Sheet handling apparatus with rotary drum
09546070 · 2017-01-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65H81/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65H81/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F21/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F23/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
According to the present invention a sheet handling apparatus is provided which comprises a rotary drum with openings at its peripheral wall. A strip with perforations formed therein spirals circumferentially over an outer surface of the drum in a circumferential spiralling direction, such that a screen is formed over the drum. A suction system controls a flow of air through the perforations thereby to attract sheets towards the drum. The strip is biased by means of a tensioning assembly, which exerts a tensioning force on the strip substantially parallel to the circumferential spiralling direction of the strip.
Claims
1. Drying drum assembly for a sheet handling apparatus for holding sheets comprising: a rotary drum having an outer peripheral wall provided with openings; a strip with perforations formed therein, which strip spirals circumferentially over an outer surface of the peripheral wall of the drum in a circumferential spiralling direction, such that a screen is formed over the peripheral wall of the drum, wherein the openings of the drum and the perforations of the strip are positioned with respect to one another for being in a fluid connection to one another and to a suction system, which suction system is arranged for controlling a flow of air through the openings of the drum and the perforations of the strip to removably fix the sheets on the screen, wherein the strip is biased by means of a tensioning device, which exerts a tensioning force on the strip substantially parallel to the circumferential spiralling direction of the strip.
2. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein the tensioning device is positioned at an end of the strip.
3. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, further comprising a tensioning assembly formed by a tensioning device at each end of the strip, wherein the tensioning devices are oriented in substantially opposite directions to one another in the circumferential spiralling direction of the strip.
4. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein the tensioning device comprises a lever pivotably provided on the drum and connected to the drum via a spring element.
5. A drying drum assembly according to claim 4, wherein during operation the spring element is arranged for exerting a continuous pulling force in the circumferential spiralling direction on the end of the strip via the lever.
6. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein a tensioning device is positioned near either end of the drum.
7. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein the tensioning assembly further comprises stop elements adjacent the edges of the screen for limiting the axial movement of the strip over the outer surface of the peripheral wall of the drum.
8. A drying drum assembly according to claim 7, wherein the stop elements are positioned near the edges at the ends of the drum.
9. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein the strip and drum are formed of materials having different thermal expansion coefficients.
10. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, wherein the strip and the peripheral wall of the drum are arranged for a free, preferably substantially frictionless, sliding motion of the strip over the outer surface of the peripheral wall of the drum.
11. A drying drum assembly according to claim 1, further comprising air channels provided on the peripheral wall of the drum, which air channels are delimited by the screen.
12. A sheet handling apparatus comprising a drying drum assembly according to claim 1, and further comprising a suction system for controlling a flow of air through the openings of the drum and the strip, thereby to attract sheets towards the peripheral wall of the drum, such that the sheets are removably fixed on the screen.
13. A sheet handling apparatus according to claim 12, further comprising a heating system for heating the sheets on the drying drum assembly drum.
14. Printing system comprising a sheet handling apparatus according to claim 12.
15. Method for producing a drying drum assembly for a sheet handling apparatus according to claim 1, the method comprising the steps of: attaching a first end of a longitudinal strip formed of a first material to a first tensioning device preferably at an outer surface of a drum formed of a second material, wrapping the strip around the outer surface of the drum in a pattern spiralling over the outer surface of the drum, such that a screen is formed over at least part of the outer surface of the drum, attaching a second end of the longitudinal strip to a second tensioning device preferably at the outer surface of the drum, such that the strip is biased in the circumferential spiralling direction of the strip by means of the tensioning devices.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given herein below and the accompanying drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus are not limitative of the present invention, and wherein:
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(12) The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the present invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate particular embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention. Other embodiments of the invention and many of the attendant advantages of the invention will be readily appreciated as they become better understood with reference to the following detailed description.
(13) It will be appreciated that common and/or well understood elements that may be useful or necessary in a commercially feasible embodiment are not necessarily depicted in order to facilitate a more abstracted view of the embodiments. The elements of the drawings are not necessarily illustrated to scale relative to each other. It will further be appreciated that certain actions and/or steps in an embodiment of a method may be described or depicted in a particular order of occurrences while those skilled in the art will understand that such specificity with respect to sequence is not actually required. It will also be understood that the terms and expressions used in the present specification have the ordinary meaning as is accorded to such terms and expressions with respect to their corresponding respective areas of inquiry and study, except where specific meanings have otherwise been set forth herein.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(14) The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein the same reference numerals have been used to identify the same or similar elements throughout the several views.
