Inkjet printer with UV bulb shutter system including more than one movable shutter
09757960 · 2017-09-12
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41J2/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M7/0081
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M7/0045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00212
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41J11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A UV inkjet printer includes a UV radiation device to irradiate jetted ink on a receiver, wherein the UV radiation device is attached to an inkjet print head module and includes a UV bulb lamp parallel to a slow scan direction; and the radiation device includes a shutter system to create a first irradiation zone on the receiver and to create a second irradiation zone.
Claims
1. An inkjet printer comprising: an inkjet print head module; and an ultraviolet radiation device attached to the inkjet print head module and that irradiates an irradiation zone on a receiver; wherein the ultraviolet radiation device includes an ultraviolet bulb lamp and a shutter system, the shutter system including: a controller that changes a dimension of the irradiation zone in a slow scan direction, which is a direction that the receiver moves, between a first irradiation zone on the receiver and a second irradiation zone on the receiver; a first shutter; and a second shutter; the first shutter and the second shutter are positioned in a single row parallel with the slow scan direction; and the first irradiation zone is defined by the first shutter and the second shutter being open, and the second irradiation zone is defined by the first shutter being closed and the second shutter being open.
2. The inkjet printer according to claim 1, wherein the controller switches between a first printing configuration in which the first shutter and the second shutter are open and a second printing configuration in which the first shutter is closed and the second shutter is open.
3. The inkjet printer according to claim 2, further comprising a rotator that rotates the ultraviolet radiation device through a rotation angle around an axis parallel to the slow scan direction while changing to the second printing configuration; wherein the rotation angle is smaller than or equal to 45 degrees in a direction away from the inkjet print head module.
4. The inkjet printer according to claim 1, wherein the shutter system includes: a driver that opens and closes one of the first shutter and the second shutter; and an engagement that engages the driver to open and close the other of the first shutter and the second shutter simultaneously with the one of the first shutter and second shutter, and that disengages from the driver so that the other of the first shutter and the second shutter remains closed.
5. The inkjet printer according to claim 1, wherein a dimension of a printing zone of the inkjet print head module along the slow scan direction is smaller than or equal to a dimension of the first irradiation zone along the slow scan direction; and the first irradiation zone overlaps the printing zone in the slow scan direction.
6. The inkjet printer according to claim 1, wherein an ink droplet of ultraviolet inkjet ink is jetted onto the receiver from a first inkjet print head in the inkjet print head module, and the ink droplet is cured in the first irradiation zone; and a varnish droplet of an ultraviolet inkjet varnish is jetted at least partially on top of the cured ink droplet, wherein the varnish droplet is jetted from a second inkjet print head in the inkjet print head module, and the varnish droplet is cured in the second irradiation zone.
7. The inkjet printer according to claim 1, wherein the second irradiation zone has a smaller dimension in the slow scan direction than the first irradiation zone.
8. An inkjet printing method comprising the steps of: providing an ultraviolet radiation device including a first shutter and a second shutter, the first shutter and the second shutter being positioned in a single row parallel with a slow scan direction, which is a direction that a receiver moves; a) providing a first printing configuration by performing the steps of: a1) opening the first shutter of the ultraviolet radiation device; a2) opening the second shutter of the ultraviolet radiation device; a3) creating a first irradiation zone on the receiver by opening the first shutter and the second shutter; a4) jetting an ultraviolet inkjet ink onto the receiver; and a5) irradiating the jetted ultraviolet inkjet ink in the first irradiation zone; and b) providing a second printing configuration by performing the steps of: b1) closing the first shutter of the ultraviolet radiation device; b2) creating a second irradiation zone on the receiver by closing the first shutter and opening the second shutter; b3) jetting an ultraviolet inkjet varnish on the receiver; and b4) irradiating the jetted ultraviolet inkjet varnish in the second irradiation zone.
9. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, further comprising the step of: changing a dimension of one of the first irradiation zone and the second irradiation zone in the slow scan direction.
10. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, further comprising the steps of: using a driver to open and close the first shutter; and engaging the second shutter with the driver to open and close the second shutter simultaneously with the first shutter, or disengaging the second shutter from the driver to keep the second shutter closed.
11. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, further comprising, prior to the step b3, the step of: wiping the receiver with a fluid selected from ethanol, isopropanol, methanol, acetone, or alcohol.
12. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, further comprising a step: rotating the ultraviolet radiation device through a rotation angle around an axis parallel with a slow scan direction, which is a direction that the receiver moves, wherein the rotation angle is smaller than or equal to 45 degrees in a direction away from an inkjet print head module while changing to the second printing configuration.
13. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, further comprising the step of: controlling a temperature of the first shutter and the second shutter differently.
14. The inkjet printing method according to claim 8, wherein the second irradiation zone has a smaller dimension in the slow scan direction than the first irradiation zone.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Definitions
(12) Inkjet UV Printer
(13) An inkjet UV printer is a dot matrix printer that is using an inkjet printing head which jets ultraviolet curable liquid such as a UV inkjet ink, UV inkjet varnish on a receiver such as paper or plastic. To cure an ultraviolet curable liquid the inkjet UV printer comprises an UV radiation device (100).
(14) The printing may be monochrome, e.g. black for gray images, or multi-colored, e.g. full color printing using a CMY (cyan, magenta, yellow, black=a process black made up of a combination of C, M, Y), a CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black), or a specialized color scheme, (e.g. CMYK plus one or more additional spot or specialized colors). To print a receiver such as paper or plastic, the nozzles of inkjet print heads are used or “fired” in a specific order while the receiver is moved relative to the inkjet printing heads in an inkjet print head module (300). Each time a nozzle is fired, a liquid is transferred to the receiver.
(15) Typically, in one form of inkjet UV printer, the inkjet head module, which comprises an inkjet print head, will be moved relative to the receiver to produce a so-called raster line which extends in a first direction, e.g. across the receiver. The first direction is sometimes called the fast scan direction. A raster line comprises a series of jetted droplets delivered onto the receiver by the nozzles of the inkjet printing head. The receiver is moved, usually intermittently, in a second direction perpendicular to the first direction. The second direction is often called the slow scan direction (370).
(16) More information about slow scan direction (370) and fast scan direction of a printer is disclosed in EP1930169 (AGFA GRAPHICS) wherein a curing method for an UV inkjet printer is invented.
(17) Wide-Format UV Inkjet Printer
(18) Wide-format UV inkjet printers are generally accepted to be UV inkjet printers with a print width over 17″. Wide-format UV inkjet printers with a print width over the 100″ are also super-wide-format UV inkjet printers or grand format UV inkjet printers. Wide-format UV inkjet printers are mostly used to print banners, posters, textiles and general signage and in some cases may be more economical than short-run methods such as screen printing. Wide format printers generally use a roll of substrate rather than individual sheets of substrate but today also wide format printers exist with a table whereon substrate is loaded. Either the table moves under an inkjet print head module (300) or a gantry moves an inkjet print head module (300) over the table. These so called flat-table UV inkjet printers most often are used for the printing of planar substrates or ridged substrates or sheets of flexible substrates.
(19) In a preferred embodiment the UV inkjet printer is a wide-format UV inkjet printer and in a more preferred embodiment the UV inkjet printer is a super-wide-format UV inkjet printer.
(20) In a preferred embodiment the UV inkjet printer is a flat-table UV inkjet printer, in a more preferred embodiment the UV inkjet printer comprises a conveyor belt to carry the receiver.
(21) In a preferred embodiment the UV inkjet printer the lay-down of the UV inkjet ink in the UV inkjet ink jetting-and-curing passing is different than the lay-down of the UV inkjet varnish in the UV inkjet varnish jetting-and-curing passing. A lay-down of a liquid in an inkjet printer on a receiver may be shingling whether or not combined with interlacing or a lay-down of a liquid in an inkjet printer on a receiver may be using a print mask.
(22) An example of a lay-down by a print mask is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,992,962 (Hewlett-Packard Company) and an example of a lay-down by shingling-and-interlacing is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,018,634 (Agfa Graphics) wherein printing mutually interstitial images (=shingling-and-interlacing) solves ink coalescence in inkjet printing.
(23) Inkjet Print Head Module (300)
(24) The inkjet print head module (300) comprises one or more inkjet print heads to jet an UV inkjet ink and one or more inkjet print heads to jet a UV varnish inkjet ink. The nozzle rows of the inkjet print heads in the inkjet print head module (300) are preferably parallel with each other and more preferably also parallel with the slow scan direction (370). The nozzle rows of one or more inkjet print heads that jets the same liquid in the inkjet print head module (300) and the nozzle rows of these inkjet print heads are aligned to each other is called a nozzle row column. In a preferred embodiment a nozzle row column in an inkjet print head is parallel to the slow scan direction (370) of the UV inkjet printer wherein its comprised.
