OPTIMIZATION OF UV CURING
A system and method of preparing a reinforced flexoplate comprising a base support structure and a printing surface. The method includes controlling the curing conditions of the reinforced flexoplate, thereby controlling the properties of the flexoplate such as floor thickness, printing and base support pattern cross-sectional geometry, repeatability of printed features during the printing process, and durability of the reinforced flexoplate during the printing process.
This application claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/979,848, filed on Jul. 15, 2013, titled, “OPTIMIZATION OF UV CURING,” which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §371 to International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/US2012/061809, filed on Oct. 25, 2012, titled “OPTIMIZATION OF UV CURING” by Ed. S. RAMAKRISHNAN, which claims the benefit of and priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/551,161, filed on Oct. 25, 2011, titled “OPTIMIZATION OF UV CURING” by Ed. S. RAMAKRISHNAN, all of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
BACKGROUNDFlexographic printing may be used to print a variety of substrates including glass, paper, and polymers. The flexographic printing process may be used on its own or as part of an in-line process, for example, a roll-to-roll handling process. The patterned flexoblanks used during a flexographic printing process may be designed for long term use, dedicated use, or as disposable, short term use.
SUMMARYIn an embodiment, a method of forming a flexoplate comprising: disposing a first mask on a first surface of a flexoblank, wherein the flexoblank comprises a second surface opposite the first surface, wherein the first surface comprises a backing; curing the first surface to form a floor on the first surface using ultraviolet (UV) radiation with wavelengths between 250 nm-600 nm and a curing dosage from 0.3 J/cm2 to 1.0 J/cm2; curing the second surface to form a printing pattern on the second surface using UV light at a dosage between 5 J/cm2 and 25 J/cm2, wherein the printing pattern comprises a first plurality of lines; and curing, the second surface to form a base support structure, wherein the base support structure comprises a second plurality of lines.
In an embodiment, a flexoplate comprising: a raised print pattern disposed on a floor, wherein the raised print pattern comprises a first plurality of lines, wherein a base support structure is disposed on the floor and comprises a second plurality of lines, wherein each of the first plurality of lines is disposed in an alternating fashion with each line of the second plurality of lines.
For a detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
The following discussion is directed to various embodiments of the invention. Although one or more of these embodiments may be preferred, the embodiments disclosed should not be interpreted, or otherwise used, as limiting the scope of the disclosure, including the claims. In addition, one skilled in the art will understand that the following description has broad application, and the discussion of any embodiment is meant only to be exemplary of that embodiment, and not intended to intimate that the scope of the disclosure, including the claims, is limited to that embodiment.
Flexography is a form of a rotary web letterpress where relief plates are mounted on to a printing cylinder, for example, with double-sided adhesive. These relief plates, which may also be referred to as a master plate or a flexoplate, may be used in conjunction with fast drying, low viscosity solvent, and ink fed from anilox or other two roller inking system. The anilox roll may be a cylinder used to provide a measured amount of ink to a printing plate. The ink may be, for example, water-based or ultraviolet (UV)-curable inks. In one example, a first roller transfers ink from an ink pan or a metering system to a meter roller or anilox roll. The ink is metered to a uniform thickness when it is transferred from the anilox roller to a plate cylinder. When the substrate moves through the roll-to-roll handling system from the plate cylinder to the impression cylinder, the impression cylinder applies pressure to the plate cylinder which transfers the image on to the relief plate to the substrate. In some embodiments, there may be a fountain roller instead of the plate cylinder and a doctor blade may be used to improve the distribution of ink across the roller.
Flexographic plates may be made from, for example, plastic, rubber, or a photopolymer which may also be referred to as a UV-sensitive polymer. The plates may be made by laser engraving, photomechanical, thermo-mechanical, or photochemical methods. The preferred flexographic process may be set up as a stack type where one or more stacks of printing stations are arranged vertically on each side of the press frame and each stack has its own plate cylinder which prints using one type of ink and the setup may allow for printing on one or both sides of a substrate. In another embodiment, a central impression cylinder may be used which uses a single impression cylinder mounted in the press frame. As the substrate enters the press, it is in contact with the impression cylinder and the appropriate pattern is printed. Alternatively, an inline flexographic printing process may be utilized in which the printing stations are arranged in a horizontal line and are driven by a common line shaft. In this example, the printing stations may be coupled to curing stations, cutters, folders, or other post-printing processing equipment. Other configurations of the flexo-graphic process may be utilized as well.