(15) With reference to
(16)
(17) Media Pre-Treatment
(18) To improve spreading and pinning (i.e. fixation of pigments and water-dispersed polymer particles) of the ink on the print medium, in particular on slow absorbing media, such as machine-coated media, the print medium may be pre-treated, i.e. treated prior to the printing of an image on the medium. The pre-treatment step may comprise one or more of the following: pre-heating of the print medium to enhance spreading of the ink used on the print medium and/or to enhance absorption into the print medium of the ink used; (ii) primer pre-treatment for increasing the surface tension of print medium in order to improve the wettability of the print medium by the ink used and to control the stability of the dispersed solid fraction of the ink composition, i.e. pigments and dispersed polymer particles; (N.B. primer pre-treatment can be performed in a gas phase, e.g. with gaseous acids such as hydrochloric acid, sulphuric acid, acetic acid, phosphoric acid and lactic acid, or in a liquid phase by coating the print medium with a pre-treatment liquid. A pre-treatment liquid may include water as a solvent, one or more co-solvents, additives such as surfactants, and at least one compound selected from a polyvalent metal salt, an acid and a cationic resin); and (iii) corona or plasma treatment.
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(20) It will be appreciated that any conventionally known methods can be used to apply the pre-treatment liquid. Specific examples of an application technique include: roller coating (as shown), ink-jet application, curtain coating and spray coating. There is no specific restriction in the number of times the pre-treatment liquid may be applied. It may be applied just one time, or it may be applied two times or more. An application twice or more may be preferable, as cockling of the coated print medium can be prevented and the film formed by the surface pre-treatment liquid will produce a uniform dry surface with no wrinkles after application twice or more. A coating device 5 that employs one or more rollers 7, 7 is desirable because this technique does not need to take ejection properties into consideration and it can apply the pre-treatment liquid homogeneously to a print medium. In addition, the amount of the pre-treatment liquid applied with a roller or with other means can be suitably adjusted by controlling one or more of: the physical properties of the pre-treatment liquid, the contact pressure of the roller, and the rotational speed of the roller in the coating device. An application area of the pre-treatment liquid may be only that portion of the sheet S to be printed, or an entire surface of a print portion and/or a non-print portion. However, when the pre-treatment liquid is applied only to a print portion, unevenness may occur between the application area and a non-application area caused by swelling of cellulose contained in coated printing paper with water from the pre-treatment liquid followed by drying. From a view-point of uniform drying, it is thus preferable to apply a pre-treatment liquid to the entire surface of a coated printing paper, and roller coating can be preferably used as a coating method to the whole surface. The pre-treatment liquid may be an aqueous liquid.
(21) Corona or plasma treatment may be used as a pre-treatment step by exposing a sheet of a print medium to corona discharge or plasma treatment. In particular, when used on media such as polyethylene (PE) films, polypropylene (PP) films, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) films and machine coated media, the adhesion and spreading of the ink can be improved by increasing the surface energy of the medium. With machine-coated media, the absorption of water can be promoted which may induce faster fixation of the image and less puddling on the print medium. Surface properties of the print medium may be tuned by using different gases or gas mixtures as medium in the corona or plasma treatment. Examples of such gases include: air, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, methane, fluorine gas, argon, neon, and mixtures thereof. Corona treatment in air is most preferred.
(22) Image Formation
(23) When employing an inkjet printer loaded with inkjet inks, the image formation is typically performed in a manner whereby ink droplets are ejected from inkjet heads onto a print medium based on digital signals. Although both single-pass inkjet printing and multi-pass (i.e. scanning) inkjet printing may be used for image formation, single-pass inkjet printing is preferable as it is effective to perform high-speed printing. Single-pass inkjet printing is an inkjet printing method with which ink droplets are deposited onto the print medium to form all pixels of the image in a single passage of the print medium through the image forming device, i.e. beneath an inkjet marking module.
(24) Referring to
(25) Each inkjet marking device 91, 92, 93, 94 may have a single print head having a length corresponding to the desired printing range R. Alternatively, as shown in
(26) In the process of image formation by ejecting ink, an inkjet head or a printing head employed may be an on-demand type or a continuous type inkjet head. As an ink ejection system, an electrical-mechanical conversion system (e.g. a single-cavity type, a double-cavity type, a bender type, a piston type, a shear mode type, or a shared wall type) or an electrical-thermal conversion system (e.g. a thermal inkjet type, or a Bubble Jet type) may be employed. Among them, it is preferable to use a piezo type inkjet recording head which has nozzles of a diameter of 30 m or less in the current image forming method.
