Endless flexible belt for a printing system
10569533 ยท 2020-02-25
Assignee
Inventors
- Benzion Landa (Nes Ziona, IL)
- Sagi Abramovich (Ra'anana, IL)
- Aharon Shmaiser (Rishon LeZion, IL)
- Rami KELLER (Tel Aviv, IL)
- Itshak Ashkanazi (Rehovot, IL)
Cpc classification
B41J2/0057
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A flexible belt is disclosed for use in a printing system. The belt comprises an endless strip which, in use, travels along a continuous path. Formations are provided along the sides of the strip which are capable of engaging with lateral tracks to place the belt under lateral tension, the lateral tracks further serving to constrain the belt to follow the continuous path.
Claims
1. A belt system comprising: a. a flexible belt; and b. a support frame including two lateral guiding tracks for guiding the belt, the guiding tracks extending one on each side of the belt, wherein the flexible belt comprises an endless strip which, in use, travels along a continuous path defined by the lateral tracks, wherein formations are provided along the sides of the endless strip which both slidably engage respective lateral guiding tracks and are retained therein so as to place the belt under lateral tension, the lateral tracks further serving to constrain the belt to follow the continuous path, wherein the tracks and the formations are shaped so that, on each side of the endless strip the track, the formations are both (i) in sliding contact with a first static surface of the track at a location above the endless strip; and (ii) in sliding contact with a second static surface of the track at a location below the endless strip, and wherein (A) at least one side of the strip from which the belt is made is provided with a plurality of formations that are spaced from one another along the length of the strip, and (B) the spaced formations are teeth of one half of a zip fastener that is secured to the belt along the side of the strip.
2. The belt system of claim 1 wherein: (i) the belt passes over drive and guide rollers and is guided through at least a portion of an upper run of the belt by guide channels that receive formations provided on both lateral edges of the belt; (ii) the underside of the belt includes a material with high frictional properties such that a frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt locally taut.
3. The belt system of claim 2 wherein: (i) first and second of the drive rollers are disposed on opposite sides of the upper run of the belt; (ii) the frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt substantially parallel to a line-segment connecting centers of the first and second drive rollers.
4. A belt system comprising: a. a flexible belt; and b. a support frame including two lateral guiding tracks for guiding the belt, the guiding tracks extending one on each side of the belt, wherein the flexible belt comprises an endless strip which, in use, travels along a continuous path defined by the lateral tracks, wherein formations are provided along the sides of the endless strip which both slidably engage respective lateral guiding tracks and are retained therein so as to place the belt under lateral tension, the lateral tracks further serving to constrain the belt to follow the continuous path, wherein on each side of the belt, the lateral formations are both in (i) rolling contact with at least one bearing element attached to a respective one of the lateral guiding tracks and (ii) in sliding contact with a static surface of the respective one of the lateral guiding tracks.
5. The belt system of claim 4 wherein: (i) the belt passes over drive and guide rollers and is guided through at least a portion of an upper run of the belt by guide channels that receive formations provided on both lateral edges of the belt; (ii) the underside of the belt includes a material with high frictional properties such that a frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt locally taut.
6. The belt system of claim 5 wherein: (i) first and second of the drive rollers are disposed on opposite sides of the upper run of the belt; (ii) the frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt substantially parallel to a line-segment connecting centers of the first and second drive rollers.
7. The belt system of claim 4 wherein (A) at least one side of the strip from which the belt is made is provided with a plurality of formations that are spaced from one another along the length of the strip, and (B) the spaced formations are teeth of one half of a zip fastener that is secured to the belt along the side of the strip.
8. A belt system comprising: a. a flexible belt; and b. a support frame including two lateral guiding tracks for guiding the belt, the guiding tracks extending one on each side of the belt, wherein the flexible belt comprises an endless strip which, in us, travels along a continuous path defined by the lateral tracks, wherein formations are provided along the sides of the endless strip which both slidably engage respective lateral guiding tracks and are retained therein so as to place the belt under lateral tension, the lateral tracks further serving to constrain the belt to follow the continuous path, wherein on each side of the belt, the lateral formations are in (i) rolling contact with at least one bearing element attached to a respective one of the lateral guiding tracks; (ii) in slipping contact with a first static inner-facing surface of the respective one of the lateral guiding tracks disposed above a local plane of the endless strip; and (iii) in slipping contact with a second static inner-facing surface of the respective one of the lateral guiding tracks disposed below a local plane of the endless strip.
