Background of the Invention
[0001] This invention relates to imaging devices and is particularly concerned with devices
for applying clear, colorless imaging fluids to an opaque open-cell microvoid-containing
layer overlying a contrasting substrate.
[0002] Several U.S. Patents (e.g., 2,299,991, 3,031,328 and 3,508,344) disclose composite
sheet material wherein a light-colored opaque blushed lacquer layer is coated over
a base sheet which is either dark-colored or imprinted with contrasting indicia. The
opacity and light color of the blushed lacquer coating are due to the inclusion of
numerous microvoids; the local application of (1) heat or pressure (either of which
irreversibly collapses the microvoids) or (2) a non-solvent liquid (which fills the
microvoids), causes the coating to become selectively transparent or translucent and
the underlying backing to become visible. An innocuous non-solvent liquid employed
to impart transparency to the opaque microporous layer can subsequently be evaporated
to restore the original appearance. A liquid that is a solvent for the lacquer coating
would, of course, result in permanent transparency by collapsing the microvoids.
[0003] U.S. Patant No. 2,854,350 describes structures which are functionally similar to
those just described, except that the blushed lacquer coatings are replaced by a microporous
layer of finely divided calcium carbonate in an organic binder. Transparency is imparted
by locally applying pressure or treating selected areas with a wax, oil or grease
having a refractive index similar to that of the calcium carbonate. Other pigments
may be incorporated in a microporous highly plasticized resin binder: see U.S. Patent
No. 3,247,006.
[0004] It is sometimes desirable to have microvoid-containing sheet material which can be
repeatedly transparentized by applying a liquid, but which cannot readily be transparentized
by the application of heat or pressure. In such circumstances, a microvoid-containing
layer of the type described in U.S. Patent No. 4,299,880, owned by applicant's assignee,
is preferred. This patent discloses a structure in which the microvoid-containing
layer consists essentially of particles held in pseudo- sintered juxtaposition by
a thermoset binder and has a cohesion value of at least 400 grams force
*.
[0005] Products of the type just discussed can be further improved by incorporating in the
microvoid layer an organic polymer that jellifies the transparentizing liquid and
blocks lateral migration, thus permitting indicia to retain their initial sharpness;
see, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 4,418,098.
[0006] Where the microvoid coating is sufficiently durable (especially, one of the type
described in U.S. Patent No. 4,199,880) it can be reused many times, thus making it
attractive for incorporation in students' workbooks, overhead transparencies, computer
cards, cards for use as optical character recognition devices, bingo cards, stenographic
pads, easel pads, games, etc. Microvoid layers of this type can also be applied to
the surface of three-dimensional objects, making it possible to
[0007] * The cohesion value is determined by knife-coating a dispersion of a putative composition
on a cleaned gray cold rolled steel panel, drying and curing as appropriate for the
composition, to provide a coating 50-60 micrometers thick. Using a "Balance Beam Scrape-Adhesion
and Mar Tester", sold by Gardner Laboratories, Inc., Bethesda, Maryland, a sapphire-tipped
stylus is lowered into contact with the test panel and held in fixed position while
a ball bearing-supported platform moves the panel. The minimum grams-force required
to form a 50-micrometer deep scratch in the coating in a single pass is determined
at a magnification of 40X and reported as cohesive value. develop such unusual toys
as a doll whose apparently pale lips become temporarily rosy-red when a transparentizing
"lipstick" is applied to reveal the underlying color. For all applications of this
type, it is important that evaporation of the transparentizing liquid be complete,
so that the original appearance is restored. As is taught in U.S. Patents No. 4,299,880
and 4,418,098, the specific marking fluid is chosen in large part on the basis of
its evaporation rate, which is inversely related to image duration.
[0008] There are many ways in which a transparentizing liquid can be applied to the surface
of a microvoid-containing layer, e.g., by a stamp pad, typewriter ribbon, sponge,
etc., but a particularly preferred imaging device is a pen having a porous nib made
of felt, extruded polymer, compressed fiber bundles, etc. Unfortunately, however,
when a transparentizing liquid is incorporated in an imaging device, the anticipated
number of uses possible is substantially less than would have been predicted. In some
instances, as few as two applications of the imaging device to the same area of a
given microvoid substrate has resulted in the presence of a "ghost" image that is
permanently visible.
Brief Description
[0009] After extensive investigation, the applicant has determined that purity of the imaging
fluid is of great significance in obtaining an imaging device that can be used repeatedly
without leaving permanent marks on the transparentizable substrate. Not only is it
important to employ imaging fluids that are themselves essentially free from contaminating
substances, but it is also important that the reservoir and any contacting parts of
the receptacle in which it is contained be similarly free from contamination. Contamination
can occur from the presence of any solid or liquid substance that dissolves in the
imaging fluid and has an evaporation rate less than about one-half that of the imaging
fluid. Problems arising from the application of solid contaminants can readily be