(27) The image formation via the inkjet marking module 9 may optionally be carried out while the sheet S of print medium is temperature controlled. For this purpose, a temperature control device 10 may be arranged to control the temperature of the surface of the transport mechanism 2 (e.g. belt or drum 3) below the inkjet marking module 9. The temperature control device 10 may be used to control the surface temperature of the sheet S within a predetermined range, for example in the range of 30 C. to 60 C. The temperature control device 10 may comprise one or more heaters, e.g. radiation heaters, and/or a cooling means, for example a cold blast, in order to control and maintain the surface temperature of the print medium within the desired range. During and/or after printing, the print medium is conveyed or transported downstream through the inkjet marking module 9.
(28) Post Treatment
(29) To improve or enhance the robustness of a printed image or other properties, such as gloss level, the sheet S may be post treated, which is an optional step in the printing process. For example, in a preferred embodiment, the printed sheets S may be post-treated by laminating the print image. That is, the post-treatment may include a step of applying (e.g. by jetting) a post-treatment liquid onto a surface of the coating layer, onto which the ink has been applied, so as to form a transparent protective layer over the printed recording medium. In the post-treatment step, the post-treatment liquid may be applied over the entire surface of an image on the print medium or it may be applied only to specific portions of the surface of an image. The method of applying the post-treatment liquid is not particularly limited, and may be selected from various methods depending on the type of the post-treatment liquid. However, the same method as used in coating the pre-treatment liquid or an inkjet printing method is preferable. Of these, an inkjet printing method is particularly preferable in view of: (i) avoiding contact between the printed image and the post-treatment liquid applicator; (ii) the construction of an inkjet recording apparatus used; and (iii) the storage stability of the post-treatment liquid. In the post-treatment step, a post-treatment liquid containing a transparent resin may be applied on the surface of a formed image so that a dry adhesion amount of the post-treatment liquid is 0.5 g/m.sup.2 to 10 g/m.sup.2, preferably 2 g/m.sup.2 to 8 g/m.sup.2, thereby to form a protective layer on the recording medium. If the dry adhesion amount is less than 0.5 g/m.sup.2, little or no improvement in image quality (image density, colour saturation, glossiness and fixability) may be obtained. If the dry adhesion amount is greater than 10 g/m.sup.2, on the other hand, this can be disadvantageous from the view-point of cost efficiency, because the dryness of the protective layer degrades and the effect of improving the image quality is saturated.
(30) As a post-treatment liquid, an aqueous solution comprising components capable of forming a transparent protective layer over the print medium sheet S (e.g. a water-dispersible resin, a surfactant, water, and other additives as required) is preferably used. The water-dispersible resin in the post-treatment liquid preferably has a glass transition temperature (Tg) of 30 C. or higher, and more preferably in the range of 20 C. to 100 C. The minimum film forming temperature (MFT) of the water-dispersible resin is preferably 50 C. or lower, and more preferably 35 C. or lower. The water-dispersible resin is preferably radiation curable to improve the glossiness and fixability of the image. As the water-dispersible resin, for example, any one or more of an acrylic resin, a styrene-acrylic resin, a urethane resin, an acryl-silicone resin, a fluorine resin or the like, is preferably employed. The water-dispersible resin can be suitably selected from the same materials as that used for the inkjet ink. The amount of the water-dispersible resin contained, as a solid content, in the protective layer is preferably 1% by mass to 50% by mass. The surfactant used in the post-treatment liquid is not particularly limited and may be suitably selected from those used in the inkjet ink. Examples of the other components of the post-treatment liquid include antifungal agents, antifoaming agents, and pH adjustors.
(31) Hitherto, the printing process was described such that the image formation step was performed in-line with the pre-treatment step (e.g. application of an (aqueous) pre-treatment liquid) and a drying and fixing step, all performed by the same apparatus, as shown in
(32) With reference now to
(33) At least one first sensor device 22 in the form of an optical sensor, such as a laser scanner, is provided within the sensing unit 21 for sensing the surface geometry or topology of the sheets S as they travel on a first pass or a second pass along the transport path P. The laser scanner or optical sensor device 22 generates digital image data I of the three-dimensional surface geometry or topology of each sheet S sensed or scanned. When performing the sensing or measuring of the surface geometry or topology of the sheets S on the transport path P of printing system 1 with the first sensor device(s) 22, it is highly desirable for the purposes of accuracy and reliability that the sheets S are transported or conveyed in the sensing unit 21 in substantially the same manner as those sheets S are later transported in the image forming unit or marking module 9. To this end, the sensing unit 21 includes a sheet conveyor mechanism 23 that simulates the sheet transport conditions provided by the transport mechanism 3 within the image forming unit 9. In this regard, both the conveyor mechanism 23 and the transport mechanism 3 include a belt transport device with vacuum sheet-holding pressure, as seen in
(34) The sheet topology data from the first sensor device 22 is then transmitted (e.g. either via a cable connection or wirelessly) to a controller 24 which includes a processor device 25 for processing and analysing the digital image data I to detect and to classify any defect or deformation D in the surface geometry or topology of each sheet S sensed or scanned. The sensing unit 21 is thus arranged to scan the sheets S for detecting and measuring any deformations or defects D before the sheets S enter the image forming device or inkjet marking module 9. In this way, if the processor device 25 determines that a sheet S on the transport path P includes a defect or deformation D that would render the sheet unsuitable for printing, the controller 24 is configured to prevent the sheet S from progressing to the inkjet marking module 9. The sensing unit 21 comprising the first sensor device(s) 22 is therefore desirably provided as a separate sentry unit positioned on the transport path P sufficiently upstream of the marking module 9. The controller 24 and processor device 25 may be integrated within the sentry unit 21 or they may be separately or remotely located.