9. The belt system of claim 8 wherein: (i) the belt passes over drive and guide rollers and is guided through at least a portion of an upper run of the belt by guide channels that receive formations provided on both lateral edges of the belt; (ii) the underside of the belt includes a material with high frictional properties such that a frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt locally taut.
10. The belt system of claim 9 wherein: (i) first and second of the drive rollers are disposed on opposite sides of the upper run of the belt; (ii) the frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt substantially parallel to a line-segment connecting centers of the first and second drive rollers.
11. The belt system of claim 8 wherein (A) at least one side of the strip from which the belt is made is provided with a plurality of formations that are spaced from one another along the length of the strip, and (B) the spaced formations are teeth of one half of a zip fastener that is secured to the belt along the side of the strip.
12. A belt system comprising: a. a flexible belt; and b. a support frame including two lateral guiding tracks for guiding the belt, the guiding tracks extending one on each side of the belt, wherein the flexible belt comprises an endless strip which, in use, travels along a continuous path defined by the lateral tracks, wherein formations are provided along the sides of the endless strip which both slidably engage respective lateral guiding tracks and are retained therein so as to place the belt under lateral tension, the lateral tracks further serving to constrain the belt to follow the continuous path, wherein on each side of the endless strip, the lateral formations are in contact with vertically-oriented and disk-shaped bearing elements to retain the lateral formations on each side within their respective guiding track, each disk-shaped bearing element being disposed above or below a local plane of the endless strip and perpendicular thereto.
13. The belt system of claim 12 wherein: (i) the belt passes over drive and guide rollers and is guided through at least a portion of an upper run of the belt by guide channels that receive formations provided on both lateral edges of the belt; (ii) the underside of the belt includes a material with high frictional properties such that a frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt locally taut.
14. The belt system of claim 13 wherein: (i) first and second of the drive rollers are disposed on opposite sides of the upper run of the belt; (ii) the frictional force between the underside of the belt and each respective guide roller is effective to maintain the belt substantially parallel to a line-segment connecting centers of the first and second drive rollers.
15. The belt system of claim 12 wherein (A) at least one side of the strip from which the belt is made is provided with a plurality of formations that are spaced from one another along the length of the strip, and (B) the spaced formations are teeth of one half of a zip fastener that is secured to the belt along the side of the strip.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will now be described further, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which the dimensions of components and features shown in the figures are chosen for convenience and clarity of presentation and not necessarily to scale. In the drawings:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
(15) General Overview
(16) The printing system shown in
(17) The belt system 100, with which the present invention is primarily concerned, comprises an endless belt or blanket 102, that acts as an intermediate transfer member and is guided over two rollers 104, 106. An image made up of dots of an ink is applied by the image forming system 300 to the upper run of the belt 102 at an image forming station and the lower run selectively interacts at two impression stations with two impression cylinders 502 and 504 of the substrate transport system 500 to impress an image onto a substrate compressed between the belt 102 and the respective impression cylinder 502, 504. As will be explained below, the purpose of there being two impression stations is to permit duplex printing. In the case of a simplex printing system, only one impression cylinder would be needed.
(18) In operation, ink images, each of which is a mirror image of an image to be impressed on the substrate, are printed by the image forming system 300 onto the upper run of the belt 102. In this context, the term run is used to mean a length or segment of the belt between any two given rollers over which the belt is guided. While being transported by the belt 102, the ink is dried by irradiation and/or the application of heat and/or a gas stream, to render tacky the ink residue remaining after evaporation of most, if not all, of the liquid carrier. At the impression stations, the image is impressed onto individual sheets of a substrate which are conveyed by the substrate transport system 500 from an input stack 506 to an output stack 508 via the impression stations. As an alternative, as shown in
(19) Image Forming System
(20) The image forming system 300 comprises inkjet print bars 302 each slidably mounted on a frame 304 positioned at a fixed or adjustable height above the surface of the belt 102. Each print bar 302 may include a plurality of print heads with individually controllable print nozzles. The print heads are together as wide as the printing area on the belt 102 though the print bars 302 may be wider than the belt. The printing system can have any number of bars 302, each of which may contain an ink of a different color.