(25) An inkjet print head module (300) may comprise one or more nozzle row columns for the same inkjet UV ink or for the UV varnish.
(26) The inkjet print head module (300) may comprise a nozzle row column for a cyan (C), for magenta (M), for yellow (Y) and for black (K) UV inkjet ink and for an UV inkjet varnish (U).
(27) The inkjet printer head module may comprise a nozzle row column for a white UV inkjet ink (W).
(28) The inkjet printer head module may comprise a base plate whereon the inkjet print heads are attached. The inkjet printer head module may comprise alignment means to control the position of the inkjet print heads. EP1805020 (XAAR) discloses, as example for alignment means, a method of aligning print modules, printers and print heads. The modules and chassis are formed with a number of alignment features which engage with one another to form elastic interference couplings, thus enabling highly repeatable alignment between components.
(29) The inkjet printer head module may comprise a set of nozzle row columns for an ordered set of liquids that is mirrored around the slow scan direction (370) from another set of nozzle row columns of an ordered set of the same liquids. Preferably the ordered set of liquids is an ordered set of UV inkjet inks.
(30) Print Zone
(31) The print zone of the inkjet print head module (300) is a logical zone that defines the area on a receiver that is printed by an inkjet print head module (300) wherein all nozzles are activated in an UV inkjet printer while the inkjet print head module (300) is moved in the fast scan direction above the receiver.
(32) The UV inkjet ink print zone of the inkjet print head module (300) is a logical zone that defines the area on a receiver that is printed by an inkjet print head module (300) wherein all nozzles are activated from inkjet print heads which jets an UV inkjet ink while the inkjet print head module (300) is moved in the fast scan direction above the receiver.
(33) The UV inkjet varnish print zone of the inkjet print head module (300) is a logical zone that defines the area on a receiver that is printed by an inkjet print head module (300) wherein all nozzles are activated from inkjet print heads which jets an UV inkjet varnish while the inkjet print head module (300) is moved in the fast scan direction above the receiver.
(34) UV Radiation Device (100)
(35) The UV radiation device (100) is a device for irradiation of a receiver by electromagnetic radiation wherein the electromagnetic radiation is UV radiation. The UV radiation device (100) comprises a housing having an oriented opening in the direction of a UV inkjet ink, UV varnish which is jetted on a receiver. The housing comprises an elongate radiation house such as UV bulb lamp. Preferably the length of the UV bulb lamp, in a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer, is parallel with the slow scan direction (370). The UV bulb lamp consists essentially of a tubular glass body, two electrodes and two pedestals. It may be partially surrounded by a reflector. An example of UV radiation device (100) is disclosed in EP1062467 (BISGES MICHAEL). Another example of UV radiation device (100) which is modular and comprises a removable holder with a barrier is disclosed in DE102005045203 (HOENLE AG DR).
(36) The UV radiation device (100) may comprise: plug-in modules for easy handling and UV bulb lamp changing; and/or air cooled circulation and/or water cooled circulation to optimize the heat extraction inside the housing; and/or a monitoring system for safety requirements; and/or a control unit with graphical display and/or touch panel for easy operating.
(37) The shutter system (200) in a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer may comprise shutter means as a means of quickly eliminating UV exposure without shutting off the UV bulb lamp, permitting rapid restart of the irradiation towards the ink layers or varnish layers. Without such shutter means, most UV radiation devices (100) would need to be powered off, requiring a lengthy cool down and restart procedure, which wastes significant amounts of production time in a day. Such shutter means may comprise reflector geometries to optimize the heat extraction inside the housing.
(38) A shutter means in a shutter system (200) may comprise one or more shutter blades. A shutter means may comprise actuator means to move the shutter blades such as mechanical actuators, hydraulic actuators, pneumatic actuators or piezoelectric actuators or any moving system known by the state-of-the-art.
(39) The figures according to
(40) In a most preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer, the shutter system (200) attached to the UV radiation device (100) may comprise more than one shutter means, positioned in a row parallel with the slow scan direction (370), wherein one or more shutter blades moves in fast scan direction to change the dimension of the irradiation zone in slow scan direction (370).
