BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to an ink-jet recording process. More particularly,
it is concerned with an ink-jet recording process for obtaining a color image of high
image quality with a high recording density, by use of a plurality of inks of different
hues.
Related Background Art
[0002] In ink-jet recording processes, the recording is carried out by forming ink droplets
according to various ink-ejection methods as exemplified by an electrostatic attraction
method, a method in which mechanical vibration or displacement is applied to ink by
use of a piezoelectric element, a method in which the pressure generated by heating
ink and forcing it to foam is utilized, and so forth; and flying the droplets so that
a part or the whole of them is adhered on a recording medium such as paper. These
have been noted as recording methods that can perform high-speed printing and multi-color
printing with less noise generation.
[0003] As the inks for ink-jet recording, those chiefly comprised of water are used in view
of safety and recording performance, and polyhydric alcohols are often added thereto
to prevent nozzle clogging and improve ejection stability.
[0004] In instances in which color images are formed by using the ink-jet systems and inks
as mentioned above, generally used are cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y) and/or black
(Bk) inks to produce each corresponding monochrome at given positions on the recording
medium. When neutral tints (mixed colors) thereof are produced, a plurality of ink
droplets having different hues are applied in superposition on the same site or mutually
overlapping sites on the recording medium.
[0005] On the other hand, when shades of recorded images are presented, it is generally
practiced to control the application density of inks (an areal gradation method).
[0006] The recording medium used for forming color images thereon by the above ink-jet systems
may include, in the first place, ordinary paper such as wood free paper and bond paper,
coated paper comprising a support having on its surface a porous ink-absorptive layer
as typified by ink-jet paper (Japanese Patent Laid-open Publication No. 214989/1985),
etc.
[0007] Since, however, with these recording mediums, the recorded images are viewed from
the ink-applying surface (the surface on which inks are applied), they are constituted
in the manner that recording agents may remain on the surface of the ink-absorptive
layer as much as possible, thus having the disadvantage that the durability such as
water resistance and abrasion resistance and storage stability of images are inferior
and the disadvantage that a recorded image cannot have satisfactory gloss.
[0008] Known as a measure to solve such problems is a recording medium disclosed, for example,
in Japanese Patent Laid-open Publication No. 136480/1983 and Japanese Patent Laid-open
Publication No. 136481/1983. This recording medium comprises a support provided thereon
with an ink receiving layer chiefly comprised of a pigment having a refractive index
of 1.58 or less, where the images formed are viewed from the support side. In this
method, difficulties in the various performances such as water resistance at the image-viewing
surface (the surface from which images are viewed) are sufficiently settled. However,
since the ink-receiving layer is chiefly comprised of the pigment and contiguously
laminated on a transparent support, a greater part of the inks having reached to the
support is veiled by the pigment even if the pigment has a refractive index of 1.58
or less, making it impossible to sufficiently enhance the image density at the image-viewing
surface.
[0009] Recently, with progress for higher speed and higher grade recording using ink-jet
recording apparatus, recording mediums also are required to have highly improved recording
performances.
[0010] More specifically, recording mediums have come to be demanded which are greatly superior
to the conventional ones in all of the recording performances such as ink absorbing
property, color-developing property for dyes, light-resistance of recorded images,
resolution, color performance, recorded image density, storage stability, and gloss.
[0011] The present inventors have made researches to provide such recording mediums as stated
above, and, as a result have ever proposed a recording medium having a specific constitution
such that it comprises a liquid-permeable ink-transporting layer and an ink-retaining
layer and the ink-applying surface and the image-viewing surface are in an obverse
and reverse relationship (EP 227 245 A2).
[0012] However, in obtaining color images having a high recording density by using the above
recording medium of prior invention, there occurred the problems that color was insufficiently
formed because of so small quantity of ink droplets applied at the monochrome producing
areas, resulting in color-forming performances being non-uniform to the neutral tint
producing areas.
[0013] More specifically, in formation of a color image by using plural kinds of inks of
different hues, as much as four droplets may be applied in superposition on one site
to develope a neutral tint, while only one ink droplet is applied on one site to develope
unicolor tone. When the number of the ink droplets to be applied varies at every site
like this, the ink penetration through the ink-transporting layer varies at every
site depending on the number of the ink droplets, so that the quantity of the inks
penetrating up to the ink-retaining layer to produce an image varies. Moreover, since
the ink droplets ejected from one ink-jet nozzle in one time are controlled to be
in a small quantity, the inks tend to stagnate in the ink-transporting layer particularly
at the unicolored producing area and therefore the inks may reach to the ink-retaining
layer only in a little quantity. This causes the problems such that there can be obtained
no image with uniform color-forming performance, high density and high resolution.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0014] Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide an ink jet recording
process for readily obtaining a color image of high image quality with a superior
image density, uniform color-forming performance and resolution, with high recording
density, relating to an ink-jet recording process comprising applying ink droplets
from the ink-retaining layer side of a recording medium having at least an ink-transporting
layer and an ink-retaining layer to form on the ink-retaining layer an image that
can be viewed from the ink-retaining layer side.