(35) Drying and Fixing
(36) After an image has been formed on the print medium, the printed ink must be dried and the image must be fixed on the print medium. Drying comprises evaporation of solvents, and particularly those solvents that have poor absorption characteristics with respect to the selected print medium.
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(38) The drying and fixing unit 11 comprises a sheet handling apparatus 30, schematically shown in
(39) Perforations (not shown) are present in the strip 35 to allow air to be sucked through the strip 35 and the outer surface 32 of the drum 31. Air channels 60 are formed in the peripheral wall of the drum 31. The air flow and the suction force through the in the strip 35 and the openings of the air channels 60 into said air channels 60 of the drum 31 are controlled via a suction system (not shown). Sheets present on the screen 36 are held onto the screen 36 via suction. Basically an underpressure in the air channels below the screen results in a vacuum force which pulls the cut sheet media onto the screen 36, such that the sheets follow the circumference of the drum 31. The underpressure and/or vacuum force is adjustable to allow a user to set the forces attracting the sheets towards the peripheral wall of the drum 31, for example for different media types. By removing or reducing the underpressure or vacuum force along a predefined angular of the drum's circumference the sheets can be released from the screen 36.
(40) The tensioning assembly 40, 41 exerts a tensioning force F.sub.a, F.sub.b on the strip 35. As such the strip 35 is biased in the spiralling direction D. The tensioning forces F.sub.a, F.sub.b on the strip 35 run substantially parallel to the circumferential spiralling direction D of the strip 35. In
(41) Alternatively a single tensioning device 40, 41 can be provided at one end 35a, 35b of the strip 35, while the other end 35a, 35b of the strip 35 is fixed to the drum 31 in a rigid manner. Basically the strip 35 is fixed to the drum 31 at one end 35a, 35b, while the single tensioning device 40, 41 pulls on the other end 35a, 35b.
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(44) The strip 35 in
(45) After attaching an end of the strip 35 to a tensioning device 40, the strip 35 in
(46) The tensioning device 40 in
(47) The tensioning device 40 in
(48) While one end of the lever 44 is connected to the strip 35, the other end of the lever 44 is attached to a spring element 43. The spring element 43 is connected to an adjacent end of the lever to the drum 31. The spring element 43 is able to exert a spring force on the lever 44, which spring force is transferred to the strip 35. By biasing the spring element 43 the strip 35 experiences a continuous tensioning force in the circumferential spiralling direction D. In the embodiment in
(49) In
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(52) Although specific embodiments of the invention are illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that a variety of alternate and/or equivalent implementations exist. It should be appreciated that the exemplary embodiment or exemplary embodiments are examples only and are not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration in any way. Rather, the foregoing summary and detailed description will provide those skilled in the art with a convenient road map for implementing at least one exemplary embodiment, it being understood that various changes may be made in the function and arrangement of elements described in an exemplary embodiment without departing from the scope as set forth in the appended claims and their legal equivalents. Generally, this application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the specific embodiments discussed herein.
(53) It will also be appreciated that in this document the terms comprise, comprising, include, including, contain, containing, have, having, and any variations thereof, are intended to be understood in an inclusive (i.e. non-exclusive) sense, such that the process, method, device, apparatus or system described herein is not limited to those features or parts or elements or steps recited but may include other elements, features, parts or steps not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus. Furthermore, the terms a and an used herein are intended to be understood as meaning one or more unless explicitly stated otherwise. Moreover, the terms first, second, third, etc. are used merely as labels, and are not intended to impose numerical requirements on or to establish a certain ranking of importance of their objects. The terms radial, axial, tangential, and circumferential in this description are generally defined with respect to the drum 31, unless stated otherwise.
(54) The present invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.