(41) The UV inkjet printer may combine the previous described types of shutter means to change the dimension of the irradiation zone in slow scan direction (370).
(42) The UV radiation device (100) which is attached to the inkjet print head module (300) in a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer may be rotated around an axis parallel with the slow scan direction (370) and wherein the rotation angle is smaller or equal than 45 degrees away from the inkjet print heads in the inkjet print head module (300) so the irradiation on the receiver is defocused which influences the time-to-cure. The rotation of the UV radiation device (100) has another benefit because the UV radiation device (100) is than it-self a light trap for the inkjet print heads in the inkjet print head module (300).
(43) In the UV inkjet printer one or more UV radiation devices (100) may be attached to the inkjet print head module (300) so the UV bulb lamps in the housings of the UV radiation devices (100) are parallel to the slow scan direction (370).
(44) Irradiation Zone
(45) The irradiation zone is a logical zone that defines the area on a receiver that is irradiated by an UV radiation device (100) in an UV inkjet printer while the inkjet print head module (300) is moved in the fast scan direction.
(46) Receiver
(47) Preferably the receiver in a preferred embodiment is a flat workpiece and more preferably flexible sheets (e.g. paper, transparency foils, adhesive PVC sheets or ink-receivers) with thickness down to 100 micrometers and preferably down to 50 micrometers. Most preferably rigid sheets (e.g. hard board, PVC, carton, wood or ink-receivers) are used preferably with a thickness up to 2 centimeters and more preferably up to 5 centimeters. More preferably the receiver is flexible web material (e.g. paper, adhesive vinyl, fabrics and PVC, textile) as in a so called “roll-to-roll” configuration wherein the flexible web material is carried from roll to roll e.g. via a conveyor belt or “roll-to-sheet” configuration wherein the flexible web material is carried from roll e.g. via a conveyor belt to sheet after cutting the web material.
(48) UV Inkjet Varnish
(49) An UV inkjet varnish is preferably a colorless, clear radiation curable liquid, more preferably a free radical curable liquid. The addition of large size particulate matter, like a flatting or matting agent, to varnish generally leads to a translucent or even opaque cured layer in stead of the desired transparent layer. A transparent cured varnish layer allows good viewing or inspection of e.g. a print beneath the varnish layer.
(50) In a preferred embodiment, the UV inkjet varnish contains no or less than 0.1 wt % of particulate matter based on the total weight of the UV inkjet varnish that has an average size larger than 10% of the nozzle diameter as measured by laser diffraction. In a more preferred embodiment, the UV inkjet varnish contains no particulate matter based on the total weight of the varnish that has an average size larger than 10% of the nozzle diameter as measured by laser diffraction. In a very preferred embodiment, the varnish contains no particulate matter at all.
(51) The particulate matter can have different shapes, such as a globular or a needle shape. While particulate matter having a needle shape and a size equal or larger to the nozzle diameter may still glide through the nozzle and allow the full functioning of an inkjet print head, globular particulate matter having a diameter equal or larger to the nozzle diameter will block a nozzle in an inkjet print head from firing. Such a failing nozzle leads to undesired gloss differences and image artefacts. Hence, the varnish preferably includes no particulate matter having a size larger than the nozzle diameter of the one or more inkjet print heads, more preferably the varnish includes no particulate matter having a size larger than 70% of the nozzle diameter of the one or more inkjet print heads, and most preferably the varnish includes no particulate matter having a size larger than 50% of the nozzle diameter of the one or more inkjet print heads.
(52) In another preferred embodiment, the UV inkjet varnish may include particulate matter of small size. A yellowish varnish or a varnish which turns yellow on radiation curing can be advantageously used to give a substrate, such as a print, an antique look. An antique look is commercially desirable e.g. for giving a piece of furniture an antique look or for making a photograph or a print look aged.
(53) In one preferred embodiment, the varnish includes a yellow color pigment having an average particle size of less than 200 nm as determined by laser diffraction. Such small average particle size not only allows for printing with print heads having nozzle diameters of 30 μm or less, but also for keeping the varnish transparent so that colors below the varnish can still be clearly seen. If a yellow color pigment is used in the varnish, a polymeric dispersant similar to those disclosed for the radiation curable inkjet inks here below is preferably used. Suitable yellow pigments include those disclosed below for the radiation curable inkjet inks.