[0015] The above object can be achieved by the invention described below.
[0016] According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink-jet recording
process comprising applying inks to a recording medium having at least an ink-transporting
layer and an ink retaining layer, from the ink-transporting layer side of said recording
medium, and thereby forming with a plurality of ink dots a unicolored area observable
from the ink-retaining layer side, the dots being formed respectively by application
of at least two ink droplets in superposition.
[0017] According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink-jet
recording process comprising applying inks to a recording medium having at least an
ink-transporting layer and an ink retaining layer, from the ink-transporting layer
side of said recording medium, and thereby forming with a plurality of ink dots in
a density of 200 × 200 DPI (dots per inch) or more a unicolored area observable from
the ink-retaining layer side, the dots being formed respectively by application of
at least two ink droplets in superposition.
[0018] According to a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink
jet recording process comprising applying inks to a recording medium having at least
an ink-transporting layer and an ink-retaining layer from the ink-transporting layer
side of said recording medium, and thereby forming with a plurality of ink dots a
unicolored area and a mixedly colored area which are observable from the ink-retaining
layer side, the dots being formed respectively by applicatlon of at least two ink
droplets in superposition.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0019] The present inventors have found that in instances where images are formed by applying
inks to a recording medium having at least an ink-transporting layer and an ink-retaining
layer, each of plural ink dots which form images may be formed by applying at least
two ink droplets in superposition, whereby the quantity of the inks reaching to the
ink-retaining layer can be made uniform as a whole and moreover the inks applied can
be made to sufficiently reach up to the ink-retaining layer even when the ink droplets
ejected from one ink-jet nozzle in one time are in a small quantity, thus solving
the above problems with great ease.
[0020] More specifically, assume that color images are formed at a recording density of
as high as 200 × 200 DPI (dots per inch) or more in length direction and in breadth
direction each, preferably from 200 × 200 to 600 × 600 DPI, and moreover with a plurality
of inks having different hues, using a recording medium of the type in which images
are not viewed from the ink-applying surface, and the ink-applying surface and the
image-viewing surface are different, and having at least an ink-transporting layer
and an ink-retaining layer. In such an instance, the ink droplets applied at a particular
site of the recording medium are not applied each in an always constant quantity,
and a plurality of inks having different hues are superposed to form the respective
dots, according to image signals and, in a neutral tint area, depending on desired
neutral tints. Therefore the number of ink droplets applied is different in each dot.
Moreover, the ink droplets ejected from one ink-jet nozzle in one time are in a small
quantity for carrying out the recording with a high density as much as 200 × 200 DPI
or more.
[0021] Accordingly, the ink-transporting property and the ink absorption ability of the
ink-transporting layer and the ink-retaining layer, respectively, vary at every site,
causing the problems that some parts bear small quantity of ink droplets applied so
that the inks may not sufficiently reach to the ink-retaining layer, that the desired
neutral tints are not produced, and so forth, resulting in unsatisfactory color-forming
performance, uniformity and resolution of images.
[0022] The above problems would be settled if the physical properties of the ink-transporting
layer and ink-retaining layer could be varied according to the number of the ink droplets
applied at particular sites on the recording medium, but, this is impossible actually.
[0023] In contrast, in the instance of the recording medium of the present invention, having
the constitution as previously described, the respective dots are formed by applying
a plurality of ink droplets in superposition when unicolored areas and neutral tint
(mixedly colored) areas are formed with a plurality of ink dots on the ink-retaining
layer by the inks applied from the ink-transporting layer side. Namely, the number
of the ink droplets applied in superposition to form the respective dots amounts to
at least two, approximating to the number of the ink droplets applied in maximum,
which is four. As a result, the inks that tend to stagnate in the ink-transporting
layer because of the small quantity of inks to be applied can be sufficiently forwarded
to the ink-retaining layer and also, in respect of insufficiency in dot shapes, the
dot shapes are improved. These and other various operation and effect have settled
at a stroke the problems as pointed out above, thus obtaining high quality color images
with a high recording density, having superior color-forming performance for neutral
tints, uniformity in images, etc.
[0024] The present invention will be described below in greater detail by giving preferred
embodiments of the present invention.
[0025] The recording medium used in the present invention is constituted of a substrate
as a support, an ink-retaining layer formed on said substrate and on which inks or
dyes are substantially absorbed and captured to form colors, and an ink-transporting
layer formed on the ink-retaining layer and which has liquid-permeability to inks,
transports the inks applied, to the ink-retaining layer and is not substantially dyed
in itself by the dyes.
[0026] The substrate is not necessarily required if the ink-transporting layer or ink-retaining
layer also have the function as a substrate.
