[0001] The present invention relates to a heat-sensitive recording medium, in particular,
to a heat-sensitive recording medium which is excellent in dot reproducibility and
in adhesion between a support and a heat-sensitive recording layer.
[0002] A heat-sensitive recording system is advantageous in that no development/fixing step
is necessary, and maintenance for hardware is easy. Accordingly, this system has been
recently and widely used in recording television images and in recording media for
various printers, facsimile machines, and laboratory instruments. The properties necessary
for these recording media are dependent on their applications. For example, in order
for a halftone recording to be adequately done, a heat-sensitive recording medium
must have good dot-reproducibility.
[0003] As support for heat-sensitive recording media, various sheet supports (e.g., paper)
and various film supports (e.g., synthetic resin films) have been used.
[0004] The dot-reproducibility and color-developability of paper are generally not good,
although it is inexpensive. Film supports do not have this deficiency, but their adhesion
to aqueous coating solution which forms a heat-sensitive recording layer is poor,
in that the heat-sensitive recording layer is easily peeled from the support.
[0005] Methods have been proposed to improve the adhesion of the recording layer to the
synthetic-resin film support. One is to apply corona discharge to the film; the other
is to coarsen the film surface. The former method does not adequately improve adhesion;
the latter reduces the smoothness of the film and thereby renders dot-reproducibility
insufficient.
[0006] The objective of the present invention is to provide a heat-sensitive recording medium
that is excellent both in dot-reproducibility and in adhesion of a heat-sensitive
recording layer to a support.
[0007] This objective has been accomplished by the present invention, i.e. by the finding
that a heat-sensitive recording medium exhibiting the desired properties can be attained
by making a support from a synthetic resin and providing an ionomer resin between
the support and the heat-sensitive recording layer. The present invention has been
completed on the basis of this finding.
[0008] As a synthetic resin to be used as a support, any known resin (polyethylene, polypropylene,
polyethylene terephthalate, polycarbonate, polystyrene, nylon, cellulose diacetate,
cellulose triacetate, etc.) can be used.
If necessary, the support used according to the present invention can be subjected
to corona discharge, in order to improve its adhesion to an ionomer resin layer to
be provided thereon. The support also may be laminated with a sheet of paper or other
sheet materials on the side opposite to that where the ionomer resin layer is to be
formed.
[0009] Any kinds of ionomer resins can be used in the present invention. Preferable ionomer
resins are copolymers of an α -olefin and an α , β -unsaturated carboxylic acid, wherein
ionic crosslinking is formed with one or more kinds of metal ions.
[0010] The α -olefins usable for forming the copolymers of the ionomer resins have a general
formula: RCH=CH₂ . The group R means a hydrogen atom or an alkyl group. The alkyl
group preferably has a carbon number of 1 to 8. Preferable olefins include ethylene,
propylene, butene-1, pentene-1, hexene-1, heptene-1, 3-methylbutene-1 and 4-methylpentene-1.
[0011] Preferable α ,β -unsaturated carboxylic acids are those of C3 to C8 and include acrylic
acid, methacrylic acid, ethacrylic acid, itaconic acid, maleic acid and fumaric acid,
and their esters(e.g., methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate, methyl methacrylate, n-butyl
methacrylate, dimethyl fumarate, diethyl itaconate and dimethyl maleate).
[0012] The α -olefins and α , β -unsaturated carboxylic acids may be used as a combination
of more than one compound.
[0013] Metal ions suitable for producing the ionomer resins include those having a valence
of one to three. Suitable mono valent metal ions include Na⁺ , K⁺ , Li⁺ , Cs⁺ , Ag⁺
, and Hg⁺ . Divalent metal ions include Be⁺⁺ , Mg⁺⁺ , Ca⁺⁺ , Sr⁺⁺ , Ba⁺⁺, Cu⁺⁺ , Cd⁺⁺
, Hg⁺⁺ , Sn⁺⁺ , Pb⁺⁺ , Fe⁺⁺ , Co⁺⁺ , Ni⁺⁺ , and Zn⁺⁺ . Trivalent metal ions include
Al⁺⁺⁺ , Sc⁺⁺⁺ , Fe⁺⁺⁺ , and Y⁺⁺⁺. It is preferable that the metal ion be Na⁺ , Mg⁺⁺
or Zn⁺⁺ in the present invention.
