Moisture-erasable note taking system
11541683 · 2023-01-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B43L1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method of reusing a notebook provides a notebook having a synthetic-paper page. The method also provides a thermochromic ink pen which, when used to write on the synthetic paper page, leaves thermochromic ink markings. The method further provides a moisture carrier configured to have a liquid diffused therein. The moisture carrier is configured to erase the thermochromic ink markings from the synthetic-paper page by contacting the thermochromic ink markings when the moisture carrier is moist. The method then writes with thermochromic ink on at least a portion of the synthetic-paper page. Liquid is diffused in the moisture carrier, and the portion of the synthetic-paper page having the thermochromic ink is wiped with the moist moisture carrier, such that the thermochromic ink is erased from the synthetic-paper page.
Claims
1. A method of reusing a notebook comprising: providing: a notebook having a writing surface, a pen having microencapsulated ink, the pen leaving markings when used to write on the writing surface, and a moisture carrier configured to have a liquid diffused therein; writing with the microencapsulated ink on at least a portion of the writing surface to form markings; and erasing the markings from the writing surface using the liquid-diffused moisture carrier.
2. The method as defined by claim 1, wherein the microencapsulated ink is thermochromic.
3. The method as defined by claim 1, wherein the writing surface is a synthetic page.
4. The method as defined by claim 1, wherein the liquid is water.
5. The method as defined by claim 1, wherein the ink is erased without damaging the writing surface.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the microcapsule that encapsulates the ink is larger than the pore size of the synthetic page.
7. A system comprising: a notebook having a writing surface, the writing surface configured to retain thermochromic ink markings, and further configured so that the thermochromic ink markings are delible when wiped with a damp moisture carrier; and a pen configured to make ink markings that are retained on the writing surface, the pen having an ink with a particle size that is larger than pores of the writing surface.
8. The system as defined by claim 7, further comprising a moisture carrier configured to have a liquid diffused therein, the moisture carrier further configured to erase the ink markings from the writing surface by contacting the ink markings when the liquid is diffused therein.
9. The system as defined by claim 8, wherein the liquid is water.
10. The system as defined by claim 7, wherein the writing surface is a synthetic page.
11. A system comprising: a notebook having a writing surface, the writing surface configured to retain thermochromic ink markings, and further configured so that the thermochromic ink markings are delible when wiped with a damp moisture carrier; and a pen configured to make ink markings that are retained on the writing surface, the pen having an ink configured to adhere to the writing surface, and further configured so as not to absorb into the writing surface.
12. The system as defined by claim 11, wherein the ink has a particle size that is larger than the pore size of the writing surface.
13. The system as defined by claim 11, further comprising a moisture carrier configured to have a liquid diffused therein, the moisture carrier further configured to erase the ink markings from the writing surface by contacting the ink markings when the liquid is diffused therein.
14. The system as defined by claim 11, wherein the liquid is water.
15. The system as defined by claim 11, wherein the writing surface is a synthetic page.
16. A system comprising: a notebook having a writing surface, the writing surface configured to retain thermochromic ink markings, and further configured so that the thermochromic ink markings are delible when wiped with a moisture carrier dampened with solvent; and a pen configured to make ink markings that bond to the writing surface, wherein the bond is broken in the presence of the solvent.
17. The system as defined by claim 16, wherein the solvent is water.
18. The system as defined by claim 16, further comprising a moisture carrier configured to have the solvent diffused therein, the moisture carrier further configured to erase the ink markings from the writing surface by contacting the ink markings when the liquid is diffused therein.
19. The system as defined by claim 16, wherein the writing surface is a synthetic page.
20. The system as defined by claim 16, wherein the ink is microencapsulated.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Those skilled in the art should more fully appreciate advantages of various embodiments of the invention from the following “Description of Illustrative Embodiments,” discussed with reference to the drawings summarized immediately below.
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DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
(12) As discussed above, thermochromic ink pens are generally used to write indelibly on paper, but with the ability to effectively erase thermochromic ink markings through the application of heat that changes the ink from opaque to transparent. Also as discussed above, synthetic paper can be used to protect writings in harsh environments such as from moisture.
(13) In illustrative embodiments, a system provides a notebook with synthetic-paper pages and a thermochromic ink pen. A user writes on the pages of the notebook with the thermochromic ink pen, such as, for example, a FRIXION™ thermochromic ink pen manufactured by Pilot Corporation. When the user has finished taking notes and wishes to erase them, the user may erase the notes by wiping the notes off of the page with a moisture carrier (e.g., a cloth, sponge, or paper towel) moistened with water or other appropriate liquid (e.g., alcohol). Details of illustrative embodiments are discussed below.
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(15) The inventors discovered and were surprised to find that moisture can erase thermochromic ink 108 when it is on synthetic paper 104 (e.g., using a wet cloth). This surprise was further enhanced given the durability and moisture-rich environments in which synthetic paper 104 may be used along with the seeming indelibility of thermochromic inks (in the absence of heat). It should be noted that the inventors are not privy to the actual chemical composition of the inks in the FRIXION™ thermochromic ink pen and therefore cannot describe, for example, why the ink is seemingly indelible on traditional paper but moisture-erasable or moisture-removable on synthetic paper.