[0027] Any conventionally known materials can be used as the substrate used in the above
recording medium, specifically including plastic films or sheets made of polyester
resin, diacetate resin, triacetate resin, polystyrene resin, polyethylene resin, polycarbonate
resin, polymethacrylate resin, cellophane, celluloid, polyvinyl chloride resin, polyvinylidene
chloride resin, polysulfone resin, polyimide resin or the like, or glass sheet, etc.
There is no particular limitation in the thickness of these substrates, but, in general,
it may range from 1 µm to 5,000 µm, preferably from 3 µm to 1,000 µm, more preferably
from 5 µm to 500 µm.
[0028] Any processing may also be applied to the substrates to be used. For example, it
is possible to apply a desired pattern, appropriate gloss or a silky pattern on the
substrates. It is also possible to select as the substrate those having water resistance,
abrasion resistance, blocking resistance or the like to impart the water resistance,
abrasion resistance, blocking resistance or the like to the image-viewing surface
of the recording medium.
[0029] The ink-transporting layer constituting the recording medium used in the present
invention is required at least to have liquid-permeability. The liquid-permeability
mentioned in the present invention refers to a property of rapidly passing inks and
causing substantially no dyeing in the ink-transporting layer by the dyes contained
in inks. A preferred embodiment for improving the liquid-permeability of the ink-transporting
layer is to have the porous structure wherein cracks or through-holes are present
inside the ink-transporting layer.
[0030] In instances in which the images obtained by the recording medium of the present
invention are viewed from the opposite side to the ink-applying surface as previously
mentioned, the ink-transporting layer may preferably have light diffusibility.
[0031] The ink-transporting layer satisfying the above properties may have any constitution
so long as it has the above properties, but may preferably be chiefly constituted
of particles free from being dyed by the dyes, and a binder.
[0032] Such particles may be any particles so long as they may substantially not be dyed
by the dyes or the like contained in inks. Considering that the dyes in inks are water-soluble
in general, particularly suitable particles in the recording medium used in the present
invention include organic particles of highly hydrophobic thermoplastic resins, thermosetting
resins or the like, as exemplified by powders of resins such as polystyrene, polymethacrylate,
polymethyl methacrylate, elastomers, an ethylene/vinyl acetate copolymer, a styrene/acrylate
copolymer, polyester, polyacrylate, polyvinyl ether, polyamide, polyolefin, polyimide,
guanamine resins, SBR, NBR, MBS, polytetrafluoroethylene, urea, polyvinyl chloride,
polyacrylamide and chloroprene, and at least one of emulsions or suspensions of any
of these is used as desired.
[0033] For the purpose of increasing the whiteness of the ink-transporting layer, there
may be also added white inorganic pigments to the extent that the ink-permeability
of the ink-transporting layer may not be impaired, as exemplified by talc, calcium
carbonate, calcium sulfate, magnesium hydroxide, basic magnesium carbonate, alumina,
synthetic silica, calcium silicate, diatomaceous earth, aluminum hydroxide, clay,
barium sulfate, titanium oxide, zinc oxide, zinc sulfide, satin white, silicon oxide,
lithopone, etc.
[0034] The binder to be used is a material having the function of binding the above particles
each other and/or the particles and ink-retaining layer, and may preferably be free
from being dyed by the dyes like the above particles. Materials preferred as the binder
include any of conventionally known materials as they can be used so long as they
have the above functions, and, for example, there can be used as desired, one or more
of resins such as polyvinyl alcohol, acrylic resins, a styrene/acrylate copolymer,
polyvinyl acetate, an ethylene/vinyl acetate copolymer, starch, polyvinyl butyral,
gelatin, casein, ionomers, gum arabic, carboxymethyl cellulose, polyvinyl pyrrolidone,
polyacrylamide, polyurethane, melamine resins, epoxy resins, styrene-butadiene rubber,
urea resins, phenol resins, α-olefin resins, chloroprene, and nitrile rubbers.
[0035] For the purpose of improving the above functions as the ink-transporting layer, various
additives as exemplified by surface active agents, penetrants, fluorescent dyes, coloring
dyes, etc. may optionally be further added to the ink-transporting layer.
[0036] Mixing ratio (weight ratio) of the above particles and binders may preferably be
in the range of particles/binder = from 1/5 to 50/1, more preferably in the range
of from 1/3 to 20/1. In this mixing ratio, an excessively large proportion for the
binder may make less the cracks or through-holes in the ink-transporting layer, resulting
in a decrease in ink absorption effect. In the mixing ratio also, an excessively large
proportion for the particles may cause insufficient binding between particles and
particles or the ink-retaining layer and particles, resulting in insufficiency in
the strength of the ink-transporting layer and making it impossible to form the ink-transporting
layer.
[0037] The thickness of the ink-transporting layer depends on the quantity of ink droplets,
but may range from 1 to 300 µm, preferably from 2 to 200 µm, and more preferably from
3 to 80 µm.
[0038] Next, the ink-retaining layer which is non-porous and capable of substantially capture
inks or dyes to produce colors, is a layer to absorb and capture the dyes in inks
having passed through the ink-transporting layer, and retain them substantially permanently.