[0014] If necessary, the ionomer resin layer may be subjected to corona discharge to improve
its adhesion to a heat-sensitive recording layer to be formed thereon.
[0015] The ionomer resin layer is usually laminated onto the support as follows:
(1) Anchor treatment is made on the support film (e.g., biaxially oriented polypropylene)
and an ionomer-resin layer is laminated onto the film either by extrusion or by coating,
in a known manner, either the ionomer resin solution or the emulsion.
(2) In the production of a support film (e.g., biaxially oriented polypropylene),
an ionomer resin and a polypropylene resin are extruded together to form an integrated
film, an ionomer resin is extruded to laminate a resin (e.g., polypropylene resin)
before orientation of the film, or either an ionomer resin solution or an emulsion
is coated onto the film before orientation is made.
[0016] Additives usually used for resins (e.g., polypropylene resin, ionomer resin) including
antioxidants, antistatic agents, slip agents, etc., may be used.
[0017] Heat-sensitive recording layers usable in the present invention may be of any type,
e.g. of a leuco-type, chelate-type, and diazo-type. The recording layer contains a
coloring compound and a binder wherein the coloring compound is dispersed and feed
throughout.
[0018] A leuco-type recording medium contains, as a coloring compound, a colorless-to-pale
leuco compound and an organic acid. The leuco compound develops color when it reacts
with the organic acid.
[0019] The leuco compounds include triphenylmethane, triphenylmethane phthalide, fluoran,
leuco-auramine, diphenylmethane, phenothiazine, spiropyran, indoline, indigo and their
derivatives. Preferable leuco compounds
include crystal violet lactone, 3-diethylamino-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran, 3-(N-ethyl-p-toluidino)-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran,
3-diethyl-amino-6-methyl-7-(o- or p-dimethylanilino) fluoran, 3-pyperidino-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran,
3-(N-cyclohexyl-N-methylamino)-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran, 3-diethylamino-7-(o-chloroanilino)
fluoran, 3-diethylamino-7-(m-trifluoromethylanilino) fluoran, 3-diethylamino-6-methyl-chlorofluoran,
3-diethylamino-6-methylfluoran, 3-(N-isoamyl-N-ehtylamino)-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran
or 3-dibutylamino-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran.
[0020] Organic acids usable with the leuco compounds are these which are meltable by heat
and develop color upon contact with the leuco compounds. The organic acids include
various phenolic compounds, aliphatic acids or aromatic carboxylic acids. They include
gallic acid, salicylic acid, 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoic acid, p-hydroxybenzoic acid, m-hydroxybenzoic
acid, 2-hydroxy-p-toluic acid, 3,5-xylenol, thymol, p-tert-butylphenol, 4-hydroxyphenoxide,
methyl-4-hydroxybenzoate, 4-hydroxy-acetophenone, α -naphthol, β -naphthol, catechol,resorcinol,
hydroquinone, 4-tert-octyl-catechol, 4,4'-sec-butylidenephenol, 2,2'-dihydroxydiphenyl,
2,2'-methylene-bis (4-methyl-6-tert-butylphenol). 2,2'-bis (4-hydroxyphenyl) propane
(namely, bisphenol A), 4,4'-isopropylidenebis (2-tert-butylphenol), pyrogallol, phloroglucin,
phloroglucin carboxylic acid, p-methylphenol, p-phenylphenol, 4,4'-cyclohexylidenediphenol,
4,4'-isopropylidene-dicatechol, 4,4'-benzylidenediphenol, 4,4'-isopropylidene bis
(2-chlorophenol), 3-phenylsalicylic acid, 3,5-di-tert-butylsalicylic acid, 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoic
acid, a gallic ester, a salycilate, a p-hydroxybenzoate, a 4-hydroxyphthalate, 2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-(3'-hydroxyphenyl)
propane or 4,4'-dihydroxy-3,3'-diisopropyldiphenyl-2,2'-propane.