(21) As some print bars may not be required during a particular printing job, the bars can be moved between an operative position, in which they overlie the belt 102 and an inoperative position. One such mechanism for moving the bars 302 between their operative and inoperative positions is schematically shown in
(22) When moved to their inoperative position, the bars are covered for protection and to prevent the nozzles of the print bar from drying or clogging. In an embodiment of the invention, the print bars are parked above a liquid bath that assists in this task. Print bars that are in the inoperative position can be changed and accessed readily for maintenance, even while a printing job is in progress using other print bars.
(23) Within each print bar, the ink may be constantly recirculated, filtered, degased and maintained at a desired temperature and pressure. As the design of the print bars may be conventional, or at least similar to print bars used in other inkjet printing applications, their construction and operation will be clear to the person skilled in the art without the need for more detailed description.
(24) As the different print bars 302 are staggered from one another along the length of the belt, it is of course essential for their operation to be correctly synchronized with the movement of the belt 102.
(25) Belt and Belt Support System
(26) The belt 102 in the present invention is releasably or permanently seamed. In particular, as shown in
(27) Alternatively, the belt can be seamless, hence relaxing certain constraints from the printing system (e.g. synchronization of seam's position) while requiring alternative mounting methods. Whether seamless or not, the primary purpose of the belt in one embodiment of the invention is to receive an ink image from the image forming system and to transfer that image dried but undisturbed to the impression stations formed by the engagement of the belt in-between an impression cylinder and a corresponding pressure or nip roller. To allow easy transfer of the ink image at each impression station, the belt has a thin upper release layer that may be hydrophobic, being formed, for example, of a silicone containing composition.
(28) The strength of the belt is derived from a reinforcement layer. In one embodiment, the reinforcement layer is formed of a fabric. If the fabric is woven, the warp and weft threads of the fabric may have a different composition or physical structure so that the belt should have, for reasons to be discussed below, greater elasticity in its width ways direction (parallel to the axes of the rollers 104 and 106) than in its lengthways direction. The fabric can be fiber-reinforced so as to be substantially inextensible lengthwise. By substantially inextensible, it is meant that during any cycle of the belt, the distance between any two fixed points on the belt will not vary to an extent that will affect the image quality. The length of the belt may however vary with temperature or, over longer periods of time, with ageing or fatigue. In its width ways direction, the belt may have a small degree of elasticity to assist it in remaining taut and flat as it is pulled through the image forming station. A suitable fabric may, for example, have high performance fibers, such as glass, carbon, ceramic or aramid fibers, in its longitudinal direction woven, stitched or otherwise held with cotton fibers in the perpendicular direction.
(29) The belt may comprise additional layers between the reinforcement layer and the release layer, for example to provide conformability of the release layer to the surface of the substrate, e.g. a compressible layer and a conformational layer, to act as a thermal reservoir or a thermal insulator, to allow an electrostatic charge to be applied to the surface of the release layer, to improve the adhesion or compatibility between any layers forming the belt, and/or to prevent migration of molecules therebetween. An inner layer may further be provided to control the magnitude of frictional forces on the belt as it is moved over its support structure.
(30) A structure capable of supporting a belt according to the invention is shown in
(31) The roller 106 is journalled in bearings that are directly mounted on the outriggers 120. At the opposite end, however, the roller 104 is journalled in pillow blocks 124 that are guided for sliding movement relative to the outriggers 120. Electric motors 126, which may be stepper motors, act through suitable gearboxes to move the pillow blocks 124, so as to alter the distance between the axes of the rollers 104 and 106, while maintaining them parallel to one another.