appreciated. It is equally true, however, that liquid materials which evaporate far
more slowly than the imaging fluid will cause a persistence of image that is highly
undesirable.
[0010] The present invention provides an imaging device comprising in combination a reservoir
incorporated in a receptacle, imaging fluid in the reservoir, and means for delivering
the fluid from the reservoir to a location where marks are to be applied to a substrate.
The imaging fluid consists essentially of a clear, colorless, and innocuous liquid;
i.e., it will neither dissolve nor degrade the microporous layer to which it will
be applied nor prove harmful if ingested in small quantities. Additionally, it must
be completely volatilizable, having an evaporation rate on the order of 20 to 10-6
(compared to n-butyl acetate = 1.00). At the heart of the invention lies the fact
that no more than about 500 ppm (preferably no more than 50 ppm, and still more preferably
no more than about 5 ppm) by weight of the fluid constitute a contaminating substance
having an evaporation rate less than about one-half of the liquid. This contaminating
substance may, as previously stated, be either another liquid or a solid present in
the imaging liquid. If the contaminants in the imaging fluid are present in an amount
no greater than 500 ppm, the microporous substrate can be imaged and re-imaged at
least about 100 times before any ghosting is noted. Decreasing the contaminant level
to 50 ppm increases the number of uses to about 1,000, and further reducing the value
to 5 ppm increases the number of ghost-free uses to about 10,000.
[0011] A particularly preferred embodiment of the invention is a pen of the type in which
either an elongated cylindrical felt nib or a longitudinally porous relatively stiff
polymeric nib extends from the reservoir to act as the writing tip. In many such constructions,
the reservoir comprises a bundle of fine fibers, frequently enclosed in a tubular
film sheath, which is mounted inside the pen body. Vent tubes may extend longitudinally
throughout the reservoir to permit equalization of internal and external pressure
as imaging fluid is drawn from the reservoir of the pen by capillary action during
use. The sources of contamination in this type of construction include the plasticizers
commonly incorporated in polyvinyl chloride vent tubes, surface finishes applied to
the fibers during processing, the plastic sheath surrounding the fibrous reservoir,
and mold release agents or low molecular weight polymers clinging to the interior
of the pen barrel. All such contaminants may be removed from pen components by rinsing
them in acetone, heptane, etc., or by heating them for a long enough period of time
(e.g., 72 hours at l20°C.) to volatilize, oxidize, or carbonize the contaminants.
Description of Presently Preferred Embodiments
Examples 1-3
[0012] Four identical felt-tipped pens were obtained, each having a 2-mm diameter nib and
generally cylindrical shell enclosing a reservoir of polyester fibers ensheathed in
a polyester film, with a pair of 1-mm o.d. plasticized polyvinyl chloride (PVC) vent
tubes extending the entire length of the reservoir. The length of the reservoir was
9.3 mm and the diameter was 7.8 mm, the total volume thus being approximately 4.4
ml. To the reservoir of the control pen was then added 2.8 ml of a clear C
9-C
11 isoparaffin having an evaporation rate of 0.18 (n-butyl acetate = 1.00; cf. ASTM
Test D3539-76). The pen was mounted in a holder at a 60° angle to the horizontal and
a 100-gram vertical force applied as the pen was moved along a 12.5-mm path while
it was held in contact with a microvoid-containing sheet material of the type described
in Example 1 of U.S. Patent No. 4,299,880
*, leaving a visible image 2 mm wide. After 5 minutes had elapsed, during which time
substantially all of the isoparaffin solvent had evaporated, another stroke of the
pen was made along the same path. After 5 minutes more had elapsed, the image was
still visible, indicating the presence of relatively non-volatile contaminants. The
reservoir was then removed from the pen and squeezed to express as much of the isoparaffin
imaging liquid as possible. The liquid was then injected into a packed chromatography
column (cf. ASTM Test E260-73), which revealed that the level of contaminants was
approximately 50,000 ppm.
[0013] The three other pens were then tested in the same manner as the control, with the
following exceptions:
Example 1 -- PVC vent tubes were removed.
Example 2 -- PVC vent tubes were removed and the receptacle was carefully rinsed with
acetone and dried. Additionally, before filling with isoparaffin, the tubular reservoir
was placed so that the lower end was in a tray of acetone and an absorbent mat of
blown microfibers was in contact with the upper end. As the acetone wicked upward
through the fibers, contaminants were carried with it. After 7 hours the reservoir
was inverted, and a drop of liquid squeezed from the upper end, placed on a microscope
slide, and allowed to evaporate. If significant residue remained on the slide, the
process was continued until a subsequent drop left no perceptible residue after evaporation,
after which the reservoir was air
[0014] * The microvoid layer was approximately 25 micrometers thick; it appears that the contamination
tolerance of an imaging liquid is directly related to the thickness of this layer.
In practice, the thickness may range from about 10+ 2 micrometers to 40+6 micrometers.
The exact nature of the components (especially fillers) of the microvoid layer may
also influence specific results.
dried at least 16 hours. (The major contaminant was found to be glycerol tributyrate.)
Example 3 -- PVC vent tubes were removed; additionally, the receptacle and reservoir
were heated at 120°C. for 72 hours before filling with isoparaffin.
Results are tabulated below:
[0015]