In an embodiment, flexo plate sleeves may be used, for example, in an in-the-round (ITR) imaging process. In an ITR process, the photopolymer plate material is processed on a sleeve that will be loaded on to the press, in contrast with the method discussed above where a flat plate may be mounted to a printing cylinder, which may also be referred to as a conventional plate cylinder. The flexo-sleeve may be a continuous sleeve of a photopolymer with a laser ablation mask coating disposed on a surface. In another example, individual pieces of photopolymer may be mounted on a base sleeve with tape and then imaged and processed in the same manner as the sleeve with the laser ablation mask discussed above. Flexo-sleeves may be used in several ways, for example, as carrier rolls for imaged, flat, plates mounted on the surface of the carrier rolls, or as sleeve surfaces that have been directly engraved (in-the-round) with an image. In the example where a sleeve acts solely as a carrier role, printing plates with engraved images may be mounted to the sleeves, which are then installed into the print stations on cylinders. These pre-mounted plates may reduce changeover time since the sleeves can be stored with the plates already mounted to the sleeves. Sleeves are made from various materials, including thermoplastic composites, thermoset composites, and nickel, and may or may not be reinforced with fiber to resist cracking and splitting. Long-run, reusable sleeves that incorporate a foam or cushion base are used for very high-quality printing. In some embodiments, disposable “thin” sleeves, without foam or cushioning, may be used. Sleeves may also provide a continuous stretch of long lengths of film rolls that are stitch-line free. Flat flexoplates that are cut and mounted on the cylinder comprise and display a stitch-line where the two ends meet, which may limit the usable sizes of the printed pattern to within the stitch lines. The formation of the patterns on the flexoplates may affect the print quality of the patterns produced as well as the life cycle and durability of the flexoplates and the repeatability of the printing process. The formation of the patterns on the flexoplates may affect the print quality of the patterns produced as well as the life cycle and durability of the flexoplates and the repeatability of the printing process.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThe tip-to-floor depth 302, which may also be referred to as the relief depth, may refer to the distance between the tip of the pattern that is the printing surface of the flexoplate and the base of the flexoplate, which may be referred to as the floor 102, which is the photopolymer material cured from the backing layer of the flexoplate towards the printing surface. The term “tip width” 300 may refer to the width of highest point of a line of the plurality of lines 104. Feature 304 is the valley that comprises the tip-to-floor depth and that is located between each pair of lines formed by the curing process.
In an embodiment, the cross section of each valley 304 is a trapezoid. In an alternate embodiment as in
In
In
In
In
In one example, if the tip-to-floor depth, or valley depth, 618 decreases, for example, as shown in
Spacings 708, 722, and 732 in
The patterned flexoblank is disposed on a roller at the printing station at step 812. In some embodiments, the printing station at step 812 may comprise more than one roller and more than one flexoplate, and may also use different inks and ink sources (not pictured) for the various rolls. A substrate, such as a polymer, paper, or glass substrate, is cleaned at a cleaning station at step 814, which may comprise a plurality of cleaning processes including high energy ozone, a water wash, or a web cleaner. The substrate may be cured at a curing station at step 816, which may comprise more than one curing process. At a first printing station at step 818a, a first substrate is printed, and at a second printing station at step 818b, a second substrate is printed. In a first example, the first substrate is printed on a first side at the first printing station at step 818a, and a second substrate is printed on a first side at the second printing station at step 818b. In a second example, the first substrate is printed on a first side at the first printing station at step 818a, and then the second side of that substrate is printed at the second printing station at step 818b. In a third example, the first substrate is printed on a first side at the first printing station at step 818a, and a second pattern is printed on the same side of that substrate at the second printing station at step 818b adjacent to the pattern printed at the first printing station at step 818a. In any of these examples, the first and the second printing processes at the stations at step 818a and at step 818b may be carried out in series, wherein the method proceeds from the first printing station at step 818a to the plating at station at step 820, or from the first printing station at step 818a to the second printing station at step 818b to the plating station at step 820, or in parallel wherein both patterns are printed in the same printing step. It is also appreciated that the flexoplate and the ink used at the first printing station at step 818a may not be the same as those used at the second printing station at step 818b.
Subsequent to printing, the printed pattern(s) are plated at a plating station at step 820. In one embodiment, plating is electroless plating with a conductive material such as copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), gold (Au), silver (Ag), or palladium (Pd). The plating process forms the high resolution conductive patterns which may then be assembled. In some embodiments (not pictured) a plurality of spacers are flexographically printed on one or both printed patterns. The plated patterns may be assembled at the assembly station at step 822. The assembly process may depend on the printing configuration in that if one substrate has two patterns printed on it, that substrate may be bent or cut and then assembled so that the patterns are orthogonal to each other. If both of the patterns are printed on both sides of one substrate, the substrate may be trimmed or cut or otherwise finished. If the patterns are printed on two separate substrates, the substrates may be cut and trimmed and assembled with the first and the second patterns orthogonal to one another.