(32) Thermally conductive support plates 130 are mounted on the cross beams 122 to form a continuous flat support surface both on the top side and the bottom side of the support frame. The junctions between the individual support plates 130 can be intentionally zigzagged in order not to create a line running parallel to the length of the belt 102. Electrical heating elements 132 can be inserted into transverse holes in the plates 130 to apply heat to the plates 130 and through the plates 130 to the overlying belt 102.
(33) Also mounted on the belt support frame are two pressure or nip rollers 140, 142. The pressure rollers are located on the underside of the support frame in gaps between the support plates 130 covering the underside of the frame. The pressure rollers 140, 142 are aligned respectively with the impression cylinders 502, 504 of the substrate transport system.
(34) Each of the pressure rollers 140, 142 is mounted on an eccentric that is rotatable by a respective actuator 150, 152. When it is raised by its actuator to an upper position within the support frame, each pressure roller is spaced from the opposing impression cylinder, allowing the belt to pass by the impression station without making contact with the impression cylinder itself nor with a substrate carried by the impression cylinder. On the other hand, when moved downwards by its actuator, each pressure roller 140, 142 projects downwards beyond the plane of the adjacent support plates 130 and deflects the belt 102, urging it against the opposing impression cylinder 502, 504.
(35) The rollers 104 and 106 are connected to respective electric motors 160, 162. The motor 160 serves to drive the belt clockwise as viewed in
(36) In one embodiment of the invention, the motors operate at the same speed, to maintain the same tension in the upper and lower runs of the belt.
(37) In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the motors 160 and 162 are operated in such a manner as to maintain a higher tension in the upper run of the belt where the ink image is formed and a lower tension in the lower run of the belt. The lower tension in the lower run may assist in absorbing sudden perturbations caused by the abrupt engagement and disengagement of the belt 102 with the impression cylinders 502 and 504.
(38) In an embodiment of the invention, a fan or air blower (not shown) is mounted on the frame to maintain a sub-atmospheric pressure in the volume 166 bounded by the belt and its support frame. The negative pressure serves to maintain the belt flat against the support plates 130 on both the upper and the lower side of the frame, in order to achieve good thermal contact. If the lower run of the belt is set to be relatively slack, the negative pressure would also assist in and maintaining the belt out of contact with the impression cylinders when the pressure rollers 140, 142 are not actuated at the impression stations.
(39) Each of the outriggers 120 also supports a continuous track 180, shown in more detail in
(40) Though the lateral tracks may be made of an anodized aluminum or stainless steel, it has been found that lateral tracks having higher hardness and/or lesser asperities (e.g. having a more polished surface interface with the lateral formations of the belt) are less prone to debris formation.
(41) As a further alternative, the tracks may, as will be described below by reference to
(42) To mount a seamed belt on its support frame, an apparatus as shown in
(43) The open ended tracks 912, 914 are bent in two planes. First, when viewed from above, as in
(44) To mount on the support frame a belt that is to be seamed, the apparatus of
(45) Sections of the tracks 180 are telescopically collapsible to provide suitable entry points for inserting and withdrawing a belt strip and to permit the length of the endless tracks 180 to vary as the distance between the rollers 104 and 106 is varied. Additionally or alternatively, there may be a gap in the track to allow for insertion of the belt.
(46) It should be mentioned that it is not essential to use a separate apparatus for the purpose of installing a belt as it would alternatively be possible to integrate the assembling apparatus into the tracks 180. Furthermore, for belt replacement, it is possible to secure the end of the old belt to the end of a new one and to use the old belt and one of the drive rollers 104, 106 to advance the new belt into position.
(47) Because the belt may contain an unusable area resulting from the seam, it is important to ensure that this area should always remain in the same position relative to the printed images in consecutive cycles of the belt. Also, during simplex printing, when one of the pressure rollers may be permanently engaged with its impression cylinder at an impression station, it is important to ensure that whenever the seam passes the impression cylinder, it always coincides with a time when an interruption in the surface of the impression cylinder that accommodates the substrate grippers. For such timing to be possible, it is important to set the length of the belt to be a whole number multiple of the circumference of the impression cylinders 502, 504. This relationship can be achieved by moving the rollers 104, 106 apart using the motors 126. The length of the belt can be determined from a shaft encoder measuring the rotation of one of rollers 104, 106 during one sensed complete revolution of the belt and a closed loop control system may be used to maintain the length of the belt at its desired value.