(16) The inventors suspect, but have not confirmed, that the mechanism of action for this erasure effect is because thermochromic ink is not absorbed into the synthetic paper 104. However, it should be understood that illustrative embodiments of the invention are intended to cover whatever mode of action is actually in use, and are not limited to the hypothesized mechanism of action.
(17) It is hypothesized, as described in provisional application 62/421,335, that the thermochromic ink's pigment particles are sufficiently larger than any pores or imperfections on the surface of the synthetic paper. Thus, the ink pigment particles do not get stuck inside the pores or imperfections of the synthetic paper. In other words, the ink is not absorbed into the paper. Once the solvent of the ink evaporates, the thermochromic pigment is stuck to the surface of the page, but not trapped inside the pores of the page. The dry ink may appear to be permanently bonded to the synthetic page, but once the solvent, such as water is reintroduced, the ink is readily wiped away from the surface of the page. Accordingly, in some embodiments, the size of the thermochromic ink molecules and/or the microcapsule that encapsulates the thermochromic ink is larger than the pore size of the synthetic paper.
(18) Tests were performed to confirm that the erasure effect was not caused by a change of temperature of the ink 108. Furthermore, the inventors determined that the thermochromic ink 108 is not completely moisture-erasable from cellulose-based paper. Conversely, non-thermochromic ink (e.g., tested from gel pens, ballpoint pens, dry-erase markers) is not completely and clearly moisture-erasable from synthetic paper.
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(23) Both the Sharpie permanent marker markings 116 and the BiC XtraLife pen markings 119 left behind smudging 122 after being wiped with the alcohol wipes. Thus, only the thermochromic ink marking 111 and the BiC brite liner highlighter markings 115 erased without smudging. It should be noted that the thermochromic ink marking 111 was readily erasable (generally a single swipe with the moisture carrier is necessary), while the highlighter marking 115 required the application of considerable force and multiple swipes to erase significantly.
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(27) Content is written or printed on synthetic-paper with thermochromic ink at step 802. The thermochromic ink may include a Leuco dye that can change between colored and colorless forms. The Leuco dye can be Leuco 1, 2, 3, and/or 4. Furthermore, illustrative embodiments include color developer and color change temperature regulator in the thermochromic ink. In some embodiments, the thermochromic ink may be microencapsulated. Illustrative embodiments used Pilot FriXion ball-point gel pens, Pilot FriXion felt-tipped pens and markers, and/or the UniBall phantom.
(28) As described above, the paper may be part of a bound notebook or the paper may be separate and loose. The marking is exposed to moisture 805 to return it to its original state so content can be written or printed on it again, which will be described further below. The process can be repeated multiple times. As expressed above, different moisture-erasing techniques can be employed to erase the marking.
(29) Optionally, at step 803, the contents written on the originally blank paper can be saved with a digital scanner prior to heating the paper and clearing the contents. After the user writes on the paper with thermochromic ink, the paper can be scanned by a digital scanning process or by taking a digital photograph and performing digital signal processing on the digital photograph to capture and retain the content in a suitable format. For example; the digital content may be saved in a format such that OCR (optical character recognition) may occur for the digital content. Furthermore, at step 804, the digital photographs or scan may optionally undergo enhancement in a computer process for enhancing each image. These processes are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/211,462, filed Jul. 15, 2016, and in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/193,915, filed Jul. 17, 2015, herein incorporated by reference in their entireties. After the contents of the paper have been digitized and saved to an appropriate storage location, the markings can be erased.
(30) The next step 805 in the process moisture erases the marking. As described above, in some embodiments, the notebook is wiped with a moisture carrier (e.g., a moist cloth, wet napkin, baby-wipe, etc.). In some embodiments, in order to reuse the reusable moisture-erasable notebook, the one or more pages 104 are water-proof, water-resistant, moisture-proof, and/or moisture-resistant (such as with previously described pages 104 Nekoosa™ XM, Nekoosa™ OM, etc.). A person of skill in the art understands that the different types of pages 104 described above are water-proof, water-resistant, moisture-proof and/or moisture-resistant. Additionally, or alternatively, the notebook may be heated to erase the thermochromic ink (e.g., microwaved).
(31) It should be recognized that a notebook and thermochromic pen with instructions, or with the intent, for using the pen with the notebook and erasing the notebook using a moisture carrier may be sold together in the form of a packaged kit.
(32) Illustrative embodiments of the present invention may be described, without limitation, by the above description. While these embodiments have been described in the clauses by process steps, an apparatus comprising a computer with associated display capable of executing the process steps in the clauses above is also included in the present invention. Likewise, a computer program product including computer executable instructions for executing the process steps in the clauses and stored on a computer readable medium is included within the present invention.
(33) Advantages of the invention include that users may have the traditional feel of writing in a notebook without requiring the purchase of multiple notebooks. Furthermore, this system is environmentally-sustainable and does not require the destruction of trees.
(34) Although the above discussion discloses various exemplary embodiments of the invention, it should be apparent that those skilled in the art can make various modifications that will achieve some of the advantages of the invention without departing from the true scope of the invention.