[0039] The ink-retaining layer is required to have stronger absorptivity than the ink-transporting
layer. This is because if the absorptivity of the ink-retaining layer is weaker than
the absorptivity of the ink-transporting layer, the inks applied on the surface of
the ink-transporting layer may stagnate in the ink-transporting layer when they pass
through the ink-transporting layer and the lead of inks reach the ink-retaining layer,
following that the inks penetrate and diffuse too much at the interface between the
ink-transporting layer and ink-retaining layer in the lateral direction inside the
ink-transporting layer. As a result, the resolution of recorded images is lowered,
which prevents formation of recorded images of high quality.
[0040] In instances in which the recorded images are viewed from the opposite side to the
recording surface as previously mentioned, the ink-retaining layer may preferably
be light-transmissive.
[0041] The ink-retaining layer satisfying the above requirements may preferably be constituted
of light-transmissive resins capable of adsorbing the dyes and/or light-transmissive
resins having solubility and swelling property to inks.
[0042] For example, when a water based ink containing acidic dyes or direct dyes as the
dyes is used, the ink-retaining layer may preferably be constituted of resins having
adsorptivity to the above dyes, as exemplified by water-soluble or hydrophilic polymers
having the swelling property to the water-based ink. There is no particular limitation
in the materials constituting the ink-retaining layer so long as they have the functions
of absorbing and capturing inks, can form a non-porous layer, and are light-transmissive.
[0043] The thickness of the ink-retaining layer may be satisfactory if it is enough to absorb
and capture ink, and it depends on the quantity of ink droplets. It, however, may
range from 1 to 70 µm, preferably 2 to 50 µm, and more preferably from 3 to 20 µm.
[0044] The materials constituting the ink-retaining layer may be any materials so long as
they can absorb water-based inks and retain the dyes contained in inks, but may preferably
be prepared from water-soluble or hydrophilic polymers considering that inks are
mainly water-based inks. Such water-soluble or hydrophilic polymers may include, for
example, natural resins such as albumin, gelatin, casein, starch, cationic starch,
gum arabic and sodium alginate; synthetic resins such as carboxymethyl cellulose,
hydroxyethyl cellulose, polyamide, polyacrylamide, polyethyleneimine, polyvinyl pyrrolidone,
quaternized polyvinylpyrrolidone, polyvinyl pyridinium halide, melamine resins, phenol
resins, alkyd resins, polyurethane, polyvinyl alcohol, ionically modified polyvinyl
alcohol, polyester and sodium polyacrylate; preferably, hydrophilic polymers made
water-insoluble by cross-linking of any of these polymers, hydrophilic and water insoluble
polymer complexes comprising two or more polymers and hydrophilic and water-insoluble
polymers having hydrophilic segments; etc. For the purpose of improving the above
functions as the ink-retaining layer, various additives as exemplified by surface
active agents, water-resisting agents, organic and inorganic pigments, etc. may optionally
be further added to the ink-retaining layer.
[0045] Methods of forming the ink-retaining layer and the ink-transporting layer on the
substrate may preferably include a method in which any of the materials set out in
the above as preferred examples are dissolved or dispersed in a suitable solvent to
prepare a coating solution, and the resulting coating solution is applied on the substrate
by a known coating process such as roll coating, rod bar coating, spray coating or
air knife coating, followed immediately by drying, or alternatively a method in which
any of the above materials are coated on the substrate by hot melt coating, or a sheet
is separately formed from any of the above materials in advance and the resulting
sheet is laminated on the substrate.
[0046] When the ink-retaining layer is provided on the substrate, it is preferred to strengthen
the adhesion between the substrate and the ink-retaining layer by forming, for example.
an anchor coat layer, to eliminate gap therebetween.
[0047] Presence of a gap between the substrate and ink-retaining layer may cause irregular
reflection on the recorded-image-viewing surface to substantially lower the image
optical density, undesirably.
[0048] In the recording process of the present invention, the inks to be applied for the
formation of images on the specific recording medium as described above may be those
known by themselves, as exemplified by water-soluble dyes typified by direct dyes,
acidic dyes, basic dyes, reactive dyes, food colors, etc., which are particularly
suited as inks for the ink jet system. Those preferred as giving images that may satisfy
the fixing performance, color-forming performance, sharpness, stability light-resistance
and other required performances when used in combination with the above recording
medium may preferably include, for example, direct dyes such as:
C.I. Direct Black 17, 19, 32, 51, 71, 108, 146;
C.I. Direct Blue 6, 22, 25, 71, 86, 90, 106, 199;
C.I. Direct Red 1, 4, 17, 28, 83;
C.I. Direct Yellow 12, 24, 26, 86, 98, 142;
C.I. Direct Orange 34, 39, 44, 46, 60;
C.I. Direct Violet 47, 48;
C.I. Direct Brown 109; and
C.I. Direct Green 59;
and acidic dyes such as
C.I. Acid Black 2, 7, 24, 26, 31, 52, 63, 112, 118;
C.I. Acid Blue 9, 22, 40, 59, 93, 102, 104, 113, 117, 120, 167, 229, 234;
C.I. Acid Red 1, 6, 32, 37, 51, 52, 80, 85, 87, 92, 94, 115, 180, 256, 317, 315;
C.I. Acid Yellow 11, 17, 23, 25, 29, 42, 61, 71;
C.I. Acid Orange 7, 19; and
C.I. Acid Violet 49.