In an embodiment, as in
The assembled substrates may comprise a touch sensor circuit that may be resistive or capacitive and may be ultimately assembled into a touch screen configuration for a television, tablet, phone, or other communication device that has a touch-screen display.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention, but as exemplifications of the presently preferred embodiments thereof. Many other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings herein. For example, the methods for curing the flexoplates may be varied with the equipment used in the curing. Additionally, a number of different materials may be used as the photopolymer component of the flexoblanks, and the flexoblanks used may vary depending on the resolution required when printing patterns or may also vary according the other conditions inherent to the manufacturing process they may be used with, including the ink composition, contact pressure, ambient conditions, amongst others. Furthermore, the spacing utilized when patterning the flexoblanks may depend on numerous factors in addition to the required valley depth, and as such the performance of the flexoplates will also be tied to the factors. Note also that the above examples may be of great use in the printing of HRPs with patterns less than 10 microns wide.
The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principles and various embodiments of the present invention. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
Claims
1. A method of forming a flexoplate comprising:
- disposing a first mask on a first surface of a flexoblank, wherein the flexoblank comprises a second surface opposite the first surface, wherein the first surface comprises a backing;
- curing the first surface to form a floor on the first surface using ultraviolet (UV) radiation with wavelengths between 250 nm-600 nm and a curing dosage from 0.3 J/cm2 to 1.0 J/cm2;
- curing the second surface to form a printing pattern on the second surface using UV light at a dosage between 5 J/cm2 and 25 J/cm2, wherein the printing pattern comprises a first plurality of lines; and
- curing, the second surface to form a base support structure, wherein the base support structure comprises a second plurality of lines.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the second surface comprises curing each line of the first and the second pluralities of lines to form a cross section, and wherein the cross-section of each line of the first and the second pluralities of lines is one of a square, a rectangle, a triangle, a half-circle, and a trapezoid, or combinations thereof.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the second surface to begin to form the printing pattern comprises using a second mask sized between 10-1000 times the size of the printing pattern.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the second surface to further form the base support structure comprises using a third mask that is within 10% of the size of the printing pattern.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the second surface comprises curing each line of the first and the second pluralities of lines to form a cross section, and wherein the cross-section of each line of the first and the second pluralities of lines is a trapezoid comprising a tip formed by a first angled side and a second angled side, and a tip-to-floor depth.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein a sidewall angle is formed between the intersection of the first angled side of the cross-section of each line of the plurality of lines and the top of the tip of the line for each line of the plurality of lines.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the sidewall angle is between 30°-50°.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the printing pattern comprises a plurality of lines, and wherein a sidewall angle of a line the plurality of lines is between 20°-70°.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein a valley is formed in between each pair of adjacent lines of the second plurality of lines.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the first surface is prior to curing the second surface.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein curing the first surface is subsequent to curing the second surface.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising curing the first surface again subsequent to curing the second surface.
13. A flexoplate comprising:
- a raised print pattern disposed on a floor,
- wherein the raised print pattern comprises a first plurality of lines,
- wherein a base support structure is disposed on the floor and comprises a second plurality of lines,
- wherein each of the first plurality of lines is disposed in an alternating fashion with each line of the second plurality of lines.
14. The flexoplate of claim 13, wherein the second plurality of lines is not in contact with the first plurality of lines.
15. The flexoplate of claim 13, wherein at least a portion of each of the second plurality of lines is in contact with at least part of a line of the first plurality of lines.
16. The flexoplate of claim 13, wherein the floor comprises an elastomer or a photopolymer disposed on a polyethylene terephthalate film.
17. The flexoplate of claim 13, wherein the cross section of each of the first and second plurality of lines is a trapezoid comprising a tip formed by the intersection of a first angled side and a second angled side, a sidewall angle, and a tip-to-floor depth, wherein the sidewall angle is the angle formed between the intersection of the first angled side of the cross-section of each line of the plurality of lines and the top of the tip of each line of the plurality of lines.
18. The flexoplate of claim 17, wherein the sidewall angle is between 30°-50°.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 16, 2015
Publication Date: Jul 2, 2015
Inventor: Ed S. RAMAKRISHNAN (The Woodlands, TX)
Application Number: 14/658,717