SCRATCH-OFF COATINGS COMPATIBLE WITH DIGITAL IMAGING
20200282298 ยท 2020-09-10
Assignee
Inventors
- Mark Chiles Tevis (Novato, CA, US)
- Fred W. Finnerty (Dawsonville, GA, US)
- Kenneth E. Irwin (Dawsonville, GA, US)
Cpc classification
B41M5/502
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A63F3/0665
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B41M3/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B42D15/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
A63F3/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B41M5/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A security-enhanced document with a removable SOC is provided that is compatible with process color digital imaging, method and system for producing the document enhances production, and expands the aesthetics of the documents.
Claims
1. A security-enhanced Scratch-Off Coating (SOC) secured document with a plurality of SOC ink film coatings, the security-enhanced document comprising: a substrate, wherein lower opacity and contrast layers are sequentially printed on the substrate; a first process color hydrophilic primer; a digitally imaged process color variable indicia printed on the first process color hydrophilic primer; a clear, colorless, and transparent seal coat covering the digitally imaged process color variable indicia and primer portions to be subsequently covered by a release coat; a release coat covering the primer portions, and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; an upper scratch-off opacity layer covering at least a portion of the release coat and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; a white scratch-off coating covering at least a portion of the upper scratch-off opacity layer, and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; a second process color hydrophilic primer covering at least a portion of the white scratch-off coating, and the digitally imaged variable indicia; and a digitally imaged process color overprint printed on the second process color hydrophilic primer.
2. The document of claim 1 where the seal coat is water based and comprises one of resin and Ethylene-Vinyl Chloride (EVCL).
3. (canceled)
4. (canceled)
5. The document of claim 1 where the seal coat is a free radical based Ultraviolet (UV) direct energy curable ink.
6. The document of claim 5 where the direct energy curable seal coat is primarily comprised of oligomers.
7. The document of claim 6 where the oligomer direct energy curable seal is primarily comprised of acrylic acrylates combined with acrylate monomers.
8. The document of claim 5 where the direct energy curable seal coat is based on cationic chemistry with cycloaliphatic diepoxides.
9. (canceled)
10. The document of claim 1 where the seal coat flexographically deposited via an application anilox roller with volumes of 24 BCM (Billion Cubic Microns) or greater.
11. (canceled)
12. (canceled)
13. The document of claim 1 where the overprint primer is a water soluble polyvinylpyrrolidone resin binder system.
14. The document of claim 13 where the water soluble overprint primer includes inorganic fillers.
15. The document of claim 1 where the first process color hydrophilic primer is a separate ink film layer apart from the contrast layers.
16. The document of claim 1 where the second process color hydrophilic primer is a separate ink film layer apart from the white scratch-off coating.
17. The document of claim 1 further comprising: a clear, colorless, and transparent overprint over the digitally imaged process color overprint printed on the second process color hydrophilic primer.
18. (canceled)
19. A method of producing a security-enhanced Scratch-Off Coating (SOC) secured document with a plurality of SOC ink film coatings, the method comprising: sequentially printing on a substrate lower opacity and contrast layers; printing a first process color hydrophilic primer; digitally imaging process color variable indicia on the first process color hydrophilic primer; printing a clear, colorless, and transparent seal coat over the digitally imaged process color variable indicia and primer portions to be subsequently covered by a release coat; printing a release coat over the primer portions and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; printing an upper scratch-off opacity layer over at least a portion of the release coat, and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; printing a white scratch-off coating over at least a portion of the upper scratch-off opacity layer, and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; printing a second process color hydrophilic primer over at least a portion of the white scratch-off coating, and the digitally imaged process color variable indicia; and printing a digitally imaged process color overprint over the second process color hydrophilic primer.
20. (canceled)
21. The method of claim 19 where the seal coat is a free radical based Ultraviolet direct energy curable ink.
22. The method of claim 19 where the seal coat viscosity is greater than or equal to 25 seconds viscosity as measured with a #2 Zahn cup.
23. The method of claim 19 where the seal coat flexographically deposited via an application anilox roller with volumes of 24 BCM or greater.
24. The method of claim 19 where one of the seal coat and the release coat is flood coated over the entire front of the document.
25. (canceled)
26. The method of claim 19 where the first process color hydrophilic primer is a separate ink film layer apart from the contrast layers.
27. The method of claim 19 where the second process color hydrophilic primer is a separate ink film layer apart from the white scratch-off coating.
28. The method of claim 19 further comprising: printing a clear, colorless, and transparent overprint over the digitally imaged process color overprint printed on the second process color hydrophilic primer.
29. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0029] Certain terminology is used herein for convenience only and is not to be taken as a limitation on the present invention. The words a and an, as used in the claims and in the corresponding portions of the specification, mean at least one.
[0030] The terms scratch-off game piece or other scratch-off document, hereinafter are referred to herein generally as an instant ticket or simply ticket. Additionally, the terms full-color, four-color, and process color are also used interchangeably throughout the specification as terms of convenience for producing a variety of colors by discrete combinations of applications of pigmented primary inks or dyes CMYK (i.e., Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and blacK), or in some cases six colors (e.g., Hexachrome printing process uses CMYK inks plus Orange and Green inks), or alternatively eight colorse.g., CMYK plus lighter shades of cyan (LC), magenta (LM), yellow (LY), and black (YK), using a digital printing process, rather than using a fixed plate printing process.
[0031] The term web as used herein refers to a continuous substrate threaded through an inline printing press that receives printing inks and/or dyes, thereby forming printed documents. The term security stack as used herein means multiple ink film layers printed on top of at least a portion of the lower layer(s) protecting the variable indicia from disclosure until the SOC has been removed. The printing layers mentioned herein may be applied in any form and in any image, and for many of the layers, not edge to edge of the ticket or other document. Thus, layers as used herein is equivalent to areas or portions of printed images or other indicia. In the context of this invention, the terms front and top are used interchangeably, referring to the side of a ticket or document with indicia secured by a SOC. Likewise, the terms back and bottom are also used interchangeably, referring to the opposite side of a ticket or document. When discussing the various ink film layers printed on top of each other, the terms upper, lower, top, and bottom disclose an ink film's proximity relative to the stack of ink films printed on top of each other. Also, the term ink as used herein refers to a printing ink with solid particles suspended in the solution that ultimately adhere to the printed document. In contrast, the term dye as used in this specification, refers to printing solutions with very little or no physical particles where the printed surface is effectively stained by the dye thereby creating a printed image. Finally, the term physical image as used herein refers to the image printed on the web by a digital imager (e.g., ink jet, bubble jet).
[0032] Before describing the present invention, it may be useful to first provide a brief description of the current state of the art of instant ticket production, to help understand the distinctions between the prior art and the present invention. This is to ensure that a common lexicon is established with respect to existing systems prior to disclosing the present invention. This description of the current state of the art of instant ticket production is provided in the discussion of
[0033]
[0034] The entire ink film stack is deposited on a paper or other substrate 101. The lower security-ink film layers include a Lower Blocking Black (LBB) layer 102 providing opacity and diffusion barriers, as well as a higher contrast (e.g., white or gray against a black or other dark color) background primer layer(s) 103, such that a human consumer can read the monochromatic variable indicia 104. The upper security ink film layers also isolate the variable indicia 104, first with a release coating 105 that helps seal the variable indicia to the substrate 101 and causes any subsequent ink films printed on top of the variable indicia 104 to scratch-off. The SOC comprises one or more layers, and typically several, so that the variable indicia 104 are not visible until the ticket is played by the SOC being legitimately scratched off. The SOC layer(s) of exemplary ticket 100 comprise(s) at least one upper opacity layer 106 applied to help protect against candling and fluorescence attacks. On top of the opacity layer(s), at least one white ink film 107 is typically applied that provides a higher contrast background for overprint inks. Finally, decorative overprint ink areas or layers 108 and 109 are applied via fixed plate printing (e.g., flexographic, gravure, offset) for both an attractive appearance of the SOC area, as well as sometimes providing additional security.
[0035] In addition to the security ink stack and variable indicia of areas or layers 102 through 109 of ticket 100, the ticket also has printed decorative display area layers 110 through 113 designed to make the ticket 100 more attractive and provide instructions for game play. Typically, this display area printing is printed via an offset or flexographic (i.e., fixed printing plate) process where the four primary printing colors Cyan 110, Magenta 111, Yellow 112, and blacK 113 (i.e., CMYK) are blended in varying intensity to mimic all colors perceived by a human. However, other fixed plate printing processes and techniques (e.g., gravure) may be used if desired.
[0036] Thus, many security ink film layers (seven in the example of
[0037] Among other shortcomings, the prior art security ink stack of document 100 of
[0038] Reference will now be made in detail to examples of the invention, one or more embodiments of which are illustrated in the drawings. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention, and not meant as a limitation of the invention. For example, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment, may be used with another embodiment to yield still a further embodiment. It is intended that the present invention encompasses these and other modifications and variations as come within the scope and spirit of the invention.
