 of
Color consistency needs are further ensured in real time by printing specific fill patterns on a fabric salvage area and scanning an optical densitometer over these fill patterns in real time. As known in the art, the fabric salvage area is usually a ¼- to ½-inch strip along both edges of the fabric 114. A choice of fill patterns may be made automatically and dynamically, or manually, for each individual print job in accordance with the print patterns and respective patterns printed on the fabric 114. By observing a drift of the reflectance values of the fill patterns, the thermal ink jet drive data may be corrected for some of the thermal head drift effects.
It will be apparent to those of ordinary skill that actual image coverage patterns are printed on the fabric 114 and, when combined, form the desired colors in any given print job. The actual image coverage patterns are loaded into their respective registers at the appropriate time, i.e., after tension and color calibrations are determined when fabric dependant calibrations are initially performed, before printing. Signals required to produce the actual image coverage patterns are sent to a carriage board, and printed on the salvage area of the fabric for monitoring. The carriage sensor 270 of the color consistency densitometry subsystem 330 is used to read an average value of the optical density of the printed patterns on the fabric salvage area during the print job. The average values are compared to pre-print job calibration values and the timing and operating parameters of the thermal head assembly may be varied to compensate for the variations. To enhance the ability of the carriage sensor to sense the color variations, several additional multicolor LED light sources may be added such that the carriage sensor is able to recognize additional wavelengths of the textile inks.
Referring now to
The edge print pattern, illustrated in
After a pattern is printed on the fabric 114, post-processing of the fabric 114 is required. Since fabrics do not dry as rapidly as paper after printing, drying equipment is often a standard feature of fabric ink-jet printing systems. Also, since inkjet printing on fabric requires two to six times the amount of ink that is traditionally printed on paper, drying of the printed fabric is important. To aid the drying process, a dryer 222, such as a heater blower, is a rapid drying device that can be incorporated in the drying and post processing subsystem 310 of
After drying, the fabric 114 is subjected to further post-processing steps in order to fix and develop a final color of the dye or pigment on the fabric 114. As known in the art, post-processing may be accomplished either mechanically or chemically. Depending on the type of ink printed on the fabric, various fixing, or post-processing, steps used on the fabric 114 may include the following: dry heat for use with pigment/binder inks and dispersed dyes; saturated steam for use with acid dyes, dispersed dyes, and reactive dyes; or saturated steam combined with a chemical for use with some reactive dyes. In the illustrated UFTCS 10 of
Incorporation of the post-processing subsystem 310 within the print system allows a color fidelity check to be performed on-line with the printing process. Thus, it is efficient to incorporate the post-processing subsystem 310 within the print system as illustrated in
In implementing the drying and post-processing subsystem 310, factors to be considered in the design of the dry heat device 312 and steamer 314 include: time required for the post-processing stage of the type of ink chemistry employed, control of steam temperature, amount of steam required, consistency of steam flux, need for a hard water line, and segregation of the unfixed printed fabric face from the steam before the unfixed printed fabric is post-processed. These factors affect the quality, durability and the handling characteristics of the finished printed fabrics. The construction and configuration of the drying and post-processing subsystem 310 is similar to the configuration of the fabric drying and conditioning subsystem 170, 150 (illustrated in
Once the fabric 114 is post-processed, the fabric 114 passes through the closed-loop color control subsystem 330, as illustrated in
The closed-loop color control subsystem 330 may use a variety of different sensors to measure the color variation of the printed fabric. For instance, a sensor 332 of the closed-loop color control subsystem 330 may be similar to the carriage sensor of the color-consistency densitometry subsystem 270. However, to achieve a higher resolution due to a small field of view of the carriage sensors, the carriage sensors can be widened. For instance, as illustrated in
Once the fabric 114 has been post-processed, the fabric 114 passes through a relaxation subsystem 350, as illustrated in
As further illustrated in
Although various components of the subsystems have been described herein as being in-line with the UFTCS 10, it will be apparent that various components, subsystems, and zones of the UFTCS 10 may be implemented off-line or separate from the UFTCS 10 and still be encompassed by the present invention. Thus, the various components, subsystems, and zones of the described UFTSC 10 may be used with other digital printing systems or utilized in conjunction with other conventional printing systems.
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to various illustrated embodiments, various additions, deletions and modifications that are obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art to which the invention pertains, even if not shown or specifically described herein, they are deemed to lie within the scope of the invention as encompassed by the following claims.
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