[0021] The chelate-type heat-sensitive recording layer contains, as a coloring compound,
(a) a heavy- or noble-metal salt of an organic acid and (b) an organic reducing agent,
a sulfur compound, or an amino compound. Either of the compounds (a) and (b), or both,
are melted by heat and the two react with each other to form a chelate compound and
develop color. Possible combinations of (a) and (b) include:
[0022] An iron salt of a long-chain aliphatic acid (e.g., ferric stearate or ferric myristate)
and phenols (e.g., tannic acid, gallic acid or ammonium salicylate); a heavy-metal
salt of an organic acid (e.g., Ni, Co, Pb, Cu, Fe, Mg, or Ag salt of acetic acid;
stearic acid or palmitic acid), and an alkaline earth-metal sulfide (e.g., CaS, SrS
or BaS) or an organic chelating agent (e.g., S-diphenylcarbazide or diphenylcarbazone);
a heavy-metal oxalate (e.g., Ag, Pb, Hg, Th salt of oxalic acid) and a sulfur compound
(e.g., Na tetrathionate, thiosulfate soda or thiourea); a noble-metal salt of an organic
acid (e.g., silver oxalate or mercury oxalate) and an organic polyhydroxy compound
(e.g., polyhydroxy alcohol, glycerine or glycol);a noble-metal salt of an organic
acid (e.g., silver behenate or silver stearate) and an aryl organic reducing agent
(e.g., protocatechuic acid, spiroindane or hydroquinone); a ferric salt of an aliphatic
acid (e.g., ferric stearate) and an aryl polyhydroxy compound (e.g., 3,4-dihydroxytetraphenylmethane);
a metal salt of an organic acid (e.g., silver behenate or silver acid phthalate) and
a cyclic organic reducing agent (e.g., protocatechuic acid, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid,
4-methoxy-1-hydroxynaphthalene, hydroquinone or catechol); a ferric salt of an aliphatic
acid (e.g., ferric palargonate or ferric laurate) and thiosemicarbazide or isothiosemicarbazide
derivative); a lead salt of an organic acid' (e.g., lead caproate, lead pelargonate
or lead behenate) and a thiourea derivative (e.g., ethylene thiourea or N-dodecylthiourea);
a heavy-metal salt of a higher aliphatic acid (e.g., ferric stearate or copper stearate)
and a zinc salt of a disubstituted dithiocarbamic acid derivative (e.g., zinc dibutylthiocarbamate);
a metal salt (e.g. nickel acetate) and a sulfur-releasing compound (e.g., thiooxalic
acid or thioacetamide); a metal salt (e.g., nickel stearate, cobalt behenate or gold
chloride) and N,N'-substituted rubeanic acid; a bismuth salt (e.g., borate, oxychloride,
salicylate or benzoate) and a tin compound, as a releasing agent (e.g., tin sulfide
or tin hydroxide); a Grignard-type organic-metal compound and a sulfur compound (e.g.,
thiuram, thiouran or thioamide).
[0023] The diazo-type heat-sensitive recording layer contains, as a coloring compound, the
following two systems:
(1) a diazosulfonate, which is stable at room temperature, and a coupler. The diazosulfonate
is made to react with the coupler by light or heat to cause color-development reaction
and form a diazo dye.
(2) a hydrophobic diazonium compound, a coupler, and a heat-meltable basic compound.
The diazonium compound (e.g., diazonium salt) is heated in the presence of the coupler
and the heat-meltable basic compound to cause reaction between the diazonium compound
and the coupler, because the system becomes alkaline due to heat, so that a diazo
dye is formed.
[0024] In this case, it is advantageous to incapsulate the hydrophobic diazo compound in
a microcapsule having a polyurethane wall, by means of interfacial polymerization,
to separate it from the other materials, so as to improve a pot life.
[0025] The diazonium salt may be soluble in water, insoluble in water, or hardly soluble
in water.
[0026] Water-soluble diazonium salts include p-diazo-N-ethyl-N-hydroxyaniline chloride ·
zinc chloride, p-diazo-N,N-dimethylaniline chloride · zinc chloride, p-diazo-N,N-diethylaniline
chloride· zinc chloride, 4-benzamide-2,3-diethoxybenzenediazonium chloride · zinc
chloride, 2-methoxy-4-morpholino-benzenediazonium chloride · zinc chloride or 4-morpholino-2,5-dibutoxybenzene-diazonium
chloride · zinc chloride.