[0039] Fortunately, these shortcomings and others can be overcome with the invention 200 of
[0040] As illustrated in
[0041] Typically, on top of the flood coated contrast layer 203, a primer 204 is applied, also typically flood coated. This primer 204 is typically hydrophilic (also, referred to herein as a process color hydrophilic primer), thereby allowing it to readily absorb water based ink jet droplets as they are applied by digital imagers, thereby providing a foundation for the desired stable and uniform variable indicia 211 and display 210 images. The primer 204 provides a foundation that imparts water and optionally alcohol fastness to the applied ink jet image ink or dye droplets, as well as enhances the sharpness and vibrancy of the printed variable indicia 211 and display 210 images. With pigmented ink jet process color printed indicia 211 and display 210 applications, the primer 204 can be deposited as a relatively thin single ink film application (e.g., 12 BCMBillion Cubic Microns) or optionally combined with the contrast layer 203. Conversely, when the process color ink jet droplets are dye based (i.e., colored solution that prints an image by staining the applied surface), the primer layer 204 is especially important since the 100% or near 100% solution must be primarily absorbed into the surface it is applied to ensure fastness as well as ease of convection or infrared drying at speed (e.g., 350 FPMFeet Per Minute) on the printing press. In some applications of dye based saturated process color printing, it may be desirable to apply two separate applications of the optional primer layer 204 to ensure that a sufficient amount of primer ink film is present to absorb the ink jet dyee.g., a first application of 12 BCM and a second application of 21 BCM.
[0042] However, by its very nature, the primer 204 tends to interact with any ink films applied on top of it. This interaction typically has the disadvantage of attracting or wicking the liquid portions of any subsequent applied ink film typically leaving only the solid portions of the ink on the surface above the primer 204. Thus, any subsequently applied ink film no longer is comprised of its intended chemistry with its liquid portions tending to be absorbed by the primer 204 and its solid portions remaining on the surface of the primer 204, resulting in incomplete curing, low graphic adhesion, and/or other problems. Regrettably, this subsequent ink primer 204 absorption problem is applicable to both water based convection or infrared and direct energy (e.g., Ultraviolet or UV, electron beam) cured inks.
[0043] It is therefore highly desirable to provide a barrier or sealer ink film layer 205 directly on top of any primer 204 after the indicia 211 are printed. This sealer ink film layer 205 saturates the underlying primer 204 layer, thereby rendering the primer 204 chemically inactive to subsequent ink film layers applied on top of the sealer ink film layer 205. As shown in
[0044] Thus, the seal ink film layer 205 chemistry is primarily intended to seal the porous surface of the primer layer 204 so that excessive absorption of the subsequent inks or coatingse.g., release coat 206, Upper Blocking Black (UBB) 207, white SOC 208does not occur. In particular, if the subsequent release coat 206 is significantly absorbed by the primer, there will remain insufficient release coat 206 material in the resulting ink film to provide a good clean scratch-off release of subsequent upper or higher ink films in the security stack.
[0045] The seal ink film layer 205 chemistry can be either water based (i.e., convection or infrared drying) or direct energy curable (e.g., UV, electron beam) so long as the deposited seal ink film layer 205 exhibits similar functional characteristics. For water based seal ink film layer 205 embodiments, there are many resin systems (i.e., polymeric solids) available that would provide satisfactory performance with most primer layer 204 applications. Examples of suitable resin systems would be: acrylics, acrylic copolymers, rosin esters, EVCL (Ethylene-Vinyl Chloride), etc. However, in preferred embodiments, a free radical based energy curable seal ink film layer 205 comprised of oligomers such as epoxy acrylates, urethane acrylates, polyester acrylates, and acrylic acrylates, combined with acrylate monomers will typically seal the porous surface of the primer layer 204 with the best efficiency in terms of ink volume required. This efficiency of ink volume is achieved because typically 100% of the solids are deposited in energy curable ink film layers as opposed to water based ink film layers were a substantial portion of the ink volume is removed due to evaporation. In circumstances where free radical based energy curable seal ink 205 formulations are undesirable, direct energy (such as UV or electron beam) curable cationic chemistry such as formulations based upon cycloaliphatic diepoxides could provide an alternative preferred embodiment, though potentially with the disadvantage of a higher cost.