(48) If the seam position is noted to be moving towards an image area of the belt, an alternative method by which it can be adjusted is to vary the speed of the belt 102 at times when it is not engaged with the impression cylinders 502, 504 at the impression stations.
(49) The position of the belt can be monitored by means of one or more markings on the surface or edges of the belt that can be detected by one or more sensors mounted at different positions along the length of the belt. The output signals of these sensors are used to indicate the position of the intermediate transfer member to the printing bars of the image forming system 300. For example, such system of belt markings and corresponding detectors may be used to monitor the position of the seam with respect to the cylinders of the impression stations. Analysis of the output signals of the sensors is also used to control the speed of the motors 160 and 162 to match that of the impression cylinders 502, 504. The marker(s) may for example be located on the surface of the belt and can be sensed magnetically or optically by a suitable detector, or it may be an irregularity in the lateral formations that are used to maintain the belt under tension, for example a missing tooth or a formation of different geometry, hence forming a mechanical type of signal.
(50) It is further possible to incorporate into the belt an electronic circuit, for example a microchip similar to those to be found in chip and pin credit cards, in which data may be stored. The microchip may comprise only read only memory, in which case it may be used by the manufacturer to record such data as where and when the belt was manufactured and details of the physical or chemical properties of the belt. The data may relate to a catalog number, a batch number, and any other identifier allowing providing information of relevance to the use of the belt and/or to its user. This data may be read by the controller of the printing system during installation or during operation and used, for example, to determine calibration parameters. Alternatively, or additionally, the chip may include random access memory to enable data to be recorded by the controller of the printing system on the microchip. In this case, the data may include information such as the number of pages or length of web that have been printed or transported using the belt, or previously measured belt parameters such as belt length, to assist in recalibrating the printing system when commencing a new print run. Reading and writing on the microchip may be achieved by making direct electrical contact with terminals of the microchip, in which case contact conductors may be provided on the surface of the belt. Alternatively, data may be read from the microchip using radio signals, in which case the microchip may be powered by an inductive loop printed on the surface of the belt.
(51) As its length is important, the belt is required to resist irreversible stretching and creep. In the transverse direction, on the other hand, it is only required to maintain the belt flat taut without creating excessive drag due to friction with the support plates 130. It is for this reason that, in an embodiment of the invention, the elasticity of the belt is intentionally made anisotropic.
(52) The lateral tracks may be positioned at a distance greater than the overall width of the belt. In a further embodiment, the lateral stress applied to the belt can be adjusted or maintained by modifying the distance between the lateral tracks.
(53) Belt Pre-Treatment
(54)
(55) While a roller can be used to apply an even film, in an alternative embodiment the optional pre-treatment solution can be sprayed onto the surface of the belt and spread more evenly, for example by the application of a jet from an air knife, a drizzle from sprinkles or undulations from a fountain. The pre-treatment solution may be removed from the transfer member shortly following its exposure therewith (e.g. using air flow). Release layers of belts amenable to such treatment may comprise a silanol-, sylyl- or silane- modified or terminated polydialkylsiloxane silicone.
(56) As an alternative embodiment, the release layer may be made of a silicone composition having suitable built-in charges or internal charging properties (e.g. an amino silicone), so that the above-described ink droplet substantial freezing upon impact on the intermediate transfer member is achieved without the application of an external chemical agent.
(57) While not wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that the fixing of aqueous ink droplets on the hydrophobic surface of a belt according to one embodiment of the invention is the result of a Brnsted-Lowry interaction between organic polymeric resin(s) in the ink and the chemical agent applied to the belt or a component of the release layer of the belt. In this particular embodiment, there is no chemical reaction that affects the composition of the ink or the surface of the belt but an electrostatic attraction between polar molecules in the ink and those on or in the release layer, that prevents the ink droplets from contracting or from moving around on the hydrophobic release surface of the belt, at least during the time period required to evaporate the ink carrier from the ink image.