(54) In another preferred embodiment, the varnish includes a photoyellowing photoinitiator, preferably a thioxanthone photoinitiator. Such a photoinitiator generally has a strong photoyellowing effect but also allows for fast curing within 500 milliseconds by an UV radiation device (100).
(55) In yet another preferred embodiment, a combination of both a photoyellowing photoinitiator and a yellow color pigment having an average particle size of less than 200 nm as determined by laser diffraction may be sued.
(56) The static surface tension of the UV inkjet varnish is preferably from 20 to 40 mN/m, more preferably from 22 to 35 mN/m. It is preferably not more than 40 mN/m from the viewpoint of the wettability. The static surface tension is preferably measured with a KRÜSS tensiometer K9 from KRÜSS GmbH, Germany at 25° C. after 60 seconds.
(57) The UV inkjet varnish preferably also contains at least one surfactant so that the dynamic surface tension is no more than 30 mN/m measured by maximum bubble pressure tensiometry at a surface age of 50 ms and at 25° C. The dynamic surface tension is measured using a Bubble Pressure Tensiometer BP2 available from KRÜSS. The UV inkjet varnish is placed in a thermostatic vessel of the tensiometer at a temperature of 25° C. A silanized, glass capillary with a capillary radius 0.22 mm was immersed to a depth of 10 mm in the varnish. The dynamic surface tension is measured as a function of surface age using e.g. Labdesk software and using air as the gas for creating the bubbles.
(58) In a preferred embodiment, the dynamic surface tension of the ink is less than or equal to the dynamic surface tension of the varnish.
(59) For having a good ejecting ability and fast inkjet printing, the viscosity of the varnish at the temperature of 45° C. is preferably smaller than 30 mPa.Math.s, more preferably smaller than 15 mPa.Math.s, and most preferably between 1 and 10 mPa.Math.s all at a shear rate of 30 s.sup.−1. A preferred jetting temperature is between 10 and 70° C., more preferably between 25 and 50° C., and most preferably between 35 and 45° C.
(60) The varnish may include the same ingredients as those disclosed for the radiation curable inkjet inks here below. Although, with the exception of a yellowish varnish, the varnish preferably does not include a colorant.
(61) UV Inkjet Inks
(62) The UV inkjet inks used in a preferred embodiment of the method of the present invention are preferably radiation curable inkjet inks, more preferably free radical curable inkjet inks.
(63) The static surface tension of the UV inkjet ink is preferably from 20 to 40 mN/m, more preferably from 22 to 35 mN/m. It is preferably 20 mN/m or more from the viewpoint of printability by a second radiation curable inkjet ink, and it is preferably not more than 30 mN/m from the viewpoint of the wettability.
(64) The inkjet ink preferably also contains at least one surfactant so that the dynamic surface tension is no more than 30 mN/m measured by maximum bubble pressure tensiometry at a surface age of 50 ms and at 25° C.
(65) For having a good ejecting ability and fast inkjet printing, the viscosity of the inkjet ink at the temperature of 45° C. is preferably smaller than 30 mPa.Math.s, more preferably smaller than 15 mPa.Math.s, and most preferably between 1 and 10 mPa.Math.s all at a shear rate of 30 s.sup.−1. A preferred jetting temperature is between 10 and 70° C., more preferably between 25 and 50° C., and most preferably between 35 and 45° C.
(66) A free radical UV curable inkjet ink may include any desired colorant, which can be a dye but is preferably a color pigment. They may include pigments having a color selected from the group consisting of black, white, cyan, magenta, yellow, red, orange, violet, blue, green, brown, and the like. A color pigment may be chosen from those disclosed by HERBST, Willy, et al. Industrial Organic Pigments, Production, Properties, Applications. 3rd edition. Wiley—VCH, 2004. ISBN 3527305769.
(67) Suitable pigments are disclosed in paragraphs [0128] to [0138] of WO 2008/074548 (AGFA GRAPHICS). The pigments are preferably present in the range of 0.01 to 15%, more preferably in the range of 0.05 to 10% by weight and most preferably in the range of 0.1 to 8% by weight, each based on the total weight of the UV inkjet ink.
(68) Belt Step Conveyor System
(69) A preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer may comprise a belt conveyor system, wrapped around a porous printing table, it may more preferably comprises a belt step conveyor system as belt conveyor system wherein the conveying belt carries the receiver by moving from a start location to an end location in successive distance movements also called discrete step increments.