[0046] Regardless of the underlining curing chemistry, generally the seal ink film layer 205 viscosity should be high relative to typical printing viscosity ranges, (e.g., greater than or equal to 25 seconds viscosity with a #2 Zahn cup) thereby minimizing dive-in or absorption of ink from adjacent layers. Additionally, it may be desirable to build in thixotropy by utilizing inorganic or organic rheology modifiers, in this case thixotropes to the seal ink film layer 205 provide a shear thinning formulation that will increase in viscosity with removal of the shear of the printing processi.e., once the seal ink film layer 205 is applied to the primer layer 204 it stops flowing and thus intermingling of ink between the layers is minimized. Ideally, a thick seal ink film layer 205 should be flexographically deposited via an application anilox roller with volumes of 24 BCM or greater.
[0047] The seal coat 205 could be applied either flood coated or confined just to the variable indicia area 211(as illustrated in
[0048] However, with this invention of SOC secured documents compatible with process color digital imaging, the SOC 208 is chemically modified to also include a primer that is typically hydrophilic, thereby allowing it to readily absorb water based ink jet droplets as they are applied by digital imagers, creating the desired stable and uniform overprint image 209. The combination SOC and primer 208 provide a foundation that imparts water and optionally alcohol fastness to the applied ink jet image droplets, as well as enhance the sharpness and vibrancy on the ink jet image.
[0049] The combined SOC and primer 208 chemistry is preferably a water based formulation. The combined SOC and primer would also contain inorganic fillers for water absorption, such as silica. However, these fillers have to be carefully selected in order to ensure no interference with curing.
[0050] Thus, the embodiment of the enhanced security protected document 200 has the advantage of enabling a predominately unaltered prior art scratch-off ink stack to be compatible with process color digital imaging. However, this embodiment has the disadvantage of chemically altering the white SOC ink film 208 and thereby possibly compromising security features that have been meticulously developed over decades. Additionally, in some process color overprint applications (e.g., dye based ink jet printing), the white SOC ink film 208 may provide insufficient primer to secure the digital overprint in some environments (e.g., water, alcohol).
[0051]
[0052] The remainder of preferred embodiment of the document 300 is identical to the embodiment of the document 200 of
[0053] Thus, the preferred embodiment of the document 300 has the advantage of enabling a substantially unaltered prior art scratch-off ink stack to be compatible with process color digital imaging. However, this embodiment has the disadvantage of at least one additional ink film layer.
[0054] Embodiment 400 of
[0055] For a water based clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414, a styrenated acrylic resin system utilizing low Tg (glass transition temperature) emulsions combined with low Tg solution resins is one general possibility. However, it is essential that the final clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414 formulation ensures that no blocking or sticking together of the ink's components occurs. To help with this anti-blocking requirement as well as to enhance the ability of a coin to readily scratch the surface, a micronized polypropylene wax additive (generally known for non-skid attributes) is preferred. The water based clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414 should preferably be a water based resin system such as: styrenated acrylic, water based urethanes, ethylene vinyl chlorides, styrenated maleic anhydrides, etc.
[0056] For a direct energy curable (UV) clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414 embodiment, urethane acrylates with a low Tg coupled with acrylates monomers would be preferred. One such monomer would be ethoxylated TMPTA (Trimethylolpropane triacrylate). As before, a good additive for anti-blocking and coin grab (coins are typically used to scratch off the SOC) would be micronized polypropylene wax. In general, the direct energy curable clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414 should avoid highly cross linked systems in order to promote optimized scratch characteristics.
[0057] The remainder of the document 400 with the clear, colorless, and transparent overprint 414 is identical to embodiment 300 of
[0058]
[0059]
[0060] Regardless of the initial configuration of digital imager instant ticket printing line 500, the lower security coated web stock is then applied to first digital imager 505 where the ticket or document's secure variable indicia portion 211 (
[0061]
[0062] Once the display and variable indicia are imaged 606, a clear seal coat is printed 607 at least on top of the variable indicia and optionally flood coating the entire ticket or document's surface. On top of the clear seal coat a clear release coat is printed 608 with an UBB 609 and white SOC 610 (white coat) subsequently printed on top of the release coat ink film. In some embodiments, the SOC will also contain the primer necessary to provide a foundation for the digitally imaged overprint; however, in other embodiments (e.g., dye based imaging) at least one additional layer of primer 611 will be optionally printed. Next, the OverPrint (OP) is digitally imaged 612 on top of the SOC and/or primer. Finally, an optional clear, glossy, decretive and protection flood coat may also be printed 613 delivering the finished product for packaging 614.
[0063] Of course, there are other variations of the disclosed embodiments that are apparent to anyone skilled in the art in view of this disclosure.
[0064] It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes could be made to the embodiments described above without departing from the broad inventive concept thereof. It is understood, therefore, that this invention is not limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but it is intended to cover modifications within the spirit and scope of the present invention.