(58) Ink Image Heating
(59) The heaters 132 inserted into the support plates 130 are used to heat the belt to a temperature that is appropriate for the rapid evaporation of the ink carrier and compatible with the composition of the belt. For belts comprising for instance silanol-terminated polydialkylsiloxane silicones in the release layer, heating is typically of the order of 150 C., though this temperature may vary within a range from 120 C. to 180 C., depending on various factors such as the composition of the inks and/or of the pre-treatment solutions if needed. Belts comprising amino silicones may generally be heated to temperatures between 70 C. and 130 C. When, as illustrated, the transfer member is heated from beneath, it is desirable for the belt to have relatively high thermal capacity and low thermal conductivity, so that the temperature of the body of the belt 102 will not change significantly as it moves between the optional pre-treatment station, the image forming station and the impression station(s). Additionally and alternatively, as shall be exemplified with the alternative architecture illustrated by
(60) To apply heat at different rates to the ink image carried by the surface of the transfer member, external heaters or energy sources (not shown) may be used to apply additional energy locally, for example prior to reaching the impression stations to render the ink residue tacky, prior to the image forming station to dry the optional pre-treatment agent and at the image forming station to start evaporating the carrier from the ink droplets as soon as possible after they impact the surface of the belt.
(61) The external heaters may be, for example, hot gas or air blowers or radiant heaters schematically represented as 306 in
(62) In addition, the vapor formed by the evaporation of the ink carrier as a result of the aforementioned heating may be evacuated or removed from their region of formation in the vicinity of the intermediate transfer member by a suitable gas moving apparatus.
(63) If the ink contains components sensitive to ultraviolet light then a UV source may be used to help cure the ink as it is being transported by the belt.
(64) Substrate Transport Systems
(65) The substrate transport system may be designed as in the case of the embodiment of
(66) In the case of
(67) Though not shown in the drawings, but known per se, the various transport rollers and impression cylinders may incorporate grippers that are cam operated to open and close at appropriate times in synchronism with their rotation so as to clamp the leading edge of each sheet of substrate. In an embodiment of the invention, the tips of the grippers, at least of the impression cylinders 502 and 504, are designed not to project beyond the outer surface of the cylinders to avoid damaging the belt 102.
(68) After an image has been impressed onto one side of a substrate sheet during passage between the impression cylinder 502 and the belt 102 applied thereon by pressure roller 140, the sheet is fed by a transport roller 522 to a perfecting cylinder 524 that has a circumference that is twice as large as the impression cylinders 502, 504. The leading edge of the sheet is transported by the perfecting cylinder past a transport roller 526, of which the grippers are timed to catch the trailing edge of the sheet carried by the perfecting cylinder and to feed the sheet to the second impression cylinder 504 to have a second image impressed onto its reverse side. The sheet, which has now had images printed onto both its sides, can be advanced by a belt conveyor 530 from the second impression cylinder 504 to the output stack 508. In one embodiment, the belt of conveyor 530 is constructed as detailed herein for a belt serving as intermediate transfer member.
(69) As the images printed on the belt are always spaced from one another by a distance corresponding to the circumference of the impression cylinders, or half of it when the cylinder can accommodate two substrates (e.g. having two set of grippers), it is important for the distance between the two impression stations also to be equal to the circumference of the impression cylinders 502, 504 or a multiple of this distance. The length the individual images on the belt is of course dependent on the size of the substrate not on the size of the impression cylinder.
(70) In the embodiment shown in
(71) Some of the rollers over which the web 560 passes do not have fixed axes. In particular, on the in-feed side of the web 560, a roller 552 is provided that can move vertically. By virtue of its weight alone, or if desired with the assistance of a spring acting on its axle, the roller 552 serves to maintain a constant tension in the web 560. If, for any reason, the supply roller offers temporary resistance, the roller 552 will rise and conversely the roller 552 will move down automatically to take up slack in the web drawn from the supply roll.