Besides these, also usable are;
C.I. Basic Black 2;
C.I. Basic Blue 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29;
C.I. Basic Red 1, 2, 9, 12, 13, 14, 37;
C.I. Basic Violet 7, 14, 27;
C.I. Food Black 1, 2; etc.
[0049] The above examples of dyes are those particularly preferable for the inks applicable
in the recording process of the present invention, and the dyes for use in the inks
used in the present invention are by no means limited to these.
[0050] Such water-soluble dyes are used generally in the proportion of about 0.1 to 20 %
by weight in conventional inks, and may be used also in the same proportion in the
present invention.
[0051] The solvent suitable for use in the inks used in the present invention is water or
a mixed solvent of water with a water-soluble organic solvent. Particularly suited
is a mixed solvent of water with a water-soluble organic solvent, containing as a
water-soluble organic solvent a polyhydric alcohol having the effect of preventing
the drying of inks. As for the water, preferred is not to use the ordinary water containing
various ions but to use deionized water. The water-soluble organic solvent used by
mixing it with water may include, for example, alkyl alcohols having 1 to 4 carbon
atoms such as methyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol, n-propyl alcohol, isopropyl alcohol,
n-butyl alcohol, sec-butyl alcohol, tert-butyl alcohol and isobutyl alcohol; amides
such as dimethylformamide and dimethylacetamide; ketones or ketoalcohols such as acetone
and diacetone alcohol; ethers such as tetrahydrofuran and dioxane; polyalkylene glycols
such as polyethylene glycol and polypropylene glycol; alkylene glycols comprising
an alkylene group having 2 to 6 carbon atoms, such as ethylene glycol, propylene glycol,
butylene glycol, triethylene glycol, 1,2,6-hexanetriol, thiodiglycol, hexylene glycol
and diethylene glycol; glycerol; lower alkyl ethers of polyhydric alcohols, such as
ethylene glycol methyl (or ethyl) ether, diethylene glycol methyl (or ethyl) ether
and triethylene glycol monomethyl (or ethyl) ether; N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone, 1,3-dimethyl-2-imidazolidinone,
etc. Of these many water-soluble organic solvents, preferred are polyhydric alcohols
such as diethylene glycol and lower alkyl ethers of polyhydric alcohols such as triethylene
glycol monomethyl (or ethyl) ether.
[0052] The above water soluble organic solvents may be contained in the inks generally in
an amount of from 0 to 95 % by weight, preferably from 10 to 80 % by weight, and more
preferably from 20 to 50 % by weight, based on the total weight of inks.
[0053] In addition to the above components, the inks used in the present invention may optionally
also contain surface active agents, viscosity modifiers, surface tension modifiers,
etc.
[0054] The ink-jet systems employed in the present invention are described, for example,
in IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications, Vol. JA-13, No. 1, March 1977, and
Nikkei Electronics, the April 19, 1976 issue, the January 29, 1973 issue and the May
6, 1974 issue. The systems described in these are suited for the process of the present
invention.
[0055] It is also possible to effectively use the ink jet system described in Japanese Patent
Laid-open Publication No. 59936/1979 in which the ink subjected to the action of heat
energy undergoes an abrupt volume change and the ink is ejected from nozzles by the
action attributable to this change in state.
[0056] The ink-jet recording process of the present invention, comprising carrying out the
recording by using the specific recording medium as previously described and the inks
and ink-jet system as described above, is characterized in that each of plural ink
dots that form unicoloed areas and mixedly colored areas on the recording medium is
formed by a plurality of ink droplets applied in superposition from the ink-transporting
layer side. More specifically, in the instance where color images with a high recording
density are formed particularly by using a plurality of inks having different hues,
only one droplet of the ink of the corresponding color is applied to the part at which
one of the three primary colors is presented in monochromes. To obtain neutral tints,
two to four ink droplets, depending on color hues, are applied, and thus the quantity
of the inks to be applied varies for every dot. As a result, the quantity of the inks
reaching to the ink-retaining layer will also vary depending on the properties of
the recording medium to be used, and moreover the inks ejected from one nozzle in
one time is in a small quantity, so that there have been involved the problem that
the inks form color with insufficiency, the inks are mixed with insufficiency, or
the dot shapes are unsatisfactory. However, the inks can be fed to the ink-retaining
layer in a sufficient quantity and with substantial uniformity as a whole if, for
example, the number of the ink droplets applied is made to be two or more even at
the unicolored areas, approximating to, or making same with, the number of the ink
droplets applied in maximum, namely four. Thus, good color formation, mixing of colors,
dot shapes and so forth can be achieved without causing any problems mentioned above.