(70) UV Bulb Lamps
(71) Many light sources exist in UV radiation, including UV bulb lamps such as high pressure mercury lamp, low pressure mercury lamp or e-beam.
(72) For facilitating curing, a preferred embodiment of the inkjet UV printer preferably includes one or more oxygen depletion units at the UV radiation device (100). A preferred oxygen depletion unit places a blanket of nitrogen or other relatively inert gas (e.g. CO.sub.2) with adjustable position and adjustable inert gas concentration, in order to reduce the oxygen concentration in the curing environment. Residual oxygen levels are usually maintained as low as 200 ppm, but are generally in the range of 200 ppm to 1200 ppm.
(73) The UV bulb lamps used in the UV irradiation device of a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer may be primarily gas discharge lamps for use where by the evaporation of metals, a plasma is generated.
(74) Inkjet Print Head
(75) The UV inkjet inks may be jetted by one or more inkjet printing heads ejecting small droplets of ink in a controlled manner through nozzles onto a receiver which is moving relative to the printing head(s). The nozzles in an inkjet printing head are substantially oriented in one or more rows, also called nozzle rows.
(76) A preferred inkjet print head for a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer is a piezoelectric inkjet print head. Piezoelectric inkjet printing is based on the movement of a piezoelectric ceramic transducer when a voltage is applied thereto. The application of a voltage changes the shape of the piezoelectric ceramic transducer in the print head creating a void, which is then filled with ink. When the voltage is again removed or changed in towards the reversed direction, the ceramic expands to its original or even past its original shape, ejecting a drop of ink from the print head. However the UV inkjet printing method according to the present invention is not restricted to piezoelectric inkjet printing. Other inkjet print heads can be used and include various types, such as a continuous type, page-wide inkjet arrays, valve-jet and thermal, electrostatic and acoustic drop on demand type. An example of piezoelectric inkjet print head is disclosed in EP 1911589 (TOSHIBA TEC KK).
(77) Another preferred inkjet print head for a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer is a valve-jet printhead that comprises a plurality of inline jets that are controlled by valves to jet on a receiver. The valves open and shut independently to produce streams of intermittent ink droplets.
(78) Conveyor Belt
(79) A conveyor belt, also called conveying belt, is made of at least one material such as a metal belt. Preferably the conveyor belt includes magnetically attractable material such as a metal conveyor belt and/or the conveyor belt has one layer of a woven fabric web. More preferably the conveyor belt has two or more layers of materials wherein an under layer provides linear strength and shape, also called the carcass and an upper layer called the cover or the support side. The carcass is preferably a woven fabric web and more preferably a woven fabric web of polyester, nylon or cotton. The material of the cover is preferably various rubber and more preferably plastic compounds and most preferably thermoplastic. But also other exotic materials for the cover can be used such as silicone or gum rubber when traction is essential. An example of a multi-layered conveyor belt for a general belt conveyor system wherein the cover having a gel coating is disclosed in US 20090098385 A1 (FORBO SIEBLING GMBH). Preferably the conveyor belt is a glass fabric or the carcass is glass fabric and more preferably the glass fabric has a coated layer on top with a thermoplastic polymer and most preferably the glass fabric has a coated layer on top with polytetrafluoroethylene also called PTFE.
(80) The conveyor belt may also have a sticky cover which holds the receiver on the conveyor belt while it is carried from start location to end location. Said conveyor belt is also called a sticky conveyor belt. The advantageous effect of using a sticky conveyor belt allows an exact positioning of the receiver on the sticky conveyor belt. Another advantageous effect is that the receiver shall not be stretched and/or deformed while the receiver is carried from start location to end location. The adhesive on the cover is preferably activated by an infrared drier to make the conveyor belt sticky. The adhesive on the cover is more preferably a removable pressure sensitive adhesive.
(81) Preferably a conveyor belt is and endless conveyor belt. Examples and figures for manufacturing an endless multi-layered conveyor belt for a general belt conveyor system are disclosed in EP 1669635 B (FORBO SIEBLING GMBH).