(72) At the impression station, the web 560 is required to move at the same speed as the surface of the belt. As earlier explained, the images on the belt must be spaced apart by the circumference of the impression cylinder 502, and within this spacing it is necessary to be able to accommodate the length of belt within which no printing can take place on account of the possible presence of the seam. If the web 560 were therefore to be permanently engaged with the belt 102 at the impression station formed with impression cylinder 502, then much of the substrate lying between printed images would need to be wasted.
(73) To mitigate this problem, there are provided, straddling the impression station, two so-called dancers 554 and 556, these being motorized rollers that are moved up and down in opposite directions in synchronism with one another. After an image has been impressed on the web, the pressure roller 140 is disengaged to allow the web 560 and the belt to move relative to one another. Immediately after disengagement, the dancer 554 is moved downwards at the same time as the dancer 556 is moved up. Though the remainder of the web continues to move forward at its normal speed, the movement of the dancers 554 and 556 has the effect of moving a short length of the web 560 backwards through the gap between the impression cylinder 502 and the belt 102 from which it is disengaged. This is done by taking up slack from the run of web following the impression station and transferring it to the run preceding the impression station. The motion of the dancers is then reversed to return them to their illustrated position so that the section of web at the impression station is again accelerated up to the speed of the belt. The pressure roller 140 can now be re-engaged to impress the next image on the web but without leaving large blank areas between the images printed on the web.
(74) The web transport system illustrated in
(75) Alternatively, if the width of the belt exceeds twice the width of the web, it is possible to use the two halves of the same belt and the same impression cylinder to print on the opposite sides of different sections of the web at the same time.
(76) The printing system of
(77) In the image forming station 612 four separate print bars 622 incorporating one or more print heads, that use inkjet technology, deposit ink droplets of different colors onto the surface of the belt 610. Though the illustrated embodiment has four print bars 622 each able to deposit one of the typical four different colors (namely Cyan (C), Magenta (M), Yellow (Y) and Black (K)), it is possible for the image forming station to have a different number of print bars and for the print bars to deposit different shades of the same color (e.g. various shades of grey including black) or for more two print bars or more to deposit is the same color (e.g. black). Following each print bar 622 in the image forming station, an intermediate drying system 624 is provided to blow hot gas (usually air) onto the surface of the belt 610 to dry the ink droplets partially. This hot gas flow assists in preventing blockage of the inkjet nozzles and also prevents the droplets of different color inks on the belt 610 from merging into one another. In the drying station 614, the ink droplets on the belt 610 are exposed to radiation and/or hot gas in order to dry the ink more thoroughly, driving off most, if not all, of the liquid carrier and leaving behind only a layer of resin and coloring agent which is heated to the point of being rendered tacky.
(78) In the impression station 616, the belt 610 passes between an impression cylinder 620 and a pressure cylinder 618 that carries a compressible blanket 619. The length of the blanket 619 is equal to or greater than the maximum length of a sheet 626 of substrate on which printing is to take place. The impression cylinder 620 has twice the diameter of the pressure cylinder 618 and can support two sheets 626 of substrate at the same time. Sheets 626 of substrate are carried by a suitable transport mechanism (not shown in
(79) In the embodiment of
(80) As shown schematically in
(81) Guide channels 680 in the image forming station ensure accurate placement of the ink droplets on the belt 610. Likewise, guide channels in the impression station 616 ensure accurate placement of the image on the substrate. In other areas, such as within the drying station 614, lateral guide channels are desirable but less important. In regions where the belt 610 has slack, no guide channels are present.
(82) It is important for the belt 610 to move with constant speed through the image forming station 612 as any hesitation or vibration will affect the registration of the ink droplets of different colors. To assist in guiding the belt smoothly, friction is reduced by passing the belt over rollers 632 adjacent each printing bar 622 instead of sliding the belt over stationary guide plates. The rollers 632 need not be precisely aligned with their respective print bars 622. They may be located slightly (e.g. a few millimeters) downstream of the print head jetting location. The frictional forces maintain the belt taut and substantially parallel to print bars. The underside of the belt may therefore have high frictional properties as it is only ever in rolling contact with all the surfaces on which it is guided. The lateral tension applied by the guide channels need only be sufficient to maintain the belt 610 flat and in contact with rollers 632 as it passes beneath the print bars 622. Aside from the inextensible reinforcement/support layer, the hydrophobic release surface layer and high friction underside, the belt 610 is not required to serve any other function. It may therefore be a thin light inexpensive belt that is easy to remove and replace, should it become worn.