[0027] Diazonium salts insoluble or hardly soluble in water include those which have, as
a counter anion, tetrafluoroborate (BF₄ ⁻ ),hexafluoraphosphate (PF₆ ⁻ ), or anions
having the following formula:

wherein R₁ to R₄ may be independently an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, a cycloalkyl
group, an allyl group, an aryl group, a heterocyclic group or a cyano group.
[0028] The diazonium salt may be a mixture of two or more of the above-mentioned diazonium
salts.
[0029] Couplers usable in the present invention include resorcinol, α -naphthol-2,7-dihydroxynaphthalene,
sodium-2-hydroxynaphthalene-3,6-disulfonate, sodium-2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene-6-sulfonate,
acetoacetylanilide, 2-hydroxy-3-naphthoic acid-ethanol amide, 2-hydroxy-3-naphthoic
acid-o-toluidinoamide. As a coupler having a basic residual group, there may be mentioned
the one having the following formula;

wherein R₁ is an alkyl group of C₁ -C₁₈, and R₂ and R₃ are alkyl groups or functional
groups which form a heterocyclic ring with the N atom to which they bind.
[0030] The heat-meltable basic compound has the ability to make the system basic when it
is heated to melt, dissolve, or decompose. Basic compounds include inorganic and organic
ammonium salts, organic amines, urea , guanidine, piperadine, imidazole and their
derivatives, nitrogen-atom-containing heterocyclic compounds (e.g., morpholine ),
and salts (e.g., sodium acetate, potassium malonate).
[0031] The coloring compound may contain an acid stabilizer (e.g., tartaric acid, citric
acid, boric acid) to prevent precoupling.
[0032] The coloring agent also contains an antioxidant (e.g., thiourea or ascorbic acid)
and a stabilizer for diazonium salts (e.g., zinc chloride).
[0033] The coloring compound may further contain various pigments and wax (e.g., paraffin
wax, montan wax or amide wax)to improve coloring sensitivity and color density.
[0034] Most binders usable in the present invention are water-soluble; all separately fix
the coloring compound dispersed in a fine-grain form.
[0035] Binders include polyvinyl-alcohol, epoxy-modified polyvinyl alcohol, methyl cellulose,
carboxymethyl cellulose, hydroxyethyl cellulose, polyacrylic acid, casein, gelatin,
and starch, and their derivatives.
[0036] The heat-sensitive recording layer may contain inorganic and organic pigments (e.g.,
clay, calcium carbonate, synthetic silica, aluminum hydroxide, talc, titanium oxide
or zinc oxide), antioxidants for storage stability, absorbers for ultraviolet rays,
waterproofers for improving water resistance, phenolic resin, surfactants, conventional
wax, and/or metal salts of higher aliphatic acids.
[0037] The recording layer may also contain heat-meltable materials for improving coloring
e.g. at least one sensitizer, if necessary. The coating material for the heat-sensitive
recording layer generally is prepared by pulverizing and dispersing the coloring compound
and, if necessary, various additives (e.g. pigment, stabilizer, and/or sensitizer)
in an aqueous medium containing a binder (e.g., polyvinyl alcohol) at a suitable concentration
and by a suitable pulverizer/disperser such as a ball mill or sand grinder.
[0038] To enhance coloring efficiency, each component of the coating material should be
as fine as possible, preferably no greater than 3µ m in particle diameter.
[0039] The resultant coating material is coated on the ionomer resin provided on the support
and is then dried, to form the heat-sensitive recording medium of the present invention.
[0040] The coating usually may be made by a suitable coating machine such as a blade coater,
an air-knife coater, a bar coater, or a reverse-roll coater.
EXAMPLES
[0041] The present invention will be further explained in detail by reference to the following
nonlimitative examples.
Example 1
A. Production of a Support Having an Ionomer Resin Layer
[0042] A polypropylene sheet extruded from a T-die was oriented in one direction to five
times its original size. One side of the resultant oriented sheet having a thickness
of 200 µ m was subjected to corona discharge. Ionomer emulsion (Chemipearl S, produced
by Mitsui petrochemical Industries, Ltd.) was coated on the corona-discharge-treated
side of the oriented sheet, so that the solid content after drying was 2 g/m², and
was immediately laterally oriented to nine times (root-mean-square) its original size
by continuously passing the sheet through a tentering machine.