Example 4
[0016] Two felt-tipped pens, substantially identical to those of Examples 1-3, were obtained,
the differences residing in the fact that the reservoir consisted of cellulose acetate
fibers, no vent tubes were present, and the major contaminant was glycerol triacetate.
Using a C
7-C
8 isoparaffin imaging liquid, the testing procedure of Examples 1-3 was repeated. The
evaporation rate of the isoparaffins was 2.8 (n-butyl acetate = 1.00), and the image
duration time was three seconds. In Example 4, prior to introducing the imaging liquid,
the cellulose acetate fibers were removed and replaced with cellulose acetate fiber
having no external lubricant prior to filling with the isoparaffin. Results are tabulated
below:

Examples 5 and 6
[0017] Two pens substantially identical to those employed in Example 4 were obtained, the
difference residing in the use of polypropylene fiber instead of cellulose acetate
fiber in the reservoir. In this case the imaging fluid utilized was diisobutylketone,
which has an evaporation rate of 0.14. It was found that extractable low molecular
weight polypropylene still clung to the surface of the fibers. For Example 5 the shell
and the fibrous reservoir were thoroughly cleansed with 1,1,1-trichloroethane and
dried, following the procedures of Example 2, before adding the imaging fluid. In
Example 6 the polypropylene fibers were replaced with a specially prepared dry, lubricant-free
fibrillated polypropylene fiber. Results are tabulated below:

Example 7
[0018] A woven nylon fiber typewriter ribbon 7.8 mm long, 12.5 mm wide, and 0.12 mm thick,
mounted in a polyphenylene oxide cartridge, was saturated with 5 ml diethyl adipate
imaging fluid, which has an evaporation rate of 0.001. The ribbon was then mounted
on a typewriter, an upper case 10-pitch Gothic H struck on sheet material of the type
used in the preceding examples, and the imaging fluid evaporated. (The normal image
duration of three hours was reduced by heating the imaged sheet material to 100°C.
for about 30 seconds.) Another upper case H was then struck in the same place and
the process repeated until a "ghost" image could be detected after heating. In Example
7, the ribbon was carefully rinsed in 1,1,1-trichloroethane (to remove light mineral
oil, the major contaminant) and dried before being saturated with the diethyl adipate.
Results are tabulated below:

Example 8
[0019] A control stamp pad comprising a 12.7 cm x 7.6 cm x 5 mm cotton felt mounted in a
polypropylene container, was obtained. (This felt was found to contain light mineral
oil lubricant.) The pad was saturated directly with 10 ml of tributyl citrate, which
has an evaporation rate of 10-
6, indicating that the expected duration of an image would be 1.5 years under room
conditions. Example 8 employed a similar pad, differing in that the cotton felt of
the control was replaced with a pure cellulose fiber felt ("100% Cotton Webril Handi-Pad",
supplied by Kendall Company) before saturating with tributyl citrate. A clean 12.7-mm
diameter circular cotton felt stamp was forced firmly into contact with the imaging
fluid-containing pad and then applied to the surface of the sheet material employed
in the preceding examples. Since it was clearly impractical to wait 18 months for
the imaging fluid to evaporate, the imaged sheet material was heated for about 15
seconds at 175°C. after each imaging procedure. Results are tabulated below:
[0020]

The product of Example 8 shows how an image can be retained for substantial periods
of time and "erased" with heat when it no longer serves its purpose, permitting the
sheet material to be repeatedly reused.
1. An imaging device comprising in combination a reservoir incorporated in a receptacle,
imaging fluid in said reservoir, and means for delivering said fluid from said reservoir
to a location where marks are to be applied to a substrate, said imaging fluid consisting
essentially of clear, colorless, innocuous, completely volatilizable liquid having
an evaporation rate on the order of from 20 to 10-6 (n-butyl acetate = 1.00), no more than about 500 ppm of said fluid constituting a
substance having an evaporation rate less than about one-half that of said liquid,
whereby said device can be used repeatedly to apply indicia to the same area of substrates
of the type having a base covered with a relatively light color, opaque, open cell
microvoid-containing layer that is rendered translucent when the microvoids are filled
with a liquid, such repeated use leaving no visible trace of previously applied indicia.
2. The invention of claim 1 wherein no more than about 50 ppm of said fluid constitutes
a substance having an evaporation rate less than one-half that of said liquid.
3. The invention of claim 1 wherein no more than about 5 ppm of said fluid constitutes
a substance having an evaporation rate less than one-half that of said liquid.
4. The invention of claim 1 wherein the reservoir comprises a bundle of fine fibers
enclosed in a tubular film sheath.
5. The invention of claim 4 wherein the device is a pen having, as the delivery means,
a relatively stiff, axially porous elongate polymeric nib, one end of which extends
into said reservoir, the other end extending from the receptacle to provide the means
for applying marks to a substrate.