[0057] When the respective dots are formed on the recording surface of the recording medium,
any methods may be employed for applying two or more ink droplets in superposition,
without any particular limitation. There may be used, as an example, a method in which
the nozzles for ejecting inks of respective colors are provided in plurality for each
color, and a plurality of, for example, two, three or four ink droplets are applied
at the same site or in the vicinity thereof, and a method in which ink-jet nozzles
are scanned twice or more.
[0058] However, as the above methods may possibly complicate an apparatus or make troublesome
the handling thereof, preferred is a method in which one or more nozzles common to
the respective colors are provided and an ink common to the respective colors are
ejected through this nozzle or nozzles. Here, a colorless ink may preferably be used
as the common ink.
[0059] The colorless ink mentioned in the present invention refers to water, an organic
solvent, or a mixture of these, but preferred is a liquid having the same liquid properties
as a liquid medium for the inks as described above. Particularly preferred is a liquid
having the composition such that only dyes have been removed from the inks of respective
colors. Employment of such colorless ink which is common to the respective colors
can bring about no complicacy of apparatus or no troublesomeness in operation, without
any limitation in the order of the shooting of inks, and makes it possible to freely
feed inks not only to the unicolored areas but also to the intermediary areas at which
two or more ink droplets are applied.
[0060] The above colorless ink may not be perfectly colorless, and may be colored in pale
tone to a certain extent. Employment of such an ink of pale color makes it possible
to correct color tone of the whole of the images obtained. For example, in instances
where proper color images are to be formed according to information signals from an
original copy excessively strong in a particular color as a whole, a pale color ink
that is in a complementary relationship may be used as the above colorless ink, thereby
making some good use for the correction of tone of the whole.
[0061] In the recording process of the present invention as described above, where the ink-applying
surface and the viewing surface are in obverse and reverse relationship, it is necessary
to use an apparatus that can print mirror image letters when letters are printed.
However, in the recording medium used in the present invention, it is also possible
to make transparent the ink-transporting layer by post-treatment such as heating
to view images by a transmission system. Accordingly, in such an instance, letters
or the like can be recorded in an ordinary state.
[0062] According to the process of the present invention constituted as described above,
the color images formed have superior effect that has not been hitherto obtained,
when the recorded images are viewed from the opposite surface to the ink-applying
surface, i.e., from the ink-retaining layer side or substrate side, although it is
not impossible to view the recorded images from the surface on which the recording
is performed with use of ink as in the case of ordinary paper.
[0063] In particular, of the color images formed, the part of the hue other than the monochromes
corresponding to the three primary colors, in other words, the area at which a plurality
of primary color inks are applied and neutral tints thereof are produced can have
color tones sufficiently matched to the desired color tones, exhibiting superior color
performances. For example, at areas in which cyan ink and yellow ink are color-mixed,
neutral tints corresponding to the mixing ratio thereof can be sufficiently exhibited.
The same applies also in the areas in which cyan ink and magenta ink, or magenta ink
and yellow ink are mixed to form color. Accordingly, the color images according to
the process of the present invention can achieve good color-forming performances
as a whole over the higher density areas to the lower density areas, and can sufficiently
satisfy the color reproducibility from an original copy.
[0064] Also, in a instance which is not in accordance with the present invention, the inks
are applied in small amounts at areas having a lower image density, so that it has
sometimes occurred that the inks do not sufficiently reach to the ink-retaining layer,
resulting in unsatisfactory continuity of density. However, according to the present
invention, even the inks applied in a small quantity can sufficiently reach to the
ink-retaining layer to have superior density continuity from pale colors to dense
colors.
[0065] In contrast, in a process which is not in accordance with the present invention,
the color-forming of neutral tints at the mixdly colored area and the color-forming
at the low density area are unstable with no color-forming of the neutral tints corresponding
to the quantity of the inks to be mixed, resulting in insufficient reproducibility
for the colors of an original copy and unclear color tones as a whole for the color
images formed. This remarkably tends to occur particularly at the low density areas
to lack the continuity of density.
[0066] Decline of resolution can also be very small as compared with an instance where inks
are applied in a quantity corresponding to plural droplets by one droplet in order
to apply plural minute ink droplets at the same site of the recording surface or in
the vicinity thereof. Namely, the process of the present invention is suited for forming
images having a high recording density of 200 × 200 DPI or more.
[0067] The effect as stated above is presumed by the present inventors to be obtainable
because, even at the areas where inks of two or more colors are mixed or the areas
where inks are applied only in a small quantity of ink, the ink applied by a second
droplet re-dissolves the inks stagnating in the ink-transporting layer near the ink-retaining
layer and the dyes retained in the ink-retaining layer, so that the dyes are sufficiently
mixed and these inks and dyes are sufficiently transported to the ink-retaining layer.