Other Preferred Embodiments
(82) A similar apparatus and method may be applied when instead of an UV inkjet varnish an UV inkjet primer is applied on the receiver but the order of applying the liquid layers on the receiver is the opposite than in a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer. In a first passing of the receiver under the inkjet print head module (300) the receiver is primed and in a second passing of the receiver under the inkjet print head module (300) the color or gray image is jetted on the primed receiver. The homogeneity of the UV inkjet primer layer may become important when e.g. a uniform surface tension on the primed receiver is needed to jet the color or gray image on it so a preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer is also useful to prime a receiver prior the ink jetting-and-curing passing.
(83) In an preferred embodiment of the UV inkjet printer, the UV inkjet printer comprises: a cured primer droplet of an UV inkjet ink on the receiver, wherein the varnish droplet is jetted from a first inkjet print head in the inkjet print head module; and the primer droplet is cured in the second irradiation zone; and a cured ink droplet of an UV inkjet ink partially on top of the cured primer droplet, wherein the ink droplet is jetted from a second inkjet print head in the inkjet print head module (300); and the ink droplet is cured in the first irradiation zone.
(84) The jetting and curing of a primer on the receiver while passing the receiver under the inkjet print head module (300) is called the primer jetting-and-curing passing.
(85) The UV inkjet printer of a preferred embodiment may perform thus the following UV inkjet printing method: An UV inkjet printing method in an UV inkjet printer comprising the following steps:
(86) a) performing a second printing configuration by:
(87) a1) if a first shutter means of an UV radiation device (100) is open, close the first shutter means of the UV radiation device (100); and a2) if a second shutter means of the UV radiation device (100) is closed, open the second shutter means of the UV radiation device (100); and a3) create a second irradiation zone by the closed first shutter means and the open second shutter means on an receiver of the UV inkjet printer; an a4) jetting an UV inkjet primer on the receiver of the UV inkjet printer; and a5) irradiating the jetted UV inkjet primer in the second irradiation zone; and
b) performing a first printing configuration by: b1) opening the first shutter means of the UV radiation device (100); and b2) create a first irradiation zone by the open first shutter means and open second shutter means on an receiver of the UV inkjet printer; and b3) jetting an UV inkjet ink to the receiver of the UV inkjet printer on top of the cured UV inkjet primer; and b4) irradiating the jetted UV inkjet ink in the first irradiation zone.
(88) Another preferred embodiment in the present invention is a shutter system (200) for an UV radiation device (100) comprising an UV bulb lamp n the shutter system (200) is characterized to switch from a first irradiation zone to a second irradiation zone and wherein the shutter system (200) comprises a controlling means wherein the controlling means of the shutter system (200) controls the dimension of the first and second irradiation zone in a direction parallel to the length of the UV bulb lamp. The controlling of the dimensions of both irradiation zones is an advantage to control the amount of irradiation and the place of the irradiation zones.
(89) The UV radiation device (100) with the shutter system (200) of the present invention is preferably comprised in an UV inkjet printer, more preferably in a wide-format UV inkjet printer. The advantage of such shutter system (200) in an UV inkjet printer is the possibility to enlarge the time-to-cure or to shorten the time-to-cure by changing the dimensions. The UV inkjet printer in this preferred embodiment may comprise in its inkjet print head module (300), an inkjet print head that jets a varnish or a primer, next to an inkjet print head that jets a color UV inkjet ink. If the UV inkjet printer is a wide-format UV inkjet printer, the length of the UV bulb lamp is parallel to the slow-scan direction of the wide-format UV inkjet printer wherein also the nozzle-row column of a comprised inkjet print head in its inkjet print head module (300) is parallel to the slow-scan direction.
(90) In a preferred embodiment of this shutter system (200), the shutter system (200) may comprise, a second shutter means to create the second irradiation zone when the second shutter is open; and a first shutter means to create together with the open second shutter means the first irradiation zone when the first shutter is open.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(91) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 1 wide-format UV inkJet printer 5 conveyor belt 100 UV radiation device (100) 101 UV bulb lamp 200 shutter system (200) 201 shutter means 202 shutter means 203 Shutter means 204 Pivotal means 205 Engaging means 300 InkJet print head module (300) 301 UV inkjet print head to jet an UV inkjet ink 302 UV inkjet print head to jet an UV inkjet varnish 311 Dimension along slow-scan direction of the UV inkjet ink print zone 312 Dimension along slow-scan direction of the UV inkjet varnish print zone 350 Fast-scan direction (forth and back) 370 Slow-scan direction 400 Dimension along slow-scan direction of the irradiation zone