(83) It is possible for the belt 610 to be seamless, that is it to say without discontinuities anywhere along its length. Such a belt would considerably simplify the control of the printing system as it may be operated at all times to run at the same surface velocity as the circumferential velocity of the two cylinders 618 and 620 of the impression station. Any stretching of the belt with ageing would not affect the performance of the printing system and would merely require the taking up of more slack by tensioning rollers 650 and 652, detailed below.
(84) It is however less costly to form the belt as an initially flat strip of which the opposite ends are secured to one another, for example by a zip fastener or possibly by a strip of hook and loop tape or possibly by soldering the edges together or possibly by using tape (e.g. Kapton tape, RTV liquid adhesives or PTFE thermoplastic adhesives with a connective strip overlapping both edges of the strip). In such a construction of the belt, it is essential to ensure that printing does not take place on the seam and that the seam is not flattened against the substrate 626 in the impression station 616.
(85) The impression and pressure cylinders 618 and 620 of the impression station 616 may be constructed in the same manner as the blanket and impression cylinders of a conventional offset litho press. In such cylinders, there is a circumferential discontinuity in the surface of the pressure cylinder 618 in the region where the two ends of the blanket 619 are clamped. There may also be discontinuities in the surface of the impression cylinder, for instance to accommodate grippers that serve to grip the leading edges of the substrate sheets to help transport them through the nip. In the illustrated embodiments of the invention, the impression cylinder circumference is twice that of the compressible blanket cylinder and the impression cylinder has two sets of grippers, so that the discontinuities line up twice every cycle for the impression cylinder. Alternatively the printing system may not require grippers (e.g. for web substrate), in which case the impression cylinder may have a continuous surface devoid of recess.
(86) If the belt 610 has a scam, then it is necessary to ensure that the seam always coincides in time with the gap between the cylinders of the impression station 616. For this reason, it is desirable for the length of the belt 610 to be equal to a whole number multiple of the circumference of the pressure cylinder 618.
(87) However, even if the belt has such a length when new, its length may change during use, for example with fatigue or temperature, and should that occur the phase of the seam during its passage through the nip will change every cycle.
(88) To compensate for such change in the length of the belt 610, it may be driven at a slightly different speed from the cylinders of the impression station 616. The belt 610 is to driven by two separately powered rollers 640 and 642. By applying different torques through the rollers 640 and 642 driving the belt, the run of the belt passing through the image forming station is maintained under controlled tension. The speed of the two rollers 640 and 642 can be set to be different from the surface velocity of the cylinders 618 and 620 of the impression station 616.
(89) Two powered tensioning rollers, or dancers, 650 and 652 are provided one on each side of the nip between the cylinders of the impression station. These two dancers 650, 652 are used to control the length of slack in the belt 610 before and after the nip and their movement is schematically represented by double sided arrows adjacent the respective dancers.
(90)
(91)
(92) The contents of all of the above mentioned applications of the Applicant are incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
(93) The present invention has been described using detailed descriptions of embodiments thereof that are provided by way of example and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. The described embodiments comprise different features, not all of which are required in all embodiments of the invention. Some embodiments of the present invention utilize only some of the features or possible combinations of the features. Variations of embodiments of the present invention that are described and embodiments of the present invention comprising different combinations of features noted in the described embodiments will occur to persons skilled in the art to which the invention pertains.
(94) In the description and claims of the present disclosure, each of the verbs, comprise include and have, and conjugates thereof, are used to indicate that the object or objects of the verb are not necessarily a complete listing of members, components, elements or parts of the subject or subjects of the verb. As used herein, the singular form a, an and the include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. For example, the term a formation or at least one formation may include a plurality of formations.