[0068] In instances in which the light-transmissive substrate is used as a substrate, the
gloss, water resistance, weatherability and abrasion resistance can be further imparted
to the recorded images in addition to the above effect originating from the light-transmitting
property possessed by the substrate.
[0069] The color images obtained by the process of the present invention are greatly superior
in the optical density of recorded images and the operation efficiency at the time
of the recorded-image formation.
[0070] The present invention will be specifically described on the bases of Reference Examples,
Examples and Comparative Examples. In the following description, "%" or "part(s)"
are by weight unless particularly mentioned.
Reference Example 1
(Preparation of recording medium)
[0071] Using polyethylene terephthalate film (75 µm thick; available from Toray Industries,
Inc.) as a light-transmissive substrate, Composition A shown below was coated on this
substrate by means of a bar coater to give a dried coat thickness of 8 µm, followed
by drying in a drying oven for 10 minutes at 140°C.
Composition A
[0072] Cationically modified polyvinyl alcohol (PVA-C 318-2A; available from Kuraray Co.,
Ltd.; a 10 % aqueous solution) 50 parts
Water-soluble polyester type polyurethane (Elastron E-37; available from Dai-ichi
Kogyo Seiyaku Co., Ltd.; a 25 % aqueous solution) 2.5 parts
Catalyst (Elastron Catalyst 32; available from Dai-ichi Kogyo Seiyaku Co., Ltd.) 0.2
part
[0073] Composition B shown below was further coated thereon by means of a bar coater to
give a dried coat thickness of 60 µm, followed by drying in a drying oven for 5 minutes
at 140°C.
Composition B
[0074] Polymethyl methacrylate resin (Microsphere M-100; available from Matsumoto Yushi-Seiyaku
Co., Ltd.; 100 parts
Acrylic resin (Boncoat 4001; available from Dainippon Ink & Chemicals, Incorporated;
solid content: 50 %) 20 parts
Sodium dioctyl sulfosuccinate (Pelex OT-P; available from Kao Corporation; solid content:
70 %) 0.5 part
Water 50 parts
[0075] The recording medium thus obtained in this Reference Example was white and opaque.
Reference Example 2
(Preparation of recording medium)
[0076] Using as a light-transmissive substrate the polyethylene terephthalate film used
in Reference Example 1, Composition C shown below was coated on this substrate by
means of a bar coater to give a dried coat thickness of 10 µm, followed by drying
in a drying oven for 12 minutes at 100°C.
Composition C
[0077] Polyphenylacetoacetal (available from Sekisui Chemical Co., Ltd.; a 10 % water/ethanol/butanol
solution)
[0078] Composition D shown below was further coated thereon by means of a bar coater to
give a dried coat thickness of 40 µm, followed by drying in a drying oven for 10 minutes
at 140°C.
Composition D
[0079] Urea resin (Organic Filler; available from Nippon Kasei Chemical Co., Ltd.) 100
parts
Butyral resin (S-lec BH-3, available from Sekisui Chemical Co., Ltd.) 50 parts
Sodium dioctyl sulfosuccinate (Pelex OT-P; available from Kao Corporation; solid content:
70 %) 2 parts
Ethylene glycol monoethyl ether (available from Kishida Chemical Co., Ltd.) 1,000
parts
[0080] The recording medium thus obtained in Reference Example was white and opaque.
Example 1
[0081] Using five kinds of inks shown below, the recording as shown below was performed
on the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1, by use of a recording apparatus
comprising an on-demand type ink-jet recording head that ejects inks by the aid of
the pressure of bubbles generated with a heat resistance element.
Colorless ink
[0082] Diethylene glycol 15 parts
Water 85 parts
Yellow ink
[0083] C.I.; Acid Yellow 86 2 parts
Diethylene glycol 15 parts
Water 85 parts
Magenta ink
[0084] C.I. Acid Red 92 2 parts
Triethylene glycol 15 parts
Water 85 parts
Cyan Ink
[0085] C.I. Direct Blue 9 2 parts
Diethylene glycol 15 parts
Nonionic surface active agent 0.5 part
Water 85 parts
Black ink
[0086] C.I. Direct Black 19 2 parts
Polyethylene glycol #300 15 parts
Water 85 parts
(1) Recording was made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI (dots per inch), and subsequently recording was
made three times with the same kind of inks at the same site (in total, 4 droplets
of the same kind of inks were applied at the same site).
(2) Recording was made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI, and subsequently recording was made twice with
the same kind of inks at the same site (in total, 3 droplets of the same kind of inks
were applied at the same site).
(3) Recording was made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with
the same kind of inks at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of the same kind of inks
were applied at the same site).
Example 2
[0087] The recording as shown below was performed on the recording medium of the above Reference
Example 1.
(1) Recording was made once with black ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI, and subsequently recording was made three times
with colorless ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) at the same site (in total, 4 droplets
of inks were applied at the same site).
(2) Recording was made once with black ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI, and subsequently recording was made twice with
colorless ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) at the same site (in total, 3 droplets of
inks were applied at the same site).