[0043] The sheet then was subjected to corona discharge, at the side where the ionomer layer
was coated, to yield an ionomer layer having a surface tension of 50 dyne/cm and a
thickness of 20µ m.
B. Production of a Heat-Sensitive Recording Medium
[0044] Each of the solutions described below was prepared by ten hours of mixing by a paint-shaker
(produced by Toyo Seiki, K.K.).
Solution A |
Leuco dye: 3-dibutylamino-6-methyl-7-anilinofluoran |
5 g |
Zinc stearate |
5 g |
Polyvinylalcohol (12%) |
40 g |
Water |
50 g |
Solution B |
Bisphenol A |
10 g |
Zinc stearate |
3 g |
Polyvinylalcohol (12%) |
40 g |
Water |
47 g |
[0045] 100 g of Solution A, 100 g of Solution B, 50 g of a 12% polyvinylalcohol solution,
15 g of synthetic silica (P-832, produced by Mizusawa Chemical, K.K.), and 60 g of
water were stirred together to form a coating solution. The coating solution was coated
onto the ionomer layer of the support by means of a Wire bar so that the coating weight
(after drying) was 8 g/m², and then was dried, to produce Heat-Sensitive Recording
Medium A.
Example 2
[0046] The procedure of Example 1 was performed, with 10 g of ferric stearate in place of
the leuco dye in Solution A, and 20 g of stearyl gallate in place of the bisphenol
A in Solution B, yielding Heat-Sensitive Recording Medium B.
Example 3
[0047] The procedure of Example 1 was performed, with epoxy-modified polyvinyl alcohol (DR587,
produced by Denki Kagaku, K.K.) in place of the 12% polyvinylalcohol solution added
when Solution A was mixed with Solution B, yielding Heat-Sensitive Recording Medium
C.
Example 4
[0048] The following solutions were prepared:

[0049] Then, 105 g of Solution A, 77 g of Solution B, 48 g of Solution C, 50 g of a 12%
polyvinylalcohol solution, 15 g of synthetic silica (P-832 produced by Mizusawa Chemical,
K.K.), and 60 g of water are stirred together, yielding a coating solution which then
was coated onto the ionomer layer on the support as in Example 1, yielding Heat-Sensitive
Recording Medium D.
Comparative Example 1
[0050] The procedure of Example 1 was performed without the ionomer layer, yielding Heat-Sensitive
Recording Medium E.
Comparative Example 2
[0051] The procedure of Example 1 was performed without the ionomer layer and the support
coarsened by sandblast method instead of subjected to corona discharge, yielding Heat-sensitive
Recording Medium F.
[0052] Heat-Sensitive Recording Media A-F were subjected to the following tests:
Test 1 (to determine the adhesion of the heat-sensitive recording layer to the support)
[0053] Commercially available mending tape was placed onto the recording layer, the tape
was peeled from the recording layer, and the surface of the recording layer was visually
observed.
Test 2 (to determine image density and dot-reproducibility)
[0054] Solid printing was performed by means of a commercially available thermal head (KFT-216-8
MPD I (Kyocera K.K.J) having a printing power of 0.7 W/dot, a pulse cycle of 5.0 msec,
and a pulse width of 0.3 msec. The density of the resultant image and the background
density were determined by means of a densitometer (Macbeth RD-914). Dot-reproducibility
was determined by visual observation.
Test 3 (to determine moisture-vapor resistance and heat resistance)
[0055] After Test 2 had been performed, Heat-Sensitive Recording Media A, B, C, E, and F
were stored for 24 hours at 40°C in 90% RH and at 60°C in 30% RH. Background density
and image density were then determined as in Test 2.
[0056] The moisture-vapor resistance and heat resistance of Heat-Sensitive Recording Medium
D were determined after the medium had been exposed to the light of two 85 W ultraviolet-ray
lamps for 10 sec at a distance of 2 cm and had been fixed after the completion of
the printing.
[0057] The results of these tests are shown in Table I.

[0058] Table I shows that, by providing an ionomer-resin layer between the support and the
heat-sensitive recording layer, an excellent heat-sensitive recording medium can be
obtained, wherein dot-reproducibility and adhesion between the support and the heat-sensitive
recording layer are superior to those of the prior art recording medium.