(3) Recording was made once with black ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give
a recording density of 200 × 200 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with
colorless ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of
inks were applied at the same site).
Example 3
[0088] Recording was performed on the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2
in the same manner as in Example 1 except for the recording density of 300 × 300 DPI
and to droplet diameter of 40 µm.
Example 4
[0090] Recording was performed on the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2
in the same manner as in Example 2 except for the recording density of 300 × 300 DPI
and the droplet diameter of 40 µm.
Example 5
[0091] Recording was performed on the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1
in the same manner as in Example 1 except for the recording density of 400 × 400 DPI
and the droplet diameter of 30 µm.
Example 6
[0092] Recording was performed on the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1
in the same manner as in Example 2 except for the recording density of 400 × 400 DPI
and the droplet diameter of 30 µm.
Comparative Example 1
[0093] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1, recording was made once
with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 60 µm) so as to give a recording density of 200 ×
200 DPI.
Comparative Example 2
[0094] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1, recording was made once
with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 76 µm) so as to give a recording density of 200 ×
200 DPI.
Comparative Example 3
[0095] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, recording was made once
with black ink (droplet diameter: 40 µm) so as to give a recording density of 300
× 300 DPI.
Comparative Example 4
[0096] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, recording was made once
with black ink (droplet diameter: 50 µm) so as to give a recording density of 300
× 300 DPI.
Comparative Example 5
[0097] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1, recording was made once
with black ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) so as to give a recording density of 400
× 400 DPI.
Comparative Example 6
[0098] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 1, recording was made once
with black ink (droplet diameter: 38 µm) so as to give a recording density of 400
× 400 DPI.
[0099] In regard to the records thus obtained in Examples and Comparative Examples, tests
and evaluation were carried out to examine whether or not they are fit for what are
aimed in the present invention according to methods (1) and (2) shown below.
(1) Image optical density (O.D.) was measured on ink recorded areas from the ink-applying
surface side (A) and the image-viewing surface side (B) with use of Macbeth Densitometer
RD 918.
(2) In respect of the resolution of images, the ink dots recorded on the recording
mediums were observed by use of an optical microscope, and it was evaluated according
to a four rank system to regard the best as AA, and the following as A, B and C in
order.
[0100] Overall evaluation was made based on the results of the above. Results obtained are
shown in Table 1.

Example 7
[0101] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, recording was made once
with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) so as to give a recording density of 400 ×
400 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with the same kind of ink at the
same site (in total, 2 droplets of the same kind of inks were applied at the same
site). Recording was further made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) in
the area contiguous to the above recording area so as to give a recording density
of 400 × 400 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with magenta ink (droplet
diameter: 30 µm) at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of different kind of inks
were applied at the same site).
Example 8
[0102] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, recording was made once
with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) so as to give a recording density of 400 ×
400 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with colorless ink (droplet diameter:
30 µm) at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of inks were applied at the same site).
Recording was further made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) in the area
contiguous to the above recording area so as to give a recording density of 400 ×
400 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with magenta ink (droplet diameter:
30 µm) at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of different kind of inks were applied
at the same site).
Comparative Example 7
[0103] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, recording was made once
with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) so as to give a recording density of 400 ×
400 DPI. Recording was further made once with cyan ink (droplet diameter: 30 µm) in
the area contiguous to the above recording area so as to give a recording density
of 400 × 400 DPI, and subsequently recording was made once with magenta ink (droplet
diameter: 30 µm) at the same site (in total, 2 droplets of different kind of inks
were applied at the same site).
[0104] In regard to the records thus obtained in Examples and Comparative Examples, tests
and evaluation to examine whether or not they are fit for what are aimed in the present
invention were carried out according to method (3) shown below. Results of evaluation
are shown in Table 2 below.
[0105] (3) In respect of the color-forming uniformity of images, the mutually adjacent unicolored
area and mixedly colored area were observed visually, and it was evaluated according
to a four rank system to regard the best as AA, and the following as A, B and C in
order.

Example 9
[0106] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, full color images were
formed according to the process of the present invention so as to give the following,
respectively.
(1) 200 × 200 DPI, ink droplet diameter: 60 µm
(2) 300 × 300 DPI, ink droplet diameter: 40 µm
(3) 400 × 400 DPI, ink droplet diameter: 30 µm
Comparative Example 8
[0107] On the recording medium of the above Reference Example 2, full color images were
formed according to the conventional process (only one ink droplet was applied to
the unicolored area) so as to give (1) to (3) of Example 9.
[0108] In regard to the records thus obtained in Examples and Comparative Examples, tests
and evaluation to examine whether or not they are fit for what are aimed in the present
invention were carried out according to method (4) shown below. Results of evaluation
are shown in Table 3 below.
[0109] (4) The color-forming uniformity of the whole images were observed visually, and
was evaluated according to a four rank system to regard the best as AA, and the following
as A